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Good witch of the north smokey and the bandit

Continue 01:01:04 Rogue, honey, this is the Good Witch speakin' North'. Time - Phrase01:00:48 pounding your mama in the mouth.01:01:00 L'll be with you instantly, youth.01:01:04 Bandit, honey, this is the Good Witch of the North speakin'.01:01:08 You better not come this way.01:01:11 There's a little fender bender here at 64. For someone else named Billy Burke, see Billy Burke (defocused). American stage and film actors This article requires additional passages for verification. Please help improve this article by adding passages to reliable sources. Unsanmined materials can be ejected and removed. Find sources: - news · newspaper · book · cleric · JSTOR (August 2017) (Know how and when to remove this template message) Billie BurkeBurke in 1933BornMary William Ethelbert Appleton Burke (1884-08-07)7 August, 1884Washington, DC, United States DiedMay 14, 1970(1970-05-14) (age 85)Los Angeles, California, A.S.Resting placeKensico Cemetery, New York, United States OccupationactorYears active1903-1960Known forGlinda Witch Good at Reverend OzSpouse(s)Florenz Ziegfeld (m. 1914; died 1932) Child Patricia Ziegfeld Stephenson Mary William Ethelbert Appleton Burke (7 August , 1884 – May 14, 1970), better known as Billie Burke, was an American actor best known on Broadway and radio, and in silent films and sounds. He is best known to modern audiences as Glinda the Good Witch of the North in metro-goldwyn-mayer film the Wizard of Oz (1939). Burke was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for her performance as Emily Kilbourne in Merrily We Live (1938). She is also remembered for her performance in the film series Topper. His high trademarks, waves, nobility-speaking voice made him a frequent choice to play dimwitted, damaging the kind of society. He was married to Broadway producer and impresario Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. from 1914 until his death in 1932. Burke was born in Washington, DC, the daughter of Blanche (née Beatty; 1844-1921) and William Billy Burke. He visited the United States and Europe with his father, a singer and clown who worked for Barnum & Bailey Circus. His family settled in London where he attended a play in the West End. She began acting on stage in 1903, making her first appearance in London at The School Girl. [1] Other London shows include The Duchess of Dantzic (1903) and The Blue Moon (1904). He eventually returned to America to star in a Broadway musical comedy. Burke's broadway production of Arthur Wing Pinero's The Mind the Paint Girl (1912)Burke with daughter Patricia (1917) Burke went on to play the lead on Broadway in Dot,[2] Suzanne,[3] The Runaway, The Minda-the-Paint Girl, and the Promised Land from 1910 to 1913, together with a supporting role in the revival of Sir Arthur Wing Pinero's The Amazons. Amazons. she met producer Florenz Ziegfeld, married to him in 1914. Two years later they had a daughter, author Patricia Ziegfeld Stephenson (1916-2008). [4] Burke was signed for films and made a cinematic appearance in the title role of Peggy (1915). His success was incredible, and he soon earned what had been mentioned the highest pay of any film actor until that time. [5] He followed his first feature with the 15-part Serial Gloria Romance (1916), another popular and critically recognized vehicle. By 1917, he was a favorite with fans of silent film, screening Mary Pickford, Lillian Gish, Clara Kimball Young and Irene Castle. He starred mainly in provocative dramas and societal comedies, similar to the theme of Mind-the-Paint Girl, the most successful American player. Her girl charmingly accompanied her acting ability, and as she