Humphrey Bogart (Bogart Humphrey)( Director, Film Actors)
Comments for Humphrey Bogart (Bogart Humphrey)
Biography Humphrey Bogart (Bogart Humphrey)
(1899-1957)
Born January 23, 1899 in New York in to-do family. Educated at Trinity Cheek (New York), and Phillips Academy (Andover, pc. Massachusetts), intended to continue his studies at Yale University, but after the U.S. entry into World War I went to serve in the Navy. After the war, Bogart played in the theater in the Role romantic youths. In 1930 signed a contract with Hollywood and for a long time tossed about between California and New York, could not find a worthy use. In 1934 landed the role of gangster Duke Menti in the play R. Sherwood petrified forest (The Petrified Forest), in 1936, played the same role in film. After the success of adaptation of studio 'Warner Brothers' with Bogart entered into a long-term contract. A rare film of the criminal genre at the studios do without Bogart: in 1936-1940 he was an average of once every two months filming in the new movie, successfully portraying the heroes standing on both sides of the law. Decisive for his career was in 1941, . when calling for the role of sympathy escaped convicts (High Sierra - High Sierra) followed by the image of Sam Spade in The Maltese Falcon (The Maltese Falcon) - deadpan detective, . whose pessimism is restrained only by a sense of professional duty, . Award-winning 'Oscar' Casablanca (Casablanca, 1942) (according to some estimates, the best film in the history of Hollywood) added to the on-screen image of Bogart's romantic touches, after which the actor came to the zenith of his fame. With the image of a romantic cynic Rick Blaine for many viewers Bogart embodies the 1940's
. Along with Lauren Bokol, . In 1945 he became the fourth wife, . Bogart played in four of the most famous paintings in the genre of 'black film' 1940's: Have and Have Not (To Have and Have Not, . 1944), . Eternal Dream (The Big Sleep, . 1946), . Gloomy trip (Dark Passage, . 1947) and Key Largo (Key Largo, . 1948), . By the end of the decade Planck success Bogart climbed so high that he could afford to significantly expand their acting range. Along with the gold-obsessed in the film classic D. Houston Treasure of the Sierra Madre (The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, . 1948), . he created the image of a suspect in the murder of a hypochondriac-writer (in a deserted place - In a Lonely Place, . 1950), . Captain Kuiga in the mutiny on the 'Cain' (The Caine Mutiny, . 1954) and conceited businessman in the comedy Sabrina (Sabrina, . 1954), . During one such unconventional roles of the old boozer-skipper with the river boat (The African Queen - The African Queen, 1951) Bogart was awarded 'Oscar'. Bogart's last film, the harder it will fall (The Harder They Fall, 1956), an impressive act charges the sports business - came on the screen for ten months until Bogart's death from cancer in Hollywood, January 14, 1957.
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