KATHARINE HEPBURN - PROGRAM SIGNED CIRCA 1976 - HFSID 20340
Price: $300.00
KATHARINE HEPBURN
This program for the three-year production of A Matter of Gravity is signed
by the world-famous actress
Program Signed: "Katharine Hepburn" on title page. Color cover with b/w pages,
24p, 8¼x10¾, bound with two staples. Program for a production of A Matter of
Gravity. No theatre listed; this is probably from the touring production of this
play, which ran from 1975 to 1977. Hepburn starred as Mrs. Basil in the play.
Stage, screen, and television actress Katharine Hepburn (1907-2003) was
nominated for 12 Academy Awards for Best Actress, winning four: Morning
Glory (1934), Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967), The Lion in Winter
(1969) and On Golden Pond (1982). She won an Emmy for Love Among the
Ruins (1975). Altogether, she notched 12 Oscar, 5 Emmy and 2 Tony
nominations. Like many film actors and actresses, she first broke into show
business on the stage, making her first appearances on Broadway in 1928 with
roles in Night Hostess and These Days. She returned to Broadway frequently
throughout her career, sometimes to rehabilitate her public image. Her final role
on Broadway was in the comedy The West Side Waltz (1982), which she starred
in. In 1932, she made her first appearance in a film, starring in A Bill of
Divorcement alongside John Barrymore. Over the decades, she played opposite
most of her era's biggest stars, including Cary Grant, Humphrey Bogart, John
Wayne, Laurence Olivier, Henry Fonda, and Spencer Tracy, the latter of
whom she made nine films with. Her intimate relationship with Tracy spanned
26 years (until his death in 1967) and is the most famous extramarital affair in
the history of Hollywood. Tracy was married to Louise Tracy, but the two had
been estranged for years. Later in life, Hepburn starred in several television
movies, the last being One Christmas (1994). In 1991, she published an
autobiography titled Me: Stories of My Life. To the present day, Hepburn
remains a significant cultural icon due to her prolific career and disregard for the
Hollywood social scene and its conventions at the time. After she divorced in
1934, she never married again, choosing to live independently for the rest of her
life. Her career floundered at times, particularly in the years just before WWII
broke out from 1934-1940. This can be partially attributed to her poor
relationship with the press, whom she refused to deal with cordially in many
cases. She was named the greatest female star in the history of Hollywood by
the American Film Institute in 1999, although naturally some disagree with
this assessment. Fine condition.
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