After going 25–2 in his first two years of college baseball, he was drafted in the 30th round by the Rangers in 2003. Feldman had Tommy John surgery later that year. He followed it up with a minor league career in which he had a 2.70 ERA, and held batters to only 6.6 hits per 9 innings, pitching almost exclusively in relief.
After pitching out of the bullpen while bouncing back and forth between Texas and its Triple-A affiliate in 2005–07, Feldman converted to a starter in 2008. He established himself in 2009 with a breakout season for the Rangers. He was 17–8, tied for 4th in the American League in wins, and tied the major league record with 12 victories on the road.
The 6' 5" Feldman was big from an early age. His father recalled with a chuckle: "His second-grade teacher made a comment to my wife that it was like 'Alice in Wonderland,' because Scott was always too big for his seat."
5/1/13: Scott Feldman goes the distance and gives up just two runs against the Padres, striking out 12 Check out http://MLB.com/video for more!About MLB.com:...
0:23
Scott Feldman throws bullpen at Astros camp Feb. 21, 2015
Scott Feldman throws bullpen at Astros camp Feb. 21, 2015
Scott Feldman throws bullpen at Astros camp Feb. 21, 2015
Scott Feldman throws bullpen at Astros camp Feb. 21, 2015
0:48
Scott Feldman's 1st start of 2012 4/25/12 New York Yankees
Scott Feldman's 1st start of 2012 4/25/12 New York Yankees
Scott Feldman's 1st start of 2012 4/25/12 New York Yankees
April 25 2012 at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington.
0:51
Astros Scott Feldman Pitching Vs Yankees 8/20/14 HD
Astros Scott Feldman Pitching Vs Yankees 8/20/14 HD
Astros Scott Feldman Pitching Vs Yankees 8/20/14 HD
Yankee Stadium
5:57
Scott Feldman Pre-Game Bullpen Texas Rangers vs New York Yankees 8/15/12
Scott Feldman Pre-Game Bullpen Texas Rangers vs New York Yankees 8/15/12
Scott Feldman Pre-Game Bullpen Texas Rangers vs New York Yankees 8/15/12
Scott Feldman warming up before his start against the Yankees on 8/15/12. After he was done I got his warm up ball!
3:15
COREY SCOTT FELDMAN'S POSITIVITY & MORE!
COREY SCOTT FELDMAN'S POSITIVITY & MORE!
COREY SCOTT FELDMAN'S POSITIVITY & MORE!
Corey Scott Feldman
0:28
Scott Feldman throws a bullpen March 4, 2015
Scott Feldman throws a bullpen March 4, 2015
Scott Feldman throws a bullpen March 4, 2015
12:16
Just For Corey Scott Feldman
Just For Corey Scott Feldman
Just For Corey Scott Feldman
I LOVE COREY SCOTT FELDMAN
0:27
Scott Feldman Pitching Slow Motion Mechanics Instruction Chicago Cubs MLB Baseball
Scott Feldman Pitching Slow Motion Mechanics Instruction Chicago Cubs MLB Baseball
Scott Feldman Pitching Slow Motion Mechanics Instruction Chicago Cubs MLB Baseball
0:08
Scott Feldman of The Houston Astros signing autographs
Scott Feldman of The Houston Astros signing autographs
Scott Feldman of The Houston Astros signing autographs
scott was really nice and signed a bunch of autos while in town.
1:47
Orioles Acquire Scott Feldman
Orioles Acquire Scott Feldman
Orioles Acquire Scott Feldman
Baseball Tonight Minute The Baseball crew breaks down the trade between the Orioles and the Cubs.
8:34
Orioles Acquire Scott Feldman
Orioles Acquire Scott Feldman
Orioles Acquire Scott Feldman
www.twitter.com/themlbtalk101 Midway through the 2013 campaign, at 47-36 the Baltimore Orioles have proven that 2012 was no fluke. In fact, it can be argued ...
1:01
Chicago Cubs vs Texas Rangers at Wrigley Field May 6 Scott Feldman
Chicago Cubs vs Texas Rangers at Wrigley Field May 6 Scott Feldman
Chicago Cubs vs Texas Rangers at Wrigley Field May 6 Scott Feldman
The Texas Rangers came to Wrigley Field on 5/6/13. Scott Feldman was on the mound for the Cubs, and he helped his cause by scoring a run.
"We going to have fun, but we?re also going to give you our knowledge. It?s just a great day for anyone who loves baseball."
"(The team and individual success) sparks interest for the sport. Seeing that other guys have had success is a big thing."
"Congress and the president approved legislation in haste to meet an artificial Memorial Day deadline without even hearing what we have been saying about this illegally approved World War II memorial and its disastrous effects on the National Mall,"
"The Vietnam and Korean memorials make us feel the human effort, sacrifice and loss, ... Instead here, we will encounter acres of stark granite, water and an eternal flame."
"The Mall was intended to be an ever-evolving, open, public space dedicated to the expression of democracy,"
"Laws were broken. Federal officials have gotten away with the perfect crime, but even if this memorial is built here, ... the public needs to understand why it is and how it is that we can come up with a fascist-looking design."
5/1/13: Scott Feldman goes the distance and gives up just two runs against the Padres, striking out 12 Check out http://MLB.com/video for more!About MLB.com:...
0:23
Scott Feldman throws bullpen at Astros camp Feb. 21, 2015
Scott Feldman throws bullpen at Astros camp Feb. 21, 2015
Scott Feldman throws bullpen at Astros camp Feb. 21, 2015
Scott Feldman throws bullpen at Astros camp Feb. 21, 2015
0:48
Scott Feldman's 1st start of 2012 4/25/12 New York Yankees
Scott Feldman's 1st start of 2012 4/25/12 New York Yankees
Scott Feldman's 1st start of 2012 4/25/12 New York Yankees
April 25 2012 at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington.
0:51
Astros Scott Feldman Pitching Vs Yankees 8/20/14 HD
Astros Scott Feldman Pitching Vs Yankees 8/20/14 HD
Astros Scott Feldman Pitching Vs Yankees 8/20/14 HD
Yankee Stadium
5:57
Scott Feldman Pre-Game Bullpen Texas Rangers vs New York Yankees 8/15/12
Scott Feldman Pre-Game Bullpen Texas Rangers vs New York Yankees 8/15/12
Scott Feldman Pre-Game Bullpen Texas Rangers vs New York Yankees 8/15/12
Scott Feldman warming up before his start against the Yankees on 8/15/12. After he was done I got his warm up ball!
3:15
COREY SCOTT FELDMAN'S POSITIVITY & MORE!
COREY SCOTT FELDMAN'S POSITIVITY & MORE!
COREY SCOTT FELDMAN'S POSITIVITY & MORE!
Corey Scott Feldman
0:28
Scott Feldman throws a bullpen March 4, 2015
Scott Feldman throws a bullpen March 4, 2015
Scott Feldman throws a bullpen March 4, 2015
12:16
Just For Corey Scott Feldman
Just For Corey Scott Feldman
Just For Corey Scott Feldman
I LOVE COREY SCOTT FELDMAN
0:27
Scott Feldman Pitching Slow Motion Mechanics Instruction Chicago Cubs MLB Baseball
Scott Feldman Pitching Slow Motion Mechanics Instruction Chicago Cubs MLB Baseball
Scott Feldman Pitching Slow Motion Mechanics Instruction Chicago Cubs MLB Baseball
0:08
Scott Feldman of The Houston Astros signing autographs
Scott Feldman of The Houston Astros signing autographs
Scott Feldman of The Houston Astros signing autographs
scott was really nice and signed a bunch of autos while in town.
1:47
Orioles Acquire Scott Feldman
Orioles Acquire Scott Feldman
Orioles Acquire Scott Feldman
Baseball Tonight Minute The Baseball crew breaks down the trade between the Orioles and the Cubs.
8:34
Orioles Acquire Scott Feldman
Orioles Acquire Scott Feldman
Orioles Acquire Scott Feldman
www.twitter.com/themlbtalk101 Midway through the 2013 campaign, at 47-36 the Baltimore Orioles have proven that 2012 was no fluke. In fact, it can be argued ...
1:01
Chicago Cubs vs Texas Rangers at Wrigley Field May 6 Scott Feldman
Chicago Cubs vs Texas Rangers at Wrigley Field May 6 Scott Feldman
Chicago Cubs vs Texas Rangers at Wrigley Field May 6 Scott Feldman
The Texas Rangers came to Wrigley Field on 5/6/13. Scott Feldman was on the mound for the Cubs, and he helped his cause by scoring a run.
3:01
MLB 2K14 MOD 金鶯 陳偉殷 VS 太空人 Scott Feldman (模擬)
MLB 2K14 MOD 金鶯 陳偉殷 VS 太空人 Scott Feldman (模擬)
MLB 2K14 MOD 金鶯 陳偉殷 VS 太空人 Scott Feldman (模擬)
3:40
MLB 2K14 MOD 太空人 Scott Feldman VS 金鶯 陳偉殷 (模擬)
MLB 2K14 MOD 太空人 Scott Feldman VS 金鶯 陳偉殷 (模擬)
MLB 2K14 MOD 太空人 Scott Feldman VS 金鶯 陳偉殷 (模擬)
0:59
COREY SCOTT FELDMAN MEET HIM!!
COREY SCOTT FELDMAN MEET HIM!!
COREY SCOTT FELDMAN MEET HIM!!
0:36
Houston Vs Baltimore - Scott Feldman y Astros doblegan a Orioles - 26 Mayo 2015
Houston Vs Baltimore - Scott Feldman y Astros doblegan a Orioles - 26 Mayo 2015
Houston Vs Baltimore - Scott Feldman y Astros doblegan a Orioles - 26 Mayo 2015
BALTIMORE -- Scott Feldman superó en el duelo de pitcheo a Chris Tillman, Chris Carter encendió un ataque crucial en el séptimo capítulo y los Astros de Houston derrotaron el martes 4-1 a los Orioles de Baltimore para embolsarse su décima victoria en 13 compromisos.
El venezolano Luis Valbuena aportó dos imparables y un par de remolcadas por los Astros, que anotaron todas sus carreras cuando había dos outs.
Feldman (4-4) aceptó una carrera y cuatro imparables en seis innings contra su antiguo equipo. El derecho tuvo una foja de 5-6 en 2013, su única campaña con los Orioles, pero marcha con 4-0 y efectividad de 2.41 de por vida contra ese eq
2:04
Corey Scott Feldman once said...? Lv 2 All
Corey Scott Feldman once said...? Lv 2 All
Corey Scott Feldman once said...? Lv 2 All
Easter 2015 at St. Dominic's Telemetry Heart Ward
0:28
Scott Feldman Pitcher Slow Motion Home Run Baseball Swing Hitting Mechanics Instruction MLB Cubs
Scott Feldman Pitcher Slow Motion Home Run Baseball Swing Hitting Mechanics Instruction MLB Cubs
Scott Feldman Pitcher Slow Motion Home Run Baseball Swing Hitting Mechanics Instruction MLB Cubs
1:06
Scott Feldman Testimonial - Extreme Focus
Scott Feldman Testimonial - Extreme Focus
Scott Feldman Testimonial - Extreme Focus
http://www.ExtremeFocus.com - Testimonials from the Game Changers themselves. See what the Pros say about Extreme Focus and how it has taken their game to ne...