dressed in hilts in a chic, fur and jewelry gown, her sense of clothing also won the deedation of a female audience. Among the films in which he appeared during the period were Weapons and Girls (1917), Miss Terry Mystery, Let's Get a Divorce (1918), Good Gracious, Annabelle (1919), Away Goes Prudence (1920) and The Frisky Mrs. Johnson (1920). Burke's beauty and taste made him a major trendsetter throughout the 1910s and 20s. As early as 1909, following his Broadway performance in My Wife (1909), the department store began carrying Billie Burke Dress with a signature flat collar and lace trim. [6] Currently, most of the burke wardrobes on and off-screen are provided by leading European couturier Lucile (in private life, Lady Duff Gordon), whose New York branch is a socialist Mecca fashion and celebrity entertainment. [7] Burke reflected on his reputation as a new type of actress, carefree, and red head, and I had a beautiful dress. [8] Despite his success in the film, Burke eventually returned to the stage, appearing in Caesar's Wife (1919), The Intimate Strangers (1921), The Marquise (1927) and The Happy Husband (1928). When the family investment continued out on Wall Street Crash the following year, she returned the screen acting to help her husband. Burke made his Hollywood comeback in 1932, when he starred in Margaret Fairfield in the Divorce Bill, directed by George Cukor. He holds the mother Katharine Hepburn in the film, which is Hepburn's debut. Despite the death of her husband Florenz Ziegfeld during filmmaking, she returned to acting shortly after her funeral. Burke as Glinda with Judy Garland as Dorothy Gale in the Pendeta Oz (1939) In 1933, Burke was cast as Millicent Jordan, a community woman The scattered hosted a dinner party at a comedy Dinner at Eight, directed by George Cukor, co-starring Lionel Barrymore, Marie Dressler, John Barrymore, Jean Harlow and Wallace Beery. The film is a huge success and revives his career and he is starring in many comedies and musicals, typecast as a high-end mathematice who is loud, brash and hairy with his high voice. In 1936, MGM filmed the sanitation biopic Florenz Ziegfeld (The Great Ziegfeld), a film that won the Academy Award for Best Picture and Best Female Actor (Luise Rainer as Ziegfeld's regular legal wife, Anna Held). William Powell played Ziegfeld and Myrna Loy played Burke; Burke, who is under contract to the studio, believes he can play alone. However, MGM considers him too old to ride on his younger side, despite being otherwise perfectly commanding in appearance and adab. In 1937, Burke appeared in the first Topper film, about a man haunted by two socialist ghosts (played by Cary Grant and ), in which he played twittering and daffy Clara Topper. Her performance as Emily Kilbourne in Merrily We Live (1938) led to her only Oscar nomination. In 1938, he was selected to play Glinda the Good Witch of the North in the musical The Wizard of Oz (1939), directed by Victor Fleming, starring Judy Garland. She previously worked with Garland on the film Everybody Sing, in which she played histrionic Judy-actress-mother. Director George Cukor offered his role as Makcik Pittypat in Gone With the Wind (1939), but he refused and he was played by Laura Hope Crews, a character that Cukor wanted to play in a Billie Burke-ish way with the same zany feel. [9] Another successful film series was followed by Father Bride (1950) and Little Dividend Father (1951), both directed by Vincente Minnelli and starring Spencer Tracy, Joan Bennett, and Elizabeth Taylor. Burke also portrayed Mrs. Ernest (Daisy) Stanley in the film The Man Who Came to Dinner in 1942. Burke wrote two autobiographies, both with Cameron Van Shippe, With Feathers on My Nose (Appleton 