On display at the museum is the Academy Award that Shelley Winters won, and later donated to the museum, for her performance as Auguste van Pels in The Diary of Anne Frank.
As of 2011, Applegate is working on a biography of Polly Adler, New York City's notorious Prohibition-era brothel-keeper whose 1953 memoir A House is Not a Home became a New York Times Bestseller and a 1963 film starring Shelley Winters.
Feldman's first credit as a film producer was the 1971 melodrama What's the Matter with Helen? starring Debbie Reynolds and Shelley Winters.
To cheer him up, the kids, with his help, build him a snow wife the next day (suggested names included Cleopatra, Minnehaha, and Corn Flakes) and name her Crystal (voiced by Shelley Winters), but she is not alive like how he is.
In addition to her role on 7th Heaven, Rosman appeared in the independent film Gideon, starring Christopher Lambert, Charlton Heston and Shelley Winters.
Marx (played by Shelley Winters) was also the main character in the Broadway musical Minnie's Boys.
The castle can be seen in the movie That Lucky Touch, a comedy which was partially shot in Rumbeke in 1975, starring Roger Moore and Shelley Winters.
Mary Shelley | Percy Bysshe Shelley | Shelley Winters | Shelley | Shelley Long | Shelley Craft | Alex Shelley | Terry Winters | The Long Winters | Shelley v. Kraemer | Shelley's Sparrow | Shelley's | Shelley Moore Capito | Richard Winters | Paul Shelley | Bruce Shelley | Shelley Mann | Shelley Jackson | Mike Winters | Kate Shelley | Yvor Winters | Stephanie Winters | Shelley, West Yorkshire | Shelley Sekula-Gibbs | Shelley Preston | Shelley Posen | Shelley Nitschke | Shelley Hirsch | Shelley Hack | Shelley Gare |
In 1948, Hart made Larceny with Shelley Winters and The Countess of Monte Cristo with Sonja Henie, both for Universal Pictures.
Reiner wrote the screenplay for and directed a 1967 film version starring Reni Santoni, José Ferrer, Shelley Winters, Elaine May, Jack Gilford, Janet Margolin, Don Rickles, David Opatoshu, and Michael J. Pollard.
A sequel of the film, Let No Man Write My Epitaph, was produced in 1960 and directed by Philip Leacock and featuring Shelley Winters, James Darren, among others.
Next Stop, Greenwich Village is a 1976 romantic comedy drama film, set in the early 1950s, written and directed by Paul Mazursky, featuring, amongst others, Lenny Baker, Shelley Winters, Ellen Greene, Lois Smith, and Christopher Walken.
Fuller turned down many actresses for the lead role including studio favorites Marilyn Monroe, Shelley Winters, Ava Gardner, who looked too glamorous, Betty Grable, who wanted a dance number written in, and initially Jean Peters who he didn't like when he saw film of her in Captain from Castile.
Poor Pretty Eddie is a 1975 American film starring Leslie Uggams, Shelley Winters and Michael Christian.
The movie is set in the world of boxe and there are Keenan Wynn in the role of manager Willy Wurble, Dewey Martin in the role of the boxeur, and Shelley Winters, in the role of the wife of Willy.
Many vaudeville, musical theater, television, and nightclub performers attended services there, including Sophie Tucker, Shelley Winters, Milton Berle, Al Jolson, Jack Benny, Joe E. Lewis, Edward G. Robinson, as well as several of the Three Stooges.
The leading ladies consist of Jane Fonda as a frigid young widow; Shelley Winters as an adulterous middle-aged housewife having an affair with artist Ray Danton; Glynis Johns as a trendy older woman infatuated with athletic young beach boy Ty Hardin; and Claire Bloom as a nymphomaniac.