2:37
Nor'easter '07, Nassau Red Cross, Live with Scott Feldman
Nor'easter '07, Nassau Red Cross, Live with Scott Feldman
Nor'easter '07, Nassau Red Cross, Live with Scott Feldman
Nassau Red Cross does live phone interview with News 12 Long Island's Scott Feldman during Nor'easter coverage. Aired April 15, 2007.
5:38
Jodisue Rosen and Scott R. Feldman, Event Co-Chairs
Jodisue Rosen and Scott R. Feldman, Event Co-Chairs
Jodisue Rosen and Scott R. Feldman, Event Co-Chairs
Food Bank For New York City's 2013 Can Do Awards.
1:05
HOU@SF: Hinch talks Feldman, 2-0 win over Giants
HOU@SF: Hinch talks Feldman, 2-0 win over Giants
HOU@SF: Hinch talks Feldman, 2-0 win over Giants
8/12/15: Astros manager A.J. Hinch discusses Scott Feldman's outing and the homers by Colby Rasmus and Jed Lowrie in a 2-0 win
Check out http://m.mlb.com/video for our full archive of videos, and subscribe on YouTube for the best, exclusive MLB content: http://youtube.com/MLB
About MLB.com:
Commissioner Allan H. (Bud) Selig announced on January 19, 2000, that the 30 Major League club owners voted unanimously to centralize all of Baseball's internet operations into an independent technology company. Major League Baseball Advanced Media (MLBAM) was formed and charged with developing, building and managing the most comprehensive baseball e
5/1/13: Scott Feldman goes the distance and gives up just two runs against the Padres, striking out 12 Check out http://MLB.com/video for more!About MLB.com:...
5/1/13: Scott Feldman goes the distance and gives up just two runs against the Padres, striking out 12 Check out http://MLB.com/video for more!About MLB.com:...
www.twitter.com/themlbtalk101 Midway through the 2013 campaign, at 47-36 the Baltimore Orioles have proven that 2012 was no fluke. In fact, it can be argued ...
www.twitter.com/themlbtalk101 Midway through the 2013 campaign, at 47-36 the Baltimore Orioles have proven that 2012 was no fluke. In fact, it can be argued ...
BALTIMORE -- Scott Feldman superó en el duelo de pitcheo a Chris Tillman, Chris Carter encendió un ataque crucial en el séptimo capítulo y los Astros de Houston derrotaron el martes 4-1 a los Orioles de Baltimore para embolsarse su décima victoria en 13 compromisos.
El venezolano Luis Valbuena aportó dos imparables y un par de remolcadas por los Astros, que anotaron todas sus carreras cuando había dos outs.
Feldman (4-4) aceptó una carrera y cuatro imparables en seis innings contra su antiguo equipo. El derecho tuvo una foja de 5-6 en 2013, su única campaña con los Orioles, pero marcha con 4-0 y efectividad de 2.41 de por vida contra ese equipo en Baltimore.
Luke Gregerson resolvió a la perfección el noveno episodio para su 13er salvamento.
Tillman (2-6) toleró dos carreras y cinco indiscutibles en siete entradas. No ha ganado desde el 18 de abril y ha perdido cinco decisiones en fila, la peor racha de su vida.
Por los Astros, los venezolanos José Altuve de 5-1, Valbuena de 4-2 con dos impulsadas, Marwin González de 4-0.
Por los Orioles, los dominicanos Jimmy Paredes de 4-3 con una anotada, Alejandro De Aza de 1-0.
BALTIMORE -- Scott Feldman superó en el duelo de pitcheo a Chris Tillman, Chris Carter encendió un ataque crucial en el séptimo capítulo y los Astros de Houston derrotaron el martes 4-1 a los Orioles de Baltimore para embolsarse su décima victoria en 13 compromisos.
El venezolano Luis Valbuena aportó dos imparables y un par de remolcadas por los Astros, que anotaron todas sus carreras cuando había dos outs.
Feldman (4-4) aceptó una carrera y cuatro imparables en seis innings contra su antiguo equipo. El derecho tuvo una foja de 5-6 en 2013, su única campaña con los Orioles, pero marcha con 4-0 y efectividad de 2.41 de por vida contra ese equipo en Baltimore.
Luke Gregerson resolvió a la perfección el noveno episodio para su 13er salvamento.
Tillman (2-6) toleró dos carreras y cinco indiscutibles en siete entradas. No ha ganado desde el 18 de abril y ha perdido cinco decisiones en fila, la peor racha de su vida.
Por los Astros, los venezolanos José Altuve de 5-1, Valbuena de 4-2 con dos impulsadas, Marwin González de 4-0.
Por los Orioles, los dominicanos Jimmy Paredes de 4-3 con una anotada, Alejandro De Aza de 1-0.
http://www.ExtremeFocus.com - Testimonials from the Game Changers themselves. See what the Pros say about Extreme Focus and how it has taken their game to ne...
http://www.ExtremeFocus.com - Testimonials from the Game Changers themselves. See what the Pros say about Extreme Focus and how it has taken their game to ne...
8/12/15: Astros manager A.J. Hinch discusses Scott Feldman's outing and the homers by Colby Rasmus and Jed Lowrie in a 2-0 win
Check out http://m.mlb.com/video for our full archive of videos, and subscribe on YouTube for the best, exclusive MLB content: http://youtube.com/MLB
About MLB.com:
Commissioner Allan H. (Bud) Selig announced on January 19, 2000, that the 30 Major League club owners voted unanimously to centralize all of Baseball's internet operations into an independent technology company. Major League Baseball Advanced Media (MLBAM) was formed and charged with developing, building and managing the most comprehensive baseball experience available on the internet. In August 2002, MLB.com streamed the first-ever live, full length MLB game when the Texas Rangers and New York Yankees faced off at Yankee Stadium. Since that time, millions of baseball fans around the world have subscribed to MLB.TV, the live video streaming product that airs every game in HD to nearly 400 different devices. MLB.com also provides an array of mobile apps for fans to choose from, including At Bat, the highest-grossing iOS sports app of all-time. MLB.com features a stable of club beat reporters and award-winning national columnists, the largest contingent of baseball reporters under one roof, who deliver over 100 original articles every day. MLB.com also offers extensive historical information and footage, online ticket sales, official baseball merchandise, authenticated memorabilia and collectibles and fantasy games.
Major League Baseball consists of 30 teams split between the American and National Leagues. The American League, originally founded in 1901, consists of the following teams: Baltimore Orioles; Boston Red Sox; Chicago White Sox; Cleveland Indians; Detroit Tigers; Houston Astros; Kansas City Royals; Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim; Minnesota Twins; New York Yankees; Oakland Athletics; Seattle Mariners; Tampa Bay Rays; Texas Rangers; and Toronto Blue Jays. The National League, originally founded in 1876, consists of the following teams: Arizona Diamondbacks; Atlanta Braves; Chicago Cubs; Cincinnati Reds; Colorado Rockies; Los Angeles Dodgers; Miami Marlins; Milwaukee Brewers; New York Mets; Philadelphia Phillies; Pittsburgh Pirates; San Diego Padres; San Francisco Giants; St. Louis Cardinals; and Washington Nationals.
Visit MLB.com: http://mlb.mlb.com
Subscribe to MLB.TV: mlb.tv
Download MLB.com At Bat: http://mlb.mlb.com/mobile/atbat
Get tickets: http://mlb.mlb.com/tickets
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Join the conversation!
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Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/MLBAM
8/12/15: Astros manager A.J. Hinch discusses Scott Feldman's outing and the homers by Colby Rasmus and Jed Lowrie in a 2-0 win
Check out http://m.mlb.com/video for our full archive of videos, and subscribe on YouTube for the best, exclusive MLB content: http://youtube.com/MLB
About MLB.com:
Commissioner Allan H. (Bud) Selig announced on January 19, 2000, that the 30 Major League club owners voted unanimously to centralize all of Baseball's internet operations into an independent technology company. Major League Baseball Advanced Media (MLBAM) was formed and charged with developing, building and managing the most comprehensive baseball experience available on the internet. In August 2002, MLB.com streamed the first-ever live, full length MLB game when the Texas Rangers and New York Yankees faced off at Yankee Stadium. Since that time, millions of baseball fans around the world have subscribed to MLB.TV, the live video streaming product that airs every game in HD to nearly 400 different devices. MLB.com also provides an array of mobile apps for fans to choose from, including At Bat, the highest-grossing iOS sports app of all-time. MLB.com features a stable of club beat reporters and award-winning national columnists, the largest contingent of baseball reporters under one roof, who deliver over 100 original articles every day. MLB.com also offers extensive historical information and footage, online ticket sales, official baseball merchandise, authenticated memorabilia and collectibles and fantasy games.
Major League Baseball consists of 30 teams split between the American and National Leagues. The American League, originally founded in 1901, consists of the following teams: Baltimore Orioles; Boston Red Sox; Chicago White Sox; Cleveland Indians; Detroit Tigers; Houston Astros; Kansas City Royals; Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim; Minnesota Twins; New York Yankees; Oakland Athletics; Seattle Mariners; Tampa Bay Rays; Texas Rangers; and Toronto Blue Jays. The National League, originally founded in 1876, consists of the following teams: Arizona Diamondbacks; Atlanta Braves; Chicago Cubs; Cincinnati Reds; Colorado Rockies; Los Angeles Dodgers; Miami Marlins; Milwaukee Brewers; New York Mets; Philadelphia Phillies; Pittsburgh Pirates; San Diego Padres; San Francisco Giants; St. Louis Cardinals; and Washington Nationals.
Visit MLB.com: http://mlb.mlb.com
Subscribe to MLB.TV: mlb.tv
Download MLB.com At Bat: http://mlb.mlb.com/mobile/atbat
Get tickets: http://mlb.mlb.com/tickets
Official MLB Merchandise: http://mlb.mlb.com/shop
Join the conversation!