1949) and With Powder on My Nose (Coward McCann, 1959). Burke's radio and television cast joined eddie cantor's 1948 line-up on CBS Radio, The Billie Burke Show was heard on Saturday mornings from April 3, 1943, until September 21, 1946. Adored by Listerine, the sitcom was originally titled Fashion in Catuan in its first year. Describing himself as a fur-coloured Good Samaritan living in a small white house on Sunnyview Lane, he always offered help to those in his neighbourhood. He often worked in early television, appearing in the short-lived sitcom Doc Corkle (1952). He was a guest star on several TV and radio series, including Tavern Duffy. On television, Burke starred in his own talk show, At Home With Billie Burke, which on the DuMont Television Network from June 1951 through the spring of 1952. She was one of the hosts of the first female talk show, after hosting the former DuMont series And Everything Nice (1949-50) (1949-50) Fashion at the Procession (1948- 49) both included several segments of the talk show. [11] Burke attempted to make a reappearance on the New York stage. He starred in two short-term productions: This Rock and Mrs. Januari and Mr. X. Although he received good reviews, the game did not. He also appeared in several games in California, although his mind became cloudy, and he faced problems remembering the line. In the late 1950s, his failed retirement from business showed, despite his explanation for it, Acting was simply not fun anymore. Burke made his last screen appearance in Sarjan Rutledge (1960), western directed by John Ford. The Memorial statue of Private Life in Burke's grave in Kensico Cemetery Between Burke's early saman was the decomposed tenor of Enrico Caruso's operation. Burke is married to publisher Florenz Ziegfeld, Jr. and is based in Beverly Hills, California. [13] He died in Los Angeles on May 14, 1970,[14] at the age of 85, and was interred at Kensico Cemetery in Valhalla, Westchester County, New York. Over the years, Burke's framed photo was displayed on the exit stairs at the Ziegfeld Theater in New York, but it disappeared after the renovation. An opening night program featuring his images from the 1912 triumph of The Mind The Paint Girl (Sir Arthur Wing Pinero) was shown in the lobby of the Lyceum Theatre in Manhattan. For his contributions to the film industry, Burke was inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1960 with a motion picture star at 6617 Hollywood Boulevard. [15] The Academy's Film Archive houses the Florenz Ziegfeld-Billie Burke Collection, which consists primarily of house films. [16] On November 4, 2015, burke crater, near the northern pole of the planet Mercury, was named after Billie Burke. [17] Burke's Radio performance career at the beginning of his career The Ziegfeld Follies of the Air - 1932 Meragui Thomas - 1935 Good News 1939 - 1938 The Ru Jam Vallee - 1939 Bay Screen Guild Theatre - 1939 The Rudy Vallee Sealtest Show - 1940-41 The Pepso Show - 1941 The Billie Burke Show - 1943-1946 Duffy's Tavern - 1944 The Sealtest Village Store - 1944 Mail Call - 1944 The Charlie McCarthy Show - 1944-47 Homage to Ethel Barrymore - 1945 The Charlie McCarthy Show - 1944-47 Homage to Ethel Barrymore - 1945 The Rudy Vallee Show - 1945 Show Stoppers - 1946 The Danny Kaye Show - 1946 WOR 25th Birthday - 1947 Your Movietown Radio Theater - 1948 The Eddie Cantor Pabst Blue Ribbon Show - 1948 Family Theatre – 1948-52 This Is Show Business - CBS-TV, 1949 The Martin and Lewis Show - 1949 The Bill Stern Colgate Sports Newsreel – 1949 Stagestruck – 1954 Biography in sound - 1955-56 Broadway Burke in february 1920 issue of Vanity Fair in portrait by Adolf de Meyer Burke Shelley Hull , 1913. My wife - 1907 Love Watches - 1908 