Five Favorite Katharine Hepburn Films
→ Alice Adams (1935)
Alice Adams: You know, people talk about each other fearfully in this town. They don’t always stop at the truth. They make things up. Yes, they do really.
Irene Dunne and Fred MacMurray in a promo shot for Invitation to Happiness (1939)
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London, 1951: Lizabeth Scott, Jane Russell, Margaret Rutherford, Joan Rice, John Mills, Merle Oberon, Fred MacMurray, Peter Lawford and Burt Lancaster in receiving line as they await meeting the Royal Family at Royal Film Performance.
Fred MacMurray, Carole Lombard and Una Merkel on the set of ‘True Confession’ (1937)
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Carole Lombard and Fred MacMurray in Hands Across the Table
Barbara Stanwyck & Fred MacMurray on the set of Double Indemnity (1944, dir. Billy Wilder)
Wartime food shortages meant that security guards were posted to protect the real cans of food in the grocery store from sticky-fingered cast & crew members. Despite this, the aggrieved store owner reported to the LA Times that some scoundrel had managed to pinch a can of peaches & four bars of laundry soap.
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Prof. Ned Brainard (Fred MacMurray) tests out “Flubber”, the anti-gravity flying rubber he’s invented in The Absent Minded Professor (1961, dir. Robert Stevenson)
True Confession
Carole Lombard and Fred MacMurray
“She looks like a sheep in heat.”
— Steve Hayes on Barbara’s wig in Double Indemnity
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When people ask, why is Carole Lombard so awesome?
This picture answers that question.