Twitter: http://twitter.com/mlb
Facebook: http://facebook.com/mlb
Instagram: http://instagram.com/mlb
Google+: https://plus.google.com/+MLB
Tumblr: http://drawntomlb.com/
Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/MLBAM
Corey Feldman Scott Corey Angel's Show Interview By Leila Ciancaglini, Beverly Hills, CA
Corey Feldman Scott Corey Angel's Show Interview By Leila Ciancaglini, Beverly Hills, CA
Corey Feldman Scott Corey Angel's Show Interview By Leila Ciancaglini, Beverly Hills, CA
10:33
Rare Blink 182 interview 2004
Rare Blink 182 interview 2004
Rare Blink 182 interview 2004
DI-Why founder interviews Blink 182 at the California Midstate Fair in Paso Robles 2004
http://www.DI-Why.com
41:50
Interview With Death Row Serial Killer - Douglas Feldman - Werner Herzog Full Do
Interview With Death Row Serial Killer - Douglas Feldman - Werner Herzog Full Do
Interview With Death Row Serial Killer - Douglas Feldman - Werner Herzog Full Do
Sentenced to death on September 22, 1999. Executed by lethal injection in Texas on July 31, 2013.Learn more about "It Can Wait" at: .
Xzavier, Chandler, Debbie, and Reggie all know the horrors of texting & driving firsthand. Acclaimed director Werner Herzog tells their stories in this powerful It Can Wait Documentary. Learn about the dangers of texting while driving and take the pledge at .
Visit to learn more about AT&T;'s commitment to end texting and driving.See the great German filmaker get shot in the gut while giving an interview to the BBC - a couple of months later he pulled Jaquin Phoenix from a car wreck in LA. That's nothing, you
7:42
Jacqueline Jax Interviews Corey Feldman for Exposure the Movie
Jacqueline Jax Interviews Corey Feldman for Exposure the Movie
Jacqueline Jax Interviews Corey Feldman for Exposure the Movie
http://www.AvALiveRadio.com See more interviews: http://youtu.be/vCNzE_5dEzs Jacqueline Jax interviews Corey Feldman about his new movie Exposure, produced b...
34:25
Career Journey Interview with Mel Feldman
Career Journey Interview with Mel Feldman
Career Journey Interview with Mel Feldman
This is an interview with Mel Feldman where I talk about my career journey. It's been a bit of a rocky one, that's for sure!
7:49
Jacqueline Jax Interviews Gordon Scott Venters, Kevin Russell and the cast of Exposure the Movie
Jacqueline Jax Interviews Gordon Scott Venters, Kevin Russell and the cast of Exposure the Movie
Jacqueline Jax Interviews Gordon Scott Venters, Kevin Russell and the cast of Exposure the Movie
http://www.AvALiveRadio.com See her interview with Actor/Musician Corey Feldman: http://youtu.be/nxBp2EMDL_s Join host Jacqueline Jax as she interviews Gordo...
9:12
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 1 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 1 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 1 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 1 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996. Lizabeth Scott (born Sept...
9:47
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 2 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 2 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 2 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 2 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996. Lizabeth Scott (born Sept...
9:36
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 3 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 3 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 3 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 3 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996.
Lizabeth Scott (born September 29, 1922) is an American actress and singer widely known for her film noir roles.
She was born Emma Matzo (some sources mistakenly give her family name as "Motzas") in the Pine Brook section of Scranton, Pennsylvania, one of six children, to Ruthenian parents who had emigrated from Uzhgorod, in what is now Ukraine. She attended Central High School and Marywood College (now Marywood University).
She later went to New York City and attended the Alvienne School of Drama. In la
9:59
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 5 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 5 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 5 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 5 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996.
Lizabeth Scott (born September 29, 1922) is an American actress and singer widely known for her film noir roles.
She was born Emma Matzo (some sources mistakenly give her family name as "Motzas") in the Pine Brook section of Scranton, Pennsylvania, one of six children, to Ruthenian parents who had emigrated from Uzhgorod, in what is now Ukraine. She attended Central High School and Marywood College (now Marywood University).
She later went to New York City and attended the Alvienne School of Drama. In la
8:59
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 6 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 6 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 6 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 6 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996. Lizabeth Scott (born Sept...
7:30
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 8 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 8 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 8 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 8 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996.
Lizabeth Scott (born September 29, 1922) is an American actress and singer widely known for her film noir roles.
She was born Emma Matzo (some sources mistakenly give her family name as "Motzas") in the Pine Brook section of Scranton, Pennsylvania, one of six children, to Ruthenian parents who had emigrated from Uzhgorod, in what is now Ukraine. She attended Central High School and Marywood College (now Marywood University).
She later went to New York City and attended the Alvienne School of Drama. In late 194
14:31
Howard Stern- Corey Feldman Talks to Scott's Son as Donatello (Part 1 of 3)
Howard Stern- Corey Feldman Talks to Scott's Son as Donatello (Part 1 of 3)
Howard Stern- Corey Feldman Talks to Scott's Son as Donatello (Part 1 of 3)
04/07/93: Howard scolds Gary for having Corey Feldman on too much. Then later, Howard calls Scott's 7 year old son so that Corey can speak to him as Donatell...
26:02
WEB EXCLUSIVE: Interview on Basic Income with Scott Santens
WEB EXCLUSIVE: Interview on Basic Income with Scott Santens
WEB EXCLUSIVE: Interview on Basic Income with Scott Santens
Basic Income is the idea that everybody should get $1,000 every month no matter what. Sounds crazy, right? Well, it's totally not and Scott Santens is going to tell us why. He's one of the main spokespeople for Basic Income, which is gaining steam around the world.
Join the ‘Redactivist’ movement online...
Subscribe to the Redacted Tonight YouTube channel for more comedy news with saber tooth tiger teeth: http://youtube.com/user/RedactedTonight
Find Redacted Tonight on Facebook for source material about our stories and daily updates:
http://facebook.com/RedactedTonight
Follow us on Twitter for funny, informative info and to participate in
3:38
Corey Feldman on Drugs, Young Celebrity Deaths and New Life
Corey Feldman on Drugs, Young Celebrity Deaths and New Life
Corey Feldman on Drugs, Young Celebrity Deaths and New Life
Subscribe http://bit.ly/mrSda2 http://www.youtube.com/maximotv http://www.maximotv.com Maximo TV - License this clip Corey Feldman (The Two Coreys, Lost Boys...
2:47
Nicole Lapin Interview with Corey Feldman - Part 1
Nicole Lapin Interview with Corey Feldman - Part 1
Nicole Lapin Interview with Corey Feldman - Part 1
Special Correspondent and Financial Journalist Nicole Lapin interviews Cory Feldman about his dark past, as revealed in his forthcoming book.
2:58
Scott LaFaro video #1 - Cherry
Scott LaFaro video #1 - Cherry
Scott LaFaro video #1 - Cherry
Richie Kamuca Quintet, Los Angeles: KABC studios, 7 April 1958. Stars of Jazz (1956-1958) Program #14). Richie Kamuca, tenor saxophone and leader Frank Rosolino, trombone Scott LaFaro, bass Victor Feldman, piano Stan Levey, drums
Corey Feldman Scott Corey Angel's Show Interview By Leila Ciancaglini, Beverly Hills, CA
Sentenced to death on September 22, 1999. Executed by lethal injection in Texas on July 31, 2013.Learn more about "It Can Wait" at: .
Xzavier, Chandler, Debbie, and Reggie all know the horrors of texting & driving firsthand. Acclaimed director Werner Herzog tells their stories in this powerful It Can Wait Documentary. Learn about the dangers of texting while driving and take the pledge at .
Visit to learn more about AT&T;'s commitment to end texting and driving.See the great German filmaker get shot in the gut while giving an interview to the BBC - a couple of months later he pulled Jaquin Phoenix from a car wreck in LA. That's nothing, you should see his films! "Grizzly Man", "Rescue Dawn", "Fitzcaralldo", "Aguire: Wrath of God", "Even Dwarfs Started Small".Uncompromising German film director Werner Herzog reads the children's classic Where's WaldoWhat is David Lynch’s favorite Werner Herzog film?
This is an excerpt from An Evening with David Lynch, an intimate conversation with the filmmaker moderated by film critic Carrie Rickey, on Saturday, September 13, 2014, at Bryn Mawr Film Institute.
For the full program, clips, and more, visit Youtube.com/BrynMawrFilm and BrynMawrFilm.org
This event and A Celebration of David Lynch Cinema Classics Film Series was presented in conjunction with DAVID LYNCH: THE UNIFIED FIELD at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts (PAFA), the first major U.S. museum exhibition of PAFA alumnus David Lynch, on view from September 13, 2014 to January 11, 2015.
Video provided by SpectiCast.In the summer of 2013 acclaimed filmmaker "Werner Herzog" visited the city of Winnipeg.
Thanks to Mike Marynuick for letting Werner critic his film.
Thanks to everyone at the film group for making camp as fantastic as it was
Performance by Jared
Filmed by Candace
Edited by MikeA heartfelt homage to my fav. actor + director.
Scenes from "Mein Liebster Feind"/"My Best Fiend" by Herzog
in which the brillant German director describes his troubled cinematic relationship
with fellow German actor Klaus Kinski, through many behind the scenes footage
and parts of the duo's greatest films.
----------------------------------------Adrián M.
En homenaje a mi actor preferido, así como a mi director preferido.
Las escenas son del documental "Mein Liebster Feind"/"Mi Querido Enemigo" de Herzog,
en el cual el brillante director Alemán describe la complicada relación cinematográfica
con su compatriota el actor Klaus Kinski, utilizando muchas filmaciones detrás de cámaras
y partes de las más grandes películas creadas por este dúo de "dementes" geniales.Please Watch, Important Documentary Against Texting While Driving --- Visit to take the pledge, and learn more about the dangers of texting while driving. --- Acclaimed filmmaker Werner Herzog's wants to bring an end to the scourge of texting while driving once and for all — and he just might do it. In a powerful 35-minute PSA entitled From One Second to the Next, Herzog hauntingly and painfully documents the tragic testimonies of individuals who have shattered lives and have had their lives shattered as a direct result of texting and driving.
The project, part of AT&T;'s "It Can Wait" campaign, was distributed yesterday to over 40,000 high schools across the country.
"There's a completely new culture out there," Herzog told the Associated Press. "I'm not a participant of texting and driving — or texting at all — but I see there's something going on in civilization which is coming with great vehemence at us."WE BELIEVE IN WERNER HERZOG .
Sentenced to death on September 22, 1999. Executed by lethal injection in Texas on July 31, 2013.Learn more about "It Can Wait" at: .
Xzavier, Chandler, Debbie, and Reggie all know the horrors of texting & driving firsthand. Acclaimed director Werner Herzog tells their stories in this powerful It Can Wait Documentary. Learn about the dangers of texting while driving and take the pledge at .
Visit to learn more about AT&T;'s commitment to end texting and driving.See the great German filmaker get shot in the gut while giving an interview to the BBC - a couple of months later he pulled Jaquin Phoenix from a car wreck in LA. That's nothing, you should see his films! "Grizzly Man", "Rescue Dawn", "Fitzcaralldo", "Aguire: Wrath of God", "Even Dwarfs Started Small".Uncompromising German film director Werner Herzog reads the children's classic Where's WaldoWhat is David Lynch’s favorite Werner Herzog film?
