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Douglas Fairbanks Jr, American actor, 1934-1935. Fairbanks became a highly decorated naval officer in World War II. Taken from Meet the Film Stars, by Seton Margrave. (London, 1934-1935)
Ginger Rogers, American actress, 1934-1935. Ginger Rogers appeared in 73 films over a 35 year movie career. She is best known for her partnership with Fred Astaire
Edmund Lowe, American actor, 1934-1935. Lowe made his name in the silent film era, appearing in over 100 films in all. Taken from Meet the Film Stars, by Seton Margrave. (London, 1934-1935)
Jean Muir, American actress, 1934-1935. Taken from Meet the Film Stars, by Seton Margrave. (London, 1934-1935)
Fredric March, American actor, 1934-1935. March was a two-time Academy Award-winning American actor. He won the Best Actor Oscar for his performances in Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1932)
Marlene Dietrich, German born American actress, 1934-1935. Dietrich (1901-1992), was an Academy Award-nominated German-American actress, entertainer and singer
Maurice Chevalier, French actor and popular entertainer, 1934-1935. Chevalier (1888-1972) was a French actor and popular entertainer. His signature songs included Louise, Mimi, and Valentine
Myrna Loy, American actress, 1934-1935. Myrna Loy was one of Hollywoods most popular and best paid stars of the 1930s. Taken from Meet the Film Stars, by Seton Margrave. (London, 1934-1935)
Janet Gaynor, American actress, 1934-1935. Janet Gaynor was the first winner of the Academy Award for Best Actress, which she won in 1928 for her performances in Seventh Heaven
Jack Buchanan, British actor and singer, 1934-1935. Born Walter John Buchanan, he worked on stage and screen on both sides of the Atlantic
William K Howard, American film director, 1933William K Howard (1899-1954), American film director, 1933
Sam Eckman Jr, head of the MGM organisation in Great Britain, 1933
Henry King, American film director, 1933. King (1886-1982) directed for the first time in 1915, and went on to become one of the most commercially successful Hollywood directors of the 1920s and 30s
Dorothy Arzner, American film director, 1933. Arzner (1897-1979) was a pioneering director during the Golden Age of Hollywood, a period in which there were hardly any women directors
Henry Alexander MacRae, Canadian film director, producer and screenwriter, 1933. MacRae (1876-1944) worked on many film serials for Universal Studios
Merian Caldwell Cooper, American aviator, adventurer, director, screenwriter and producer, 1933. Coopers (1893-1973) most famous film was the 1933 movie King Kong
Frank Borzage, American film director, 1933. Borzage (1893-1962) was a director famed for his mystical romanticism. He won the first Best Director Academy Award for his picture Seventh Heaven (1927)
Robert Z Leonard, American film director, 1933. Leonard (1889-1968) was nominated for the Best Director Oscar twice, for The Divorcee (1930) and The Great Ziegfeld (1936)
George Archainbaud, French screen, stage actor, film and television and film director, 1933George Archainbaud (1890-1959), French screen, stage actor, film and television and film director, 1933
Alfred J Goulding, Australian film director, 1933. Goulding (1896-1972) directed many films, mostly short comedies, in the 1920s and 1930s
Edmund Goulding, British film director, 1933. Goulding (1891-1959) was a stage actor and director in London before serving in World War I
William James Craft, American actor, cameraman and film director, (1933). Crafts (c1887-1931) Hollywod career began in 1915
Raoul Walsh, American film director, 1933. Walshs (1887-1980) directorial career began in 1914 and spanned 52 years. Amongst his films is The Big Trail (1930)
Harry Lachman, American artist, designer and film director, 1933. After establishing a reputation as a successful Post-Impressionist painter Lachman (1886-1975) began a career as a film director
Douglas Shearer, Canadian-born pioneer sound designer and director, 1933. The brother of the Hollywood film star Norma Shearer
John Malcolm Stahl, American film director and producer, 1933. Stahl (1886-1950) was one of the founding members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences established in 1927
Roy Del Ruth, American Hollywood film director, 1933. Ruth (1893-1961) started out as a screenwriter in 1915 writing gags for the comedian Mack Sennett, before directing motion pictures in the 1920s
Howard Estabrook, American screen writer, 1933. Estabrook (1884-1978) won an Oscar for Best Writing (Adaptation) for his screenplay for Cimarron (1931)
Beulah Marie Dix, American screen writer, 1933. Dix (1876-1970) was a prolific screenwriter in the silent movie era
Edwin J Burke, American screen writer and director, 1933Edwin J Burke (1889-1944), American screen writer and director, 1933
Richard Boleslawski, Polish film director and actor, 1933. Boleslawski (1880-1937) emigrated to America after the Russian Revolution
Irving Asher, film producer and managing director of British projects for Warner Brothers, 1933Irving Asher (1903-1985), film producer and managing director of British projects for Warner Brothers, 1933
Irving Thalberg, American film producer, 1933. Thalberg (1899-1936) was a producer during the early years of cinema. He was known as The Boy Wonder for his youth
Ernst Lubitsch, German-born Jewish film director, 1933. Lubitsch (1892-1947) emigrated to Hollywood in 1922
William C McGann, American film director, 1933William C McGann (1893-1977), American film director, 1933
Diana Wynyard, British actress, 1933. Wynyard (1906-1964) was thought by many to be the equal as a stage actress of the more famous Peggy Ashcroft and Celia Johnson
Tom Walls and Ralph Lynn, English actors, 1933. Walls (1883-1949) was a popular English stage and motion-pictures character actor and film director
Barbara Stanwyck, American film and television actress, 1933. Stanwyck (1907-1990) starred in over 100 films before moving into television acting in the 1950s, winning three Emmy Awards
Ramon Novarro, Mexican actor, 1933. Novarro (1899-1968) was a Mexican actor who achieved fame as a Latin lover in silent films
Aline MacMahon, American actress, 1933. MacMahon (1899-1991) was nominated for the Best Supporting Actress Oscar for her performance in Dragon Seed (1944)
Tom Mix, American film actor, 1933. Mix (1880-1940) was the star of many early Western films. He made a reported 336 features between 1910 and 1935, all but 9 of them silent
Elissa Landi, Italian born actress, 1933. Landi (1904-1948) was a popular star of Hollywood films of the 1920s and 1930s. Rumoured to be a descendant of Emperor Franz Josef of Austria
Herbert Marshall, English actor, 1933. Marshall (1890-1966) was a popular English cinema and theatre actor who overcame the loss of a leg during World War I, to enjoy a long career
Fredric March, American actor, 1933. March (1897-1975) was a two-time Academy Award-winning American actor. He won the Best Actor Oscar for his performances in Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1932)
Molly Lamont and Gene Gerrard, actors, 1933. Lamont (1910-2001) was a South African-born film actress and Gerrard (1892-1971) an English actor, director, and writer
Harold Lloyd, American actor and film maker, 1933. Lloyd (1893-1971) was most famous for his hugely successful and influential silent film comedies
Emil Jannings, Swiss actor, 1933. Jannings (1884-1950) was the first winner of the Academy Award for Best Actor, which he won for his performances in The Way of All Flesh and the Last Command (1928)
Charles Farrell and Janet Gaynor, American actors, 1933. Farrell (1901-1990) was a notable American film actor of the 1920s silent era and into the 1930s and later a television actor