Puan Dot - 1910 Suzanne (stage – 1910 Ahli Falsafah dalam Apple Orchard - 1911 The Runaway – 1911 The Amazons – 1913 The Land of Promise – 1913 Jerry - 1914 The Rescuing Angel – 1917 A Marriage of Convenience – 1918 Caesar's Isteri - 1919 The Intimate Orang Yang Tidak Dikenali Intim – 1921 Rose Briar – 1922 Annie Dear – 1924 The Marquise – 1927 The Happy Suami – 1928 Hal Ehwal Keluarga – 1929 Permainan Kebenaran - 1930 Ziegfeld Follies 1934 - 1934 Ziegfeld Follies 1936 – 1936 Ini Batu – 1943 Ziegfeld Follies 1943 - 1943 Filemografi Senyap Gadis Bersama Kita (1914) sebagai Peggy Sendiri (1916) sebagai Pegg Percintaan Cameron Gloria (1916) sebagai Gloria Stafford The Misteri Miss Terry (1917) sebagai Mavis Terry Arms dan Gadis (1917) sebagai Ruth Sherwood The Land of Janji (1917) sebagai Anak Perempuan Nora Marsh Eve (1918) sebagai Irene Simpson-Bates Let's Get a Divorce (1918) sebagai Mme. Cyprienne Marcey Dalam Mengejar Polly (1918) sebagai Polly Marsden Isteri Make-Percaya (1918) sebagai Phyllis Ashbrook Good Gracious , Annabelle (1919) sebagai Annabelle Leigh Balu Mengelirukan (1919) sebagai Betty Taradine Sadie Love (1919) sebagai Sadie Love Wanted : A Husband (1919) as Amanda Darcy Cole Away Goes Prudence (1920) as Prudence Thorne The Frisky Mrs. Johnson (1920) as Belle Johnson The Education of Elizabeth (1921) as Elizabeth Banks Sound Glorifying the American Girl (1929) as Herself (uncredited) A Bill of Divorcement (1932) as Margaret Christopher Strong (1933) as Lady Strong - His Wife Dinner at Eight (1933) as Millicent Jordan Only Yesterday (1933) as Julia Warren Where Sinners Meet (1934) as Eustasia Finishing School (1934) as Her Mother / Mrs. Helen Crawford Radcliff We're Rich Again (1934) as Mrs. Linda Page Forsaking All Others (1934) as Aunt Paula Society Doctor (1935) as Mrs. Crane After Office Hours (1935) as Mrs. Norwood Becky Sharp (1935) as Lady Bareacres Doubting Thomas (1935) as Paula Brown She Couldn't Take It (1935) as Mrs. Daniel Van Dyke A Feather in Her Hat (1935) as Julia Trent Anders Splendor (1935) as Clarissa My American Wife (1936) as Mrs. Robert Cantillon Piccadilly Jim (1936) as Eugenia Willis, Isteri Craig Saudara Nesta (1936) sebagai Puan Frazier Parnell (1937) sebagai Clara Wood Topper (1937) sebagai Puan. Topper The Bride Wore Red (1937) sebagai Contessa di Meina Navy Blue dan Gold (1937) sebagai Puan Alyce Gates Everybody Sing (1938) sebagai Diana Bellaire Merrily We Live (1938) sebagai Puan. Kilbourne The Young in Heart (1938) sebagai Marmy Carleton Topper Mengambil Perjalanan (1939) sebagai Puan Topper Zenobia (1939) sebagai Puan Tibbett BridAl Suite (1939) sebagai Puan McGill Pendeta Oz (1939) sebagai Glinda Witch Good of the North Eternally Yours (1939) sebagai Makcik Abby Ingat? (1939) sebagai Puan. Bronson The Ghost Comes Home (1940) sebagai Cora Adams And One Was Beautiful (1940) sebagai Puan Julia Lattimer Irene (1940) sebagai Puan The Captain Is a Lady (1940) sebagai Blossy Stort Dulcy (1940) sebagai Eleanbalor Forbes Hulloos Hulloos as Penny Merriweather The Wild Man of Borneo (1941) as Bernice Marshall Topper Returns (1941) as Puan Topper One Night in Lisbon (1941) as Catherine Enfilden The Man Who Came to Dinner (1942) as Daisy Stanley What's Cookin'? (1942) as Agatha Courtney In This Our Life (1942) as Lavinia Timberlake They All Kiss the Bride (1942) as Puan. Drew Girl Trouble (1942) as Mrs. Rowland Hi Diddle Diddle (1943) as Your Father Liza Prescott So (1943) as Makcik Minerva Anda A Lucky Felo, Mr. Smith (1943) as Makcik Harriet Crandall Gildersleeve on Broadway (1943) as Lady Laura Chandler Swing Out, Sister (1945) as Jessica Mariman The Cheaters (1945) as Clara Pidgeon Breakfast in Hollywood (1946) as French Poet Cartwright Young Bachelor (1946) as Molly Burns Billie Gets Her Man (1948) as Billie Baxter The Barkleys of Broadway (1949) as Puan Livingston Belney And Baby Makes Three (1949) as Puan Marvin Fletcher The Boy from Indiana (1950) the day bagley father bride (1950) as Doris Dunstan Three Husbands (1950) as Mrs. Jenny Bard Whittaker Father Little Dividend (1951) as Doris Dunstan Small Town Girl (1953) as Puan Livingston The Young Philadelphians (1959) as Mrs. Allen Sarjan Rutledge (1960) as Mrs. Cordelia Fosgate Pepe (1960) as Herself See also the Biography Portal of the Academy of Music/Riviera Theater List of actors with Academy Award nominations References ^ The School Girl a Hit. New York Times, May 10, 1903, accessed February 20, 2011 ↑ Puan Ziegfeld: Public and Private Life Billie Burke, p. 50. ↑ Hampton Magazine, Volume 26, Page 362. ↑ Patricia Ziegfeld Stephenson, Daughter of a Broadway Impresario Legend. Jazz News. April 25th, 2008. Archived from the original on April 29, 2008. Retrieved 2008-05-11. ↑ Glinda Good Magic: Early Years. Oscars.org | Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. August 4, 2015. Retrieved 6 March 2019. ↑ Schweitzer, Marlis (January 31, 2009). When Broadway Is The Runway. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. doi:10.9783/9780812206166. ISBN 9780812206166. ↑ Marlis Schweitzer (2008). Patriotic Acts of Use: Lucile (Lady Duff Gordon) and Vaudeville Fashion Show Madness. Journal of Theatre. 60 (4): 585–608. doi:10.1353/tj.0.0111. ISSN 1086-332X. ↑ DeBauche, LM (March 2008). Advertising Testimonials Using Movie Stars In the 1910s: How Billie Burke Came to Sell The Vanished Cream Pool in 1917. Journal of Macromarketing. 28 (1): 87 – via Sage. ↑ Wilson, Steve (2014). Making Go With the Wind. University of Texas Press. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-292-76126-1. ↑ Los Angeles Times, Various issues, 1951-52. sfn error: no target: CITEREFLos_Angeles_Times,_Various_issues,_1951-52 (help) ^ Paley Center For Media recording. sfn error: sasaran: CITEREFPaley_Center_For_Media_recording (bantuan) ^ Radice, Michael L. Glinda's Ruby Slippers, Manuscript Draf, 2012. 2012. error: no target: CITEREFRadice,_Michael_L._Glinda's_Ruby_Slippers,_Manuscript_Draft,_2012 (help) ^ Mitchell Owens, Hollywood Star Legend at Home, Architectural Digest ^ Varieti Obituary, May 20, 1970. ↑ Hollywood Walk of Fame - Billie Burke. walkoffame.com. Hollywood Business Council. Retrieved 28 December 2017. ↑ Florenz Ziegfeld-Billie Burke Collection. Academy Film Archive. ↑ Planetary Nomenclature News. Read more Alistair, Rupert (2018). Billie Burke. Name Under Title : 65 Actors Of Classic Film Characters from the Age of Hollywood Ness (softcover) (Ed First.). Great Britain: Published freely. Pp. 57-60. ISBN 978-1-7200-3837-5. Burke, Billie. With Feathers on My Nose. (Ed first.) New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1948. ISBN 978-1162773513. Wikimedia Commons outside links have media related to Billie Burke. Billie Burke on IMDb Billie Burke on The Internet Database Broadway AllMovie.com Billie Burke is still the picture of some billie play and lost silent movie Billie Univ. than Washington Sayre's collection of Billie Burke Univ images. Louisville Macauley Flo Ziegfeld-Billie Burke Papers Collection, 1907-1984, held by Billy Rose Theatre Division, New York Public Library for The Performing Arts Billie Burke Digital Image Gallery, Billy Rose Theatre Division, New York Public Library for Performing Arts Billie Burke Collection, held by Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center, Boston University Literature on Billie Burke Billie Burke with one of her motorcyclecars, Rolls-Royce Taken from

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