This is an excerpt from An Evening with David Lynch, an intimate conversation with the filmmaker moderated by film critic Carrie Rickey, on Saturday, September 13, 2014, at Bryn Mawr Film Institute.
For the full program, clips, and more, visit Youtube.com/BrynMawrFilm and BrynMawrFilm.org
This event and A Celebration of David Lynch Cinema Classics Film Series was presented in conjunction with DAVID LYNCH: THE UNIFIED FIELD at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts (PAFA), the first major U.S. museum exhibition of PAFA alumnus David Lynch, on view from September 13, 2014 to January 11, 2015.
Video provided by SpectiCast.In the summer of 2013 acclaimed filmmaker "Werner Herzog" visited the city of Winnipeg.
Thanks to Mike Marynuick for letting Werner critic his film.
Thanks to everyone at the film group for making camp as fantastic as it was
Performance by Jared
Filmed by Candace
Edited by MikeA heartfelt homage to my fav. actor + director.
Scenes from "Mein Liebster Feind"/"My Best Fiend" by Herzog
in which the brillant German director describes his troubled cinematic relationship
with fellow German actor Klaus Kinski, through many behind the scenes footage
and parts of the duo's greatest films.
----------------------------------------Adrián M.
En homenaje a mi actor preferido, así como a mi director preferido.
Las escenas son del documental "Mein Liebster Feind"/"Mi Querido Enemigo" de Herzog,
en el cual el brillante director Alemán describe la complicada relación cinematográfica
con su compatriota el actor Klaus Kinski, utilizando muchas filmaciones detrás de cámaras
y partes de las más grandes películas creadas por este dúo de "dementes" geniales.Please Watch, Important Documentary Against Texting While Driving --- Visit to take the pledge, and learn more about the dangers of texting while driving. --- Acclaimed filmmaker Werner Herzog's wants to bring an end to the scourge of texting while driving once and for all — and he just might do it. In a powerful 35-minute PSA entitled From One Second to the Next, Herzog hauntingly and painfully documents the tragic testimonies of individuals who have shattered lives and have had their lives shattered as a direct result of texting and driving.
The project, part of AT&T;'s "It Can Wait" campaign, was distributed yesterday to over 40,000 high schools across the country.
"There's a completely new culture out there," Herzog told the Associated Press. "I'm not a participant of texting and driving — or texting at all — but I see there's something going on in civilization which is coming with great vehemence at us."WE BELIEVE IN WERNER HERZOG .
published:07 Jan 2015
views:24
Jacqueline Jax Interviews Corey Feldman for Exposure the Movie
http://www.AvALiveRadio.com See more interviews: http://youtu.be/vCNzE_5dEzs Jacqueline Jax interviews Corey Feldman about his new movie Exposure, produced b...
http://www.AvALiveRadio.com See more interviews: http://youtu.be/vCNzE_5dEzs Jacqueline Jax interviews Corey Feldman about his new movie Exposure, produced b...
http://www.AvALiveRadio.com See her interview with Actor/Musician Corey Feldman: http://youtu.be/nxBp2EMDL_s Join host Jacqueline Jax as she interviews Gordo...
http://www.AvALiveRadio.com See her interview with Actor/Musician Corey Feldman: http://youtu.be/nxBp2EMDL_s Join host Jacqueline Jax as she interviews Gordo...
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 1 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996. Lizabeth Scott (born Sept...
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 1 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996. Lizabeth Scott (born Sept...
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 2 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996. Lizabeth Scott (born Sept...
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 2 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996. Lizabeth Scott (born Sept...
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 3 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996.
Lizabeth Scott (born September 29, 1922) is an American actress and singer widely known for her film noir roles.
She was born Emma Matzo (some sources mistakenly give her family name as "Motzas") in the Pine Brook section of Scranton, Pennsylvania, one of six children, to Ruthenian parents who had emigrated from Uzhgorod, in what is now Ukraine. She attended Central High School and Marywood College (now Marywood University).
She later went to New York City and attended the Alvienne School of Drama. In late 1942, she was eking out a precarious living with a small Midtown Manhattan summer stock company when she got a job as understudy for Tallulah Bankhead in Thornton Wilder's play The Skin of Our Teeth. However, Scott never had an opportunity to substitute for Bankhead.
When Miriam Hopkins was signed to replace Bankhead, Scott quit and returned to her drama studies and some fashion modeling. She then received a call that Gladys George, who was signed to replace Hopkins, was ill, and Scott was needed back at the theatre. She went on in the leading role of "Sabina", receiving a nod of approval from critics at the age of 20. The following night, George was out again and Scott went on in her place.
Soon afterward, Scott was at the Stork Club when film producer Hal Wallis asked who she was, unaware that an aide had already arranged an interview with her for the following day. When Scott returned home, however, she found a telegram offering her the lead for the Boston run of The Skin of Our Teeth. She could not turn it down. She sent Wallis her apologies and went on the road.
Though the Broadway production, in which she was credited as "Girl", christened her "Elizabeth", she dropped the "e" the day after the opening night in Boston, "just to be different".
A photograph of Scott in Harper's Bazaar magazine was seen by film agent Charles Feldman. He admired the fashion pose and took her on as a client. Scott made her first screen test at Warner Brothers, where she and Wallis finally met. Though the test was bad, the producer recognized her potential. As soon as Wallis set up shop at Paramount, she was signed to a contract. Her film debut was in You Came Along (1945) opposite Robert Cummings.
Paramount publicity dubbed Scott "The Threat," in order to create an onscreen persona for her similar to Lauren Bacall or Veronica Lake. Scott's smoky sensuality and husky voice lent itself to the film noir genre and, beginning with The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946) starring Barbara Stanwyck and Van Heflin, the studio cast her in a series of noir thrillers. Film historian Eddie Muller has noted that no other actress has appeared in so many noir films, with more than three quarters of her 20 films qualifying.[2]
Don DeFore and Lizabeth Scott in a promotional still from Too Late for Tears.
The dark blonde actress was initially compared to Bacall because of a slight resemblance and a similar voice, even more so after she starred with Bacall's husband, Humphrey Bogart, in the 1947 noir thriller Dead Reckoning. At the age of 25, Scott's billing and portrait were equal to Bogart's on the film's lobby posters and in advertisements. The film was the first of many femme fatale roles for Scott.
She also starred in Desert Fury (1947), a noir filmed in Technicolor, with John Hodiak, Burt Lancaster, Wendell Corey and Mary Astor. In it, she played Paula Haller, who, on her return from college, falls for gangster Eddie Bendix (Hodiak), and faces a great deal of opposition from the others. Scott was paired with Lancaster, Corey and Kirk Douglas in Wallis' I Walk Alone (1948), a noirish story of betrayal and vengeance. In 1949, she starred as a vicious femme fatale in Too Late for Tears. The film is unusual for featuring her as the main character, rather than the supporting role most women were relegated to in film noirs of the period.
Having being known professionally as Lizabeth Scott for 4½ years, she appeared at the courthouse in Los Angeles, on October 20, 1949 and had her name legally changed. Another courtroom appearance came several years later, in 1955, when she sued Confidential magazine for stating that she spent her off-work hours with "Hollywood's weird society of baritone babes" (a euphemism for a lesbian) in an article which claimed Scott's name was found on the clients' list belonging to a call-girl agency. The suit was dismissed on a technicality. After completing Loving You in 1957, Elvis Presley's second film, Scott retired from the screen. Later that year, she recorded her album, Lizabeth. The next few years saw Scott occasionally guest-star on television, including a 1963 episode of Burke's Law.
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 3 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996.
Lizabeth Scott (born September 29, 1922) is an American actress and singer widely known for her film noir roles.
She was born Emma Matzo (some sources mistakenly give her family name as "Motzas") in the Pine Brook section of Scranton, Pennsylvania, one of six children, to Ruthenian parents who had emigrated from Uzhgorod, in what is now Ukraine. She attended Central High School and Marywood College (now Marywood University).
She later went to New York City and attended the Alvienne School of Drama. In late 1942, she was eking out a precarious living with a small Midtown Manhattan summer stock company when she got a job as understudy for Tallulah Bankhead in Thornton Wilder's play The Skin of Our Teeth. However, Scott never had an opportunity to substitute for Bankhead.
When Miriam Hopkins was signed to replace Bankhead, Scott quit and returned to her drama studies and some fashion modeling. She then received a call that Gladys George, who was signed to replace Hopkins, was ill, and Scott was needed back at the theatre. She went on in the leading role of "Sabina", receiving a nod of approval from critics at the age of 20. The following night, George was out again and Scott went on in her place.
Soon afterward, Scott was at the Stork Club when film producer Hal Wallis asked who she was, unaware that an aide had already arranged an interview with her for the following day. When Scott returned home, however, she found a telegram offering her the lead for the Boston run of The Skin of Our Teeth. She could not turn it down. She sent Wallis her apologies and went on the road.
Though the Broadway production, in which she was credited as "Girl", christened her "Elizabeth", she dropped the "e" the day after the opening night in Boston, "just to be different".
A photograph of Scott in Harper's Bazaar magazine was seen by film agent Charles Feldman. He admired the fashion pose and took her on as a client. Scott made her first screen test at Warner Brothers, where she and Wallis finally met. Though the test was bad, the producer recognized her potential. As soon as Wallis set up shop at Paramount, she was signed to a contract. Her film debut was in You Came Along (1945) opposite Robert Cummings.
Paramount publicity dubbed Scott "The Threat," in order to create an onscreen persona for her similar to Lauren Bacall or Veronica Lake. Scott's smoky sensuality and husky voice lent itself to the film noir genre and, beginning with The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946) starring Barbara Stanwyck and Van Heflin, the studio cast her in a series of noir thrillers. Film historian Eddie Muller has noted that no other actress has appeared in so many noir films, with more than three quarters of her 20 films qualifying.[2]
Don DeFore and Lizabeth Scott in a promotional still from Too Late for Tears.
The dark blonde actress was initially compared to Bacall because of a slight resemblance and a similar voice, even more so after she starred with Bacall's husband, Humphrey Bogart, in the 1947 noir thriller Dead Reckoning. At the age of 25, Scott's billing and portrait were equal to Bogart's on the film's lobby posters and in advertisements. The film was the first of many femme fatale roles for Scott.
She also starred in Desert Fury (1947), a noir filmed in Technicolor, with John Hodiak, Burt Lancaster, Wendell Corey and Mary Astor. In it, she played Paula Haller, who, on her return from college, falls for gangster Eddie Bendix (Hodiak), and faces a great deal of opposition from the others. Scott was paired with Lancaster, Corey and Kirk Douglas in Wallis' I Walk Alone (1948), a noirish story of betrayal and vengeance. In 1949, she starred as a vicious femme fatale in Too Late for Tears. The film is unusual for featuring her as the main character, rather than the supporting role most women were relegated to in film noirs of the period.
Having being known professionally as Lizabeth Scott for 4½ years, she appeared at the courthouse in Los Angeles, on October 20, 1949 and had her name legally changed. Another courtroom appearance came several years later, in 1955, when she sued Confidential magazine for stating that she spent her off-work hours with "Hollywood's weird society of baritone babes" (a euphemism for a lesbian) in an article which claimed Scott's name was found on the clients' list belonging to a call-girl agency. The suit was dismissed on a technicality. After completing Loving You in 1957, Elvis Presley's second film, Scott retired from the screen. Later that year, she recorded her album, Lizabeth. The next few years saw Scott occasionally guest-star on television, including a 1963 episode of Burke's Law.
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 5 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996.
Lizabeth Scott (born September 29, 1922) is an American actress and singer widely known for her film noir roles.
She was born Emma Matzo (some sources mistakenly give her family name as "Motzas") in the Pine Brook section of Scranton, Pennsylvania, one of six children, to Ruthenian parents who had emigrated from Uzhgorod, in what is now Ukraine. She attended Central High School and Marywood College (now Marywood University).
She later went to New York City and attended the Alvienne School of Drama. In late 1942, she was eking out a precarious living with a small Midtown Manhattan summer stock company when she got a job as understudy for Tallulah Bankhead in Thornton Wilder's play The Skin of Our Teeth. However, Scott never had an opportunity to substitute for Bankhead.
When Miriam Hopkins was signed to replace Bankhead, Scott quit and returned to her drama studies and some fashion modeling. She then received a call that Gladys George, who was signed to replace Hopkins, was ill, and Scott was needed back at the theatre. She went on in the leading role of "Sabina", receiving a nod of approval from critics at the age of 20. The following night, George was out again and Scott went on in her place.
Soon afterward, Scott was at the Stork Club when film producer Hal Wallis asked who she was, unaware that an aide had already arranged an interview with her for the following day. When Scott returned home, however, she found a telegram offering her the lead for the Boston run of The Skin of Our Teeth. She could not turn it down. She sent Wallis her apologies and went on the road.
Though the Broadway production, in which she was credited as "Girl", christened her "Elizabeth", she dropped the "e" the day after the opening night in Boston, "just to be different".
A photograph of Scott in Harper's Bazaar magazine was seen by film agent Charles Feldman. He admired the fashion pose and took her on as a client. Scott made her first screen test at Warner Brothers, where she and Wallis finally met. Though the test was bad, the producer recognized her potential. As soon as Wallis set up shop at Paramount, she was signed to a contract. Her film debut was in You Came Along (1945) opposite Robert Cummings.
Paramount publicity dubbed Scott "The Threat," in order to create an onscreen persona for her similar to Lauren Bacall or Veronica Lake. Scott's smoky sensuality and husky voice lent itself to the film noir genre and, beginning with The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946) starring Barbara Stanwyck and Van Heflin, the studio cast her in a series of noir thrillers. Film historian Eddie Muller has noted that no other actress has appeared in so many noir films, with more than three quarters of her 20 films qualifying.[2]
Don DeFore and Lizabeth Scott in a promotional still from Too Late for Tears.
The dark blonde actress was initially compared to Bacall because of a slight resemblance and a similar voice, even more so after she starred with Bacall's husband, Humphrey Bogart, in the 1947 noir thriller Dead Reckoning. At the age of 25, Scott's billing and portrait were equal to Bogart's on the film's lobby posters and in advertisements. The film was the first of many femme fatale roles for Scott.
She also starred in Desert Fury (1947), a noir filmed in Technicolor, with John Hodiak, Burt Lancaster, Wendell Corey and Mary Astor. In it, she played Paula Haller, who, on her return from college, falls for gangster Eddie Bendix (Hodiak), and faces a great deal of opposition from the others. Scott was paired with Lancaster, Corey and Kirk Douglas in Wallis' I Walk Alone (1948), a noirish story of betrayal and vengeance. In 1949, she starred as a vicious femme fatale in Too Late for Tears. The film is unusual for featuring her as the main character, rather than the supporting role most women were relegated to in film noirs of the period.
Having being known professionally as Lizabeth Scott for 4½ years, she appeared at the courthouse in Los Angeles, on October 20, 1949 and had her name legally changed. Another courtroom appearance came several years later, in 1955, when she sued Confidential magazine for stating that she spent her off-work hours with "Hollywood's weird society of baritone babes" (a euphemism for a lesbian) in an article which claimed Scott's name was found on the clients' list belonging to a call-girl agency. The suit was dismissed on a technicality. After completing Loving You in 1957, Elvis Presley's second film, Scott retired from the screen. Later that year, she recorded her album, Lizabeth. The next few years saw Scott occasionally guest-star on television, including a 1963 episode of Burke's Law.
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 5 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996.
Lizabeth Scott (born September 29, 1922) is an American actress and singer widely known for her film noir roles.
She was born Emma Matzo (some sources mistakenly give her family name as "Motzas") in the Pine Brook section of Scranton, Pennsylvania, one of six children, to Ruthenian parents who had emigrated from Uzhgorod, in what is now Ukraine. She attended Central High School and Marywood College (now Marywood University).
She later went to New York City and attended the Alvienne School of Drama. In late 1942, she was eking out a precarious living with a small Midtown Manhattan summer stock company when she got a job as understudy for Tallulah Bankhead in Thornton Wilder's play The Skin of Our Teeth. However, Scott never had an opportunity to substitute for Bankhead.
When Miriam Hopkins was signed to replace Bankhead, Scott quit and returned to her drama studies and some fashion modeling. She then received a call that Gladys George, who was signed to replace Hopkins, was ill, and Scott was needed back at the theatre. She went on in the leading role of "Sabina", receiving a nod of approval from critics at the age of 20. The following night, George was out again and Scott went on in her place.
Soon afterward, Scott was at the Stork Club when film producer Hal Wallis asked who she was, unaware that an aide had already arranged an interview with her for the following day. When Scott returned home, however, she found a telegram offering her the lead for the Boston run of The Skin of Our Teeth. She could not turn it down. She sent Wallis her apologies and went on the road.
Though the Broadway production, in which she was credited as "Girl", christened her "Elizabeth", she dropped the "e" the day after the opening night in Boston, "just to be different".
A photograph of Scott in Harper's Bazaar magazine was seen by film agent Charles Feldman. He admired the fashion pose and took her on as a client. Scott made her first screen test at Warner Brothers, where she and Wallis finally met. Though the test was bad, the producer recognized her potential. As soon as Wallis set up shop at Paramount, she was signed to a contract. Her film debut was in You Came Along (1945) opposite Robert Cummings.
Paramount publicity dubbed Scott "The Threat," in order to create an onscreen persona for her similar to Lauren Bacall or Veronica Lake. Scott's smoky sensuality and husky voice lent itself to the film noir genre and, beginning with The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946) starring Barbara Stanwyck and Van Heflin, the studio cast her in a series of noir thrillers. Film historian Eddie Muller has noted that no other actress has appeared in so many noir films, with more than three quarters of her 20 films qualifying.[2]
Don DeFore and Lizabeth Scott in a promotional still from Too Late for Tears.
The dark blonde actress was initially compared to Bacall because of a slight resemblance and a similar voice, even more so after she starred with Bacall's husband, Humphrey Bogart, in the 1947 noir thriller Dead Reckoning. At the age of 25, Scott's billing and portrait were equal to Bogart's on the film's lobby posters and in advertisements. The film was the first of many femme fatale roles for Scott.
She also starred in Desert Fury (1947), a noir filmed in Technicolor, with John Hodiak, Burt Lancaster, Wendell Corey and Mary Astor. In it, she played Paula Haller, who, on her return from college, falls for gangster Eddie Bendix (Hodiak), and faces a great deal of opposition from the others. Scott was paired with Lancaster, Corey and Kirk Douglas in Wallis' I Walk Alone (1948), a noirish story of betrayal and vengeance. In 1949, she starred as a vicious femme fatale in Too Late for Tears. The film is unusual for featuring her as the main character, rather than the supporting role most women were relegated to in film noirs of the period.
Having being known professionally as Lizabeth Scott for 4½ years, she appeared at the courthouse in Los Angeles, on October 20, 1949 and had her name legally changed. Another courtroom appearance came several years later, in 1955, when she sued Confidential magazine for stating that she spent her off-work hours with "Hollywood's weird society of baritone babes" (a euphemism for a lesbian) in an article which claimed Scott's name was found on the clients' list belonging to a call-girl agency. The suit was dismissed on a technicality. After completing Loving You in 1957, Elvis Presley's second film, Scott retired from the screen. Later that year, she recorded her album, Lizabeth. The next few years saw Scott occasionally guest-star on television, including a 1963 episode of Burke's Law.
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 6 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996. Lizabeth Scott (born Sept...
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 6 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996. Lizabeth Scott (born Sept...
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 8 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996.
Lizabeth Scott (born September 29, 1922) is an American actress and singer widely known for her film noir roles.
She was born Emma Matzo (some sources mistakenly give her family name as "Motzas") in the Pine Brook section of Scranton, Pennsylvania, one of six children, to Ruthenian parents who had emigrated from Uzhgorod, in what is now Ukraine. She attended Central High School and Marywood College (now Marywood University).
She later went to New York City and attended the Alvienne School of Drama. In late 1942, she was eking out a precarious living with a small Midtown Manhattan summer stock company when she got a job as understudy for Tallulah Bankhead in Thornton Wilder's play The Skin of Our Teeth. However, Scott never had an opportunity to substitute for Bankhead.
When Miriam Hopkins was signed to replace Bankhead, Scott quit and returned to her drama studies and some fashion modeling. She then received a call that Gladys George, who was signed to replace Hopkins, was ill, and Scott was needed back at the theatre. She went on in the leading role of "Sabina", receiving a nod of approval from critics at the age of 20. The following night, George was out again and Scott went on in her place.
Soon afterward, Scott was at the Stork Club when film producer Hal Wallis asked who she was, unaware that an aide had already arranged an interview with her for the following day. When Scott returned home, however, she found a telegram offering her the lead for the Boston run of The Skin of Our Teeth. She could not turn it down. She sent Wallis her apologies and went on the road.
Though the Broadway production, in which she was credited as "Girl", christened her "Elizabeth", she dropped the "e" the day after the opening night in Boston, "just to be different".
A photograph of Scott in Harper's Bazaar magazine was seen by film agent Charles Feldman. He admired the fashion pose and took her on as a client. Scott made her first screen test at Warner Brothers, where she and Wallis finally met. Though the test was bad, the producer recognized her potential. As soon as Wallis set up shop at Paramount, she was signed to a contract. Her film debut was in You Came Along (1945) opposite Robert Cummings.
Paramount publicity dubbed Scott "The Threat," in order to create an onscreen persona for her similar to Lauren Bacall or Veronica Lake. Scott's smoky sensuality and husky voice lent itself to the film noir genre and, beginning with The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946) starring Barbara Stanwyck and Van Heflin, the studio cast her in a series of noir thrillers. Film historian Eddie Muller has noted that no other actress has appeared in so many noir films, with more than three quarters of her 20 films qualifying.[2]
Don DeFore and Lizabeth Scott in a promotional still from Too Late for Tears.
The dark blonde actress was initially compared to Bacall because of a slight resemblance and a similar voice, even more so after she starred with Bacall's husband, Humphrey Bogart, in the 1947 noir thriller Dead Reckoning. At the age of 25, Scott's billing and portrait were equal to Bogart's on the film's lobby posters and in advertisements. The film was the first of many femme fatale roles for Scott.
She also starred in Desert Fury (1947), a noir filmed in Technicolor, with John Hodiak, Burt Lancaster, Wendell Corey and Mary Astor. In it, she played Paula Haller, who, on her return from college, falls for gangster Eddie Bendix (Hodiak), and faces a great deal of opposition from the others. Scott was paired with Lancaster, Corey and Kirk Douglas in Wallis' I Walk Alone (1948), a noirish story of betrayal and vengeance. In 1949, she starred as a vicious femme fatale in Too Late for Tears. The film is unusual for featuring her as the main character, rather than the supporting role most women were relegated to in film noirs of the period.
Having being known professionally as Lizabeth Scott for 4½ years, she appeared at the courthouse in Los Angeles, on October 20, 1949 and had her name legally changed. Another courtroom appearance came several years later, in 1955, when she sued Confidential magazine for stating that she spent her off-work hours with "Hollywood's weird society of baritone babes" (a euphemism for a lesbian) in an article which claimed Scott's name was found on the clients' list belonging to a call-girl agency. The suit was dismissed on a technicality. After completing Loving You in 1957, Elvis Presley's second film, Scott retired from the screen. Later that year, she recorded her album, Lizabeth. The next few years saw Scott occasionally guest-star on television, including a 1963 episode of Burke's Law.
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 8 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996.
Lizabeth Scott (born September 29, 1922) is an American actress and singer widely known for her film noir roles.
She was born Emma Matzo (some sources mistakenly give her family name as "Motzas") in the Pine Brook section of Scranton, Pennsylvania, one of six children, to Ruthenian parents who had emigrated from Uzhgorod, in what is now Ukraine. She attended Central High School and Marywood College (now Marywood University).
She later went to New York City and attended the Alvienne School of Drama. In late 1942, she was eking out a precarious living with a small Midtown Manhattan summer stock company when she got a job as understudy for Tallulah Bankhead in Thornton Wilder's play The Skin of Our Teeth. However, Scott never had an opportunity to substitute for Bankhead.
When Miriam Hopkins was signed to replace Bankhead, Scott quit and returned to her drama studies and some fashion modeling. She then received a call that Gladys George, who was signed to replace Hopkins, was ill, and Scott was needed back at the theatre. She went on in the leading role of "Sabina", receiving a nod of approval from critics at the age of 20. The following night, George was out again and Scott went on in her place.
Soon afterward, Scott was at the Stork Club when film producer Hal Wallis asked who she was, unaware that an aide had already arranged an interview with her for the following day. When Scott returned home, however, she found a telegram offering her the lead for the Boston run of The Skin of Our Teeth. She could not turn it down. She sent Wallis her apologies and went on the road.
Though the Broadway production, in which she was credited as "Girl", christened her "Elizabeth", she dropped the "e" the day after the opening night in Boston, "just to be different".
A photograph of Scott in Harper's Bazaar magazine was seen by film agent Charles Feldman. He admired the fashion pose and took her on as a client. Scott made her first screen test at Warner Brothers, where she and Wallis finally met. Though the test was bad, the producer recognized her potential. As soon as Wallis set up shop at Paramount, she was signed to a contract. Her film debut was in You Came Along (1945) opposite Robert Cummings.
Paramount publicity dubbed Scott "The Threat," in order to create an onscreen persona for her similar to Lauren Bacall or Veronica Lake. Scott's smoky sensuality and husky voice lent itself to the film noir genre and, beginning with The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946) starring Barbara Stanwyck and Van Heflin, the studio cast her in a series of noir thrillers. Film historian Eddie Muller has noted that no other actress has appeared in so many noir films, with more than three quarters of her 20 films qualifying.[2]
Don DeFore and Lizabeth Scott in a promotional still from Too Late for Tears.
The dark blonde actress was initially compared to Bacall because of a slight resemblance and a similar voice, even more so after she starred with Bacall's husband, Humphrey Bogart, in the 1947 noir thriller Dead Reckoning. At the age of 25, Scott's billing and portrait were equal to Bogart's on the film's lobby posters and in advertisements. The film was the first of many femme fatale roles for Scott.
She also starred in Desert Fury (1947), a noir filmed in Technicolor, with John Hodiak, Burt Lancaster, Wendell Corey and Mary Astor. In it, she played Paula Haller, who, on her return from college, falls for gangster Eddie Bendix (Hodiak), and faces a great deal of opposition from the others. Scott was paired with Lancaster, Corey and Kirk Douglas in Wallis' I Walk Alone (1948), a noirish story of betrayal and vengeance. In 1949, she starred as a vicious femme fatale in Too Late for Tears. The film is unusual for featuring her as the main character, rather than the supporting role most women were relegated to in film noirs of the period.
Having being known professionally as Lizabeth Scott for 4½ years, she appeared at the courthouse in Los Angeles, on October 20, 1949 and had her name legally changed. Another courtroom appearance came several years later, in 1955, when she sued Confidential magazine for stating that she spent her off-work hours with "Hollywood's weird society of baritone babes" (a euphemism for a lesbian) in an article which claimed Scott's name was found on the clients' list belonging to a call-girl agency. The suit was dismissed on a technicality. After completing Loving You in 1957, Elvis Presley's second film, Scott retired from the screen. Later that year, she recorded her album, Lizabeth. The next few years saw Scott occasionally guest-star on television, including a 1963 episode of Burke's Law.
published:07 Dec 2011
views:4212
Howard Stern- Corey Feldman Talks to Scott's Son as Donatello (Part 1 of 3)
04/07/93: Howard scolds Gary for having Corey Feldman on too much. Then later, Howard calls Scott's 7 year old son so that Corey can speak to him as Donatell...
04/07/93: Howard scolds Gary for having Corey Feldman on too much. Then later, Howard calls Scott's 7 year old son so that Corey can speak to him as Donatell...
Basic Income is the idea that everybody should get $1,000 every month no matter what. Sounds crazy, right? Well, it's totally not and Scott Santens is going to tell us why. He's one of the main spokespeople for Basic Income, which is gaining steam around the world.
Join the ‘Redactivist’ movement online...
Subscribe to the Redacted Tonight YouTube channel for more comedy news with saber tooth tiger teeth: http://youtube.com/user/RedactedTonight
Find Redacted Tonight on Facebook for source material about our stories and daily updates:
http://facebook.com/RedactedTonight
Follow us on Twitter for funny, informative info and to participate in our weekly ‘Redactivist’ hashtag:
http://twitter.com/RedactedTonight
Visit Lee Camp’s official site to listen to the ‘Moment of Clarity: The Backstage of Redacted Tonight’ podcast w/ Lee and John F.O’Donnell:
http://leecamp.net
Basic Income is the idea that everybody should get $1,000 every month no matter what. Sounds crazy, right? Well, it's totally not and Scott Santens is going to tell us why. He's one of the main spokespeople for Basic Income, which is gaining steam around the world.
Join the ‘Redactivist’ movement online...
Subscribe to the Redacted Tonight YouTube channel for more comedy news with saber tooth tiger teeth: http://youtube.com/user/RedactedTonight
Find Redacted Tonight on Facebook for source material about our stories and daily updates:
http://facebook.com/RedactedTonight
Follow us on Twitter for funny, informative info and to participate in our weekly ‘Redactivist’ hashtag:
http://twitter.com/RedactedTonight
Visit Lee Camp’s official site to listen to the ‘Moment of Clarity: The Backstage of Redacted Tonight’ podcast w/ Lee and John F.O’Donnell:
http://leecamp.net
published:11 Jul 2015
views:98
Corey Feldman on Drugs, Young Celebrity Deaths and New Life
Subscribe http://bit.ly/mrSda2 http://www.youtube.com/maximotv http://www.maximotv.com Maximo TV - License this clip Corey Feldman (The Two Coreys, Lost Boys...
Subscribe http://bit.ly/mrSda2 http://www.youtube.com/maximotv http://www.maximotv.com Maximo TV - License this clip Corey Feldman (The Two Coreys, Lost Boys...
Richie Kamuca Quintet, Los Angeles: KABC studios, 7 April 1958. Stars of Jazz (1956-1958) Program #14). Richie Kamuca, tenor saxophone and leader Frank Rosolino, trombone Scott LaFaro, bass Victor Feldman, piano Stan Levey, drums
Richie Kamuca Quintet, Los Angeles: KABC studios, 7 April 1958. Stars of Jazz (1956-1958) Program #14). Richie Kamuca, tenor saxophone and leader Frank Rosolino, trombone Scott LaFaro, bass Victor Feldman, piano Stan Levey, drums
5/1/13: Scott Feldman goes the distance and gives up just two runs against the Padres, striking out 12 Check out http://MLB.com/video for more!About MLB.com:...
0:23
Scott Feldman throws bullpen at Astros camp Feb. 21, 2015
Scott Feldman throws bullpen at Astros camp Feb. 21, 2015...
published:21 Feb 2015
Scott Feldman throws bullpen at Astros camp Feb. 21, 2015
Scott Feldman throws bullpen at Astros camp Feb. 21, 2015
published:21 Feb 2015
views:238
Scott Feldman throws bullpen at Astros camp Feb. 21, 2015
0:48
Scott Feldman's 1st start of 2012 4/25/12 New York Yankees
April 25 2012 at Rangers Ballpark in Arlington....
www.twitter.com/themlbtalk101 Midway through the 2013 campaign, at 47-36 the Baltimore Orioles have proven that 2012 was no fluke. In fact, it can be argued ...
1:01
Chicago Cubs vs Texas Rangers at Wrigley Field May 6 Scott Feldman
The Texas Rangers came to Wrigley Field on 5/6/13. Scott Feldman was on the mound for the ...
DI-Why founder interviews Blink 182 at the California Midstate Fair in Paso Robles 2004
...
published:26 Sep 2011
Rare Blink 182 interview 2004
Rare Blink 182 interview 2004
published:26 Sep 2011
views:842
DI-Why founder interviews Blink 182 at the California Midstate Fair in Paso Robles 2004
http://www.DI-Why.com
41:50
Interview With Death Row Serial Killer - Douglas Feldman - Werner Herzog Full Do
Sentenced to death on September 22, 1999. Executed by lethal injection in Texas on July 31...
published:07 Jan 2015
Interview With Death Row Serial Killer - Douglas Feldman - Werner Herzog Full Do
Interview With Death Row Serial Killer - Douglas Feldman - Werner Herzog Full Do
published:07 Jan 2015
views:24
Sentenced to death on September 22, 1999. Executed by lethal injection in Texas on July 31, 2013.Learn more about "It Can Wait" at: .
Xzavier, Chandler, Debbie, and Reggie all know the horrors of texting & driving firsthand. Acclaimed director Werner Herzog tells their stories in this powerful It Can Wait Documentary. Learn about the dangers of texting while driving and take the pledge at .
Visit to learn more about AT&T;'s commitment to end texting and driving.See the great German filmaker get shot in the gut while giving an interview to the BBC - a couple of months later he pulled Jaquin Phoenix from a car wreck in LA. That's nothing, you should see his films! "Grizzly Man", "Rescue Dawn", "Fitzcaralldo", "Aguire: Wrath of God", "Even Dwarfs Started Small".Uncompromising German film director Werner Herzog reads the children's classic Where's WaldoWhat is David Lynch’s favorite Werner Herzog film?
This is an excerpt from An Evening with David Lynch, an intimate conversation with the filmmaker moderated by film critic Carrie Rickey, on Saturday, September 13, 2014, at Bryn Mawr Film Institute.
For the full program, clips, and more, visit Youtube.com/BrynMawrFilm and BrynMawrFilm.org
This event and A Celebration of David Lynch Cinema Classics Film Series was presented in conjunction with DAVID LYNCH: THE UNIFIED FIELD at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts (PAFA), the first major U.S. museum exhibition of PAFA alumnus David Lynch, on view from September 13, 2014 to January 11, 2015.
Video provided by SpectiCast.In the summer of 2013 acclaimed filmmaker "Werner Herzog" visited the city of Winnipeg.
Thanks to Mike Marynuick for letting Werner critic his film.
Thanks to everyone at the film group for making camp as fantastic as it was
Performance by Jared
Filmed by Candace
Edited by MikeA heartfelt homage to my fav. actor + director.
Scenes from "Mein Liebster Feind"/"My Best Fiend" by Herzog
in which the brillant German director describes his troubled cinematic relationship
with fellow German actor Klaus Kinski, through many behind the scenes footage
and parts of the duo's greatest films.
----------------------------------------Adrián M.
En homenaje a mi actor preferido, así como a mi director preferido.
Las escenas son del documental "Mein Liebster Feind"/"Mi Querido Enemigo" de Herzog,
en el cual el brillante director Alemán describe la complicada relación cinematográfica
con su compatriota el actor Klaus Kinski, utilizando muchas filmaciones detrás de cámaras
y partes de las más grandes películas creadas por este dúo de "dementes" geniales.Please Watch, Important Documentary Against Texting While Driving --- Visit to take the pledge, and learn more about the dangers of texting while driving. --- Acclaimed filmmaker Werner Herzog's wants to bring an end to the scourge of texting while driving once and for all — and he just might do it. In a powerful 35-minute PSA entitled From One Second to the Next, Herzog hauntingly and painfully documents the tragic testimonies of individuals who have shattered lives and have had their lives shattered as a direct result of texting and driving.
The project, part of AT&T;'s "It Can Wait" campaign, was distributed yesterday to over 40,000 high schools across the country.
"There's a completely new culture out there," Herzog told the Associated Press. "I'm not a participant of texting and driving — or texting at all — but I see there's something going on in civilization which is coming with great vehemence at us."WE BELIEVE IN WERNER HERZOG .
7:42
Jacqueline Jax Interviews Corey Feldman for Exposure the Movie
http://www.AvALiveRadio.com See more interviews: http://youtu.be/vCNzE_5dEzs Jacqueline Ja...
http://www.AvALiveRadio.com See more interviews: http://youtu.be/vCNzE_5dEzs Jacqueline Jax interviews Corey Feldman about his new movie Exposure, produced b...
34:25
Career Journey Interview with Mel Feldman
This is an interview with Mel Feldman where I talk about my career journey. It's been a bi...
http://www.AvALiveRadio.com See her interview with Actor/Musician Corey Feldman: http://youtu.be/nxBp2EMDL_s Join host Jacqueline Jax as she interviews Gordo...
9:12
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 1 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 1 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Car...
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 1 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996. Lizabeth Scott (born Sept...
9:47
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 2 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 2 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Car...
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 2 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996. Lizabeth Scott (born Sept...
9:36
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 3 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 3 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Car...
published:04 Oct 2011
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 3 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 3 of 8
published:04 Oct 2011
views:5554
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 3 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996.
Lizabeth Scott (born September 29, 1922) is an American actress and singer widely known for her film noir roles.
She was born Emma Matzo (some sources mistakenly give her family name as "Motzas") in the Pine Brook section of Scranton, Pennsylvania, one of six children, to Ruthenian parents who had emigrated from Uzhgorod, in what is now Ukraine. She attended Central High School and Marywood College (now Marywood University).
She later went to New York City and attended the Alvienne School of Drama. In late 1942, she was eking out a precarious living with a small Midtown Manhattan summer stock company when she got a job as understudy for Tallulah Bankhead in Thornton Wilder's play The Skin of Our Teeth. However, Scott never had an opportunity to substitute for Bankhead.
When Miriam Hopkins was signed to replace Bankhead, Scott quit and returned to her drama studies and some fashion modeling. She then received a call that Gladys George, who was signed to replace Hopkins, was ill, and Scott was needed back at the theatre. She went on in the leading role of "Sabina", receiving a nod of approval from critics at the age of 20. The following night, George was out again and Scott went on in her place.
Soon afterward, Scott was at the Stork Club when film producer Hal Wallis asked who she was, unaware that an aide had already arranged an interview with her for the following day. When Scott returned home, however, she found a telegram offering her the lead for the Boston run of The Skin of Our Teeth. She could not turn it down. She sent Wallis her apologies and went on the road.
Though the Broadway production, in which she was credited as "Girl", christened her "Elizabeth", she dropped the "e" the day after the opening night in Boston, "just to be different".
A photograph of Scott in Harper's Bazaar magazine was seen by film agent Charles Feldman. He admired the fashion pose and took her on as a client. Scott made her first screen test at Warner Brothers, where she and Wallis finally met. Though the test was bad, the producer recognized her potential. As soon as Wallis set up shop at Paramount, she was signed to a contract. Her film debut was in You Came Along (1945) opposite Robert Cummings.
Paramount publicity dubbed Scott "The Threat," in order to create an onscreen persona for her similar to Lauren Bacall or Veronica Lake. Scott's smoky sensuality and husky voice lent itself to the film noir genre and, beginning with The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946) starring Barbara Stanwyck and Van Heflin, the studio cast her in a series of noir thrillers. Film historian Eddie Muller has noted that no other actress has appeared in so many noir films, with more than three quarters of her 20 films qualifying.[2]
Don DeFore and Lizabeth Scott in a promotional still from Too Late for Tears.
The dark blonde actress was initially compared to Bacall because of a slight resemblance and a similar voice, even more so after she starred with Bacall's husband, Humphrey Bogart, in the 1947 noir thriller Dead Reckoning. At the age of 25, Scott's billing and portrait were equal to Bogart's on the film's lobby posters and in advertisements. The film was the first of many femme fatale roles for Scott.
She also starred in Desert Fury (1947), a noir filmed in Technicolor, with John Hodiak, Burt Lancaster, Wendell Corey and Mary Astor. In it, she played Paula Haller, who, on her return from college, falls for gangster Eddie Bendix (Hodiak), and faces a great deal of opposition from the others. Scott was paired with Lancaster, Corey and Kirk Douglas in Wallis' I Walk Alone (1948), a noirish story of betrayal and vengeance. In 1949, she starred as a vicious femme fatale in Too Late for Tears. The film is unusual for featuring her as the main character, rather than the supporting role most women were relegated to in film noirs of the period.
Having being known professionally as Lizabeth Scott for 4½ years, she appeared at the courthouse in Los Angeles, on October 20, 1949 and had her name legally changed. Another courtroom appearance came several years later, in 1955, when she sued Confidential magazine for stating that she spent her off-work hours with "Hollywood's weird society of baritone babes" (a euphemism for a lesbian) in an article which claimed Scott's name was found on the clients' list belonging to a call-girl agency. The suit was dismissed on a technicality. After completing Loving You in 1957, Elvis Presley's second film, Scott retired from the screen. Later that year, she recorded her album, Lizabeth. The next few years saw Scott occasionally guest-star on television, including a 1963 episode of Burke's Law.
9:59
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 5 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 5 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Car...
published:05 Oct 2011
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 5 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 5 of 8
published:05 Oct 2011
views:5049
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 5 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996.
Lizabeth Scott (born September 29, 1922) is an American actress and singer widely known for her film noir roles.
She was born Emma Matzo (some sources mistakenly give her family name as "Motzas") in the Pine Brook section of Scranton, Pennsylvania, one of six children, to Ruthenian parents who had emigrated from Uzhgorod, in what is now Ukraine. She attended Central High School and Marywood College (now Marywood University).
She later went to New York City and attended the Alvienne School of Drama. In late 1942, she was eking out a precarious living with a small Midtown Manhattan summer stock company when she got a job as understudy for Tallulah Bankhead in Thornton Wilder's play The Skin of Our Teeth. However, Scott never had an opportunity to substitute for Bankhead.
When Miriam Hopkins was signed to replace Bankhead, Scott quit and returned to her drama studies and some fashion modeling. She then received a call that Gladys George, who was signed to replace Hopkins, was ill, and Scott was needed back at the theatre. She went on in the leading role of "Sabina", receiving a nod of approval from critics at the age of 20. The following night, George was out again and Scott went on in her place.
Soon afterward, Scott was at the Stork Club when film producer Hal Wallis asked who she was, unaware that an aide had already arranged an interview with her for the following day. When Scott returned home, however, she found a telegram offering her the lead for the Boston run of The Skin of Our Teeth. She could not turn it down. She sent Wallis her apologies and went on the road.
Though the Broadway production, in which she was credited as "Girl", christened her "Elizabeth", she dropped the "e" the day after the opening night in Boston, "just to be different".
A photograph of Scott in Harper's Bazaar magazine was seen by film agent Charles Feldman. He admired the fashion pose and took her on as a client. Scott made her first screen test at Warner Brothers, where she and Wallis finally met. Though the test was bad, the producer recognized her potential. As soon as Wallis set up shop at Paramount, she was signed to a contract. Her film debut was in You Came Along (1945) opposite Robert Cummings.
Paramount publicity dubbed Scott "The Threat," in order to create an onscreen persona for her similar to Lauren Bacall or Veronica Lake. Scott's smoky sensuality and husky voice lent itself to the film noir genre and, beginning with The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946) starring Barbara Stanwyck and Van Heflin, the studio cast her in a series of noir thrillers. Film historian Eddie Muller has noted that no other actress has appeared in so many noir films, with more than three quarters of her 20 films qualifying.[2]
Don DeFore and Lizabeth Scott in a promotional still from Too Late for Tears.
The dark blonde actress was initially compared to Bacall because of a slight resemblance and a similar voice, even more so after she starred with Bacall's husband, Humphrey Bogart, in the 1947 noir thriller Dead Reckoning. At the age of 25, Scott's billing and portrait were equal to Bogart's on the film's lobby posters and in advertisements. The film was the first of many femme fatale roles for Scott.
She also starred in Desert Fury (1947), a noir filmed in Technicolor, with John Hodiak, Burt Lancaster, Wendell Corey and Mary Astor. In it, she played Paula Haller, who, on her return from college, falls for gangster Eddie Bendix (Hodiak), and faces a great deal of opposition from the others. Scott was paired with Lancaster, Corey and Kirk Douglas in Wallis' I Walk Alone (1948), a noirish story of betrayal and vengeance. In 1949, she starred as a vicious femme fatale in Too Late for Tears. The film is unusual for featuring her as the main character, rather than the supporting role most women were relegated to in film noirs of the period.
Having being known professionally as Lizabeth Scott for 4½ years, she appeared at the courthouse in Los Angeles, on October 20, 1949 and had her name legally changed. Another courtroom appearance came several years later, in 1955, when she sued Confidential magazine for stating that she spent her off-work hours with "Hollywood's weird society of baritone babes" (a euphemism for a lesbian) in an article which claimed Scott's name was found on the clients' list belonging to a call-girl agency. The suit was dismissed on a technicality. After completing Loving You in 1957, Elvis Presley's second film, Scott retired from the screen. Later that year, she recorded her album, Lizabeth. The next few years saw Scott occasionally guest-star on television, including a 1963 episode of Burke's Law.
8:59
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 6 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 6 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Car...
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 6 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996. Lizabeth Scott (born Sept...
7:30
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 8 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 8 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Car...
published:07 Dec 2011
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 8 of 8
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 8 of 8
published:07 Dec 2011
views:4212
Lizabeth Scott 1996 Interview Part 8 of 8. Videographed by Luke Sacher, interviewed by Carole Langer at Janet Leigh's home in 1996.
Lizabeth Scott (born September 29, 1922) is an American actress and singer widely known for her film noir roles.
She was born Emma Matzo (some sources mistakenly give her family name as "Motzas") in the Pine Brook section of Scranton, Pennsylvania, one of six children, to Ruthenian parents who had emigrated from Uzhgorod, in what is now Ukraine. She attended Central High School and Marywood College (now Marywood University).
She later went to New York City and attended the Alvienne School of Drama. In late 1942, she was eking out a precarious living with a small Midtown Manhattan summer stock company when she got a job as understudy for Tallulah Bankhead in Thornton Wilder's play The Skin of Our Teeth. However, Scott never had an opportunity to substitute for Bankhead.
When Miriam Hopkins was signed to replace Bankhead, Scott quit and returned to her drama studies and some fashion modeling. She then received a call that Gladys George, who was signed to replace Hopkins, was ill, and Scott was needed back at the theatre. She went on in the leading role of "Sabina", receiving a nod of approval from critics at the age of 20. The following night, George was out again and Scott went on in her place.
Soon afterward, Scott was at the Stork Club when film producer Hal Wallis asked who she was, unaware that an aide had already arranged an interview with her for the following day. When Scott returned home, however, she found a telegram offering her the lead for the Boston run of The Skin of Our Teeth. She could not turn it down. She sent Wallis her apologies and went on the road.
Though the Broadway production, in which she was credited as "Girl", christened her "Elizabeth", she dropped the "e" the day after the opening night in Boston, "just to be different".
A photograph of Scott in Harper's Bazaar magazine was seen by film agent Charles Feldman. He admired the fashion pose and took her on as a client. Scott made her first screen test at Warner Brothers, where she and Wallis finally met. Though the test was bad, the producer recognized her potential. As soon as Wallis set up shop at Paramount, she was signed to a contract. Her film debut was in You Came Along (1945) opposite Robert Cummings.
Paramount publicity dubbed Scott "The Threat," in order to create an onscreen persona for her similar to Lauren Bacall or Veronica Lake. Scott's smoky sensuality and husky voice lent itself to the film noir genre and, beginning with The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946) starring Barbara Stanwyck and Van Heflin, the studio cast her in a series of noir thrillers. Film historian Eddie Muller has noted that no other actress has appeared in so many noir films, with more than three quarters of her 20 films qualifying.[2]
Don DeFore and Lizabeth Scott in a promotional still from Too Late for Tears.
The dark blonde actress was initially compared to Bacall because of a slight resemblance and a similar voice, even more so after she starred with Bacall's husband, Humphrey Bogart, in the 1947 noir thriller Dead Reckoning. At the age of 25, Scott's billing and portrait were equal to Bogart's on the film's lobby posters and in advertisements. The film was the first of many femme fatale roles for Scott.
She also starred in Desert Fury (1947), a noir filmed in Technicolor, with John Hodiak, Burt Lancaster, Wendell Corey and Mary Astor. In it, she played Paula Haller, who, on her return from college, falls for gangster Eddie Bendix (Hodiak), and faces a great deal of opposition from the others. Scott was paired with Lancaster, Corey and Kirk Douglas in Wallis' I Walk Alone (1948), a noirish story of betrayal and vengeance. In 1949, she starred as a vicious femme fatale in Too Late for Tears. The film is unusual for featuring her as the main character, rather than the supporting role most women were relegated to in film noirs of the period.
Having being known professionally as Lizabeth Scott for 4½ years, she appeared at the courthouse in Los Angeles, on October 20, 1949 and had her name legally changed. Another courtroom appearance came several years later, in 1955, when she sued Confidential magazine for stating that she spent her off-work hours with "Hollywood's weird society of baritone babes" (a euphemism for a lesbian) in an article which claimed Scott's name was found on the clients' list belonging to a call-girl agency. The suit was dismissed on a technicality. After completing Loving You in 1957, Elvis Presley's second film, Scott retired from the screen. Later that year, she recorded her album, Lizabeth. The next few years saw Scott occasionally guest-star on television, including a 1963 episode of Burke's Law.
14:31
Howard Stern- Corey Feldman Talks to Scott's Son as Donatello (Part 1 of 3)
04/07/93: Howard scolds Gary for having Corey Feldman on too much. Then later, Howard call...
04/07/93: Howard scolds Gary for having Corey Feldman on too much. Then later, Howard calls Scott's 7 year old son so that Corey can speak to him as Donatell...
26:02
WEB EXCLUSIVE: Interview on Basic Income with Scott Santens
Basic Income is the idea that everybody should get $1,000 every month no matter what. Soun...
published:11 Jul 2015
WEB EXCLUSIVE: Interview on Basic Income with Scott Santens
WEB EXCLUSIVE: Interview on Basic Income with Scott Santens
published:11 Jul 2015
views:98
Basic Income is the idea that everybody should get $1,000 every month no matter what. Sounds crazy, right? Well, it's totally not and Scott Santens is going to tell us why. He's one of the main spokespeople for Basic Income, which is gaining steam around the world.
Join the ‘Redactivist’ movement online...
Subscribe to the Redacted Tonight YouTube channel for more comedy news with saber tooth tiger teeth: http://youtube.com/user/RedactedTonight
Find Redacted Tonight on Facebook for source material about our stories and daily updates:
http://facebook.com/RedactedTonight
Follow us on Twitter for funny, informative info and to participate in our weekly ‘Redactivist’ hashtag:
http://twitter.com/RedactedTonight
Visit Lee Camp’s official site to listen to the ‘Moment of Clarity: The Backstage of Redacted Tonight’ podcast w/ Lee and John F.O’Donnell:
http://leecamp.net
ISTANBUL. Heart-rending pictures of a toddler's lifeless body washed ashore on a Turkish beach sparked horror on Wednesday as the cost of Europe's growing refugee crisis hit home. The images of a tiny child lying face down in the surf at one of Turkey's main tourist resorts has once more put a human face on the dangers faced by tens of thousands of desperate people who risk life and limb to seek a new life in Europe ... "....
"If Israel attacks Iran according to that deal, I believe... that we have to fight with Iran against Israel," Republican presidential candidate tells CNN ... ....
About 40kg (88 lb) of wool has been sheared from a sheep found near Australia’s capital, the RSPCA said on Thursday, making him unofficially the world’s woolliest ... Reuters ....
Beijing. China launched a major military parade through Beijing on Thursday to commemorate Japan’s World War II defeat while underlining PresidentXi Jinping’s determination to make his country Asia’s pre-eminent power ...Secretary GeneralBan Ki-moon. “The experience of war makes people value peace even more,” Xi said ... The events also minimize the role of the U.S., Britain and others ... ....
It happens...ScottKazmir yielded seven hits and three runs — two earned — in 4 1-3 innings, which was his shortest start since a trade to Houston on June 23 ... An MRI on the right shoulder of RHPScottFeldman revealed no damage and he received a cortisone injection to calm the inflammation in his shoulder. Feldman left Tuesday's start after 2 2-3 innings with discomfort in his throwing shoulder ... Scott Kazmir ... ScottFeldman....
Al MelchiorData Analyst. Follow Al. Sep ... . Note ... Aug ... Fortunately for Gutierrez, the Mariners have faced an unusually heavy load of lefty starters in recent weeks, but on Tuesday, he got the nod to be the team's designated hitter against Astros righty ScottFeldman. Gutierrez responded by depositing a Feldman curveball in the left field seats. That may not have been the stiffest test, as Feldman was dealing with shoulder inflammation ... ....
Houston Astros starter ScottFeldman has left Tuesday night's game against the Seattle Mariners with discomfort in his right shoulder ...Feldman struggled with command Tuesday, walking five and allowing three hits ......
Astros starter ScottFeldman left the game in the third inning after experiencing discomfort in his right shoulder, trailing, 3-1 ...Feldman injured ... More > Feldman exits ballgame ... Feldman exits the ballgame in the 3rd ... ScottFeldman exits the ballgame in the 3rd inning after being attended to by trainers ... LeftyScottKazmir (7-9, 2.45) gets the start in the series finale against the Mariners at 7.10 p.m....
HOUSTON — ScottFeldman led the American League with a 1.33 ERA in August ...Feldman walked two straight batters before grimacing after a pitch to Mark Trumbo that resulted in a fly out for the second out of the third inning ... "It was just one of those nights where it was going to be a battle," Feldman said ... After replacing Feldman, Velasquez promptly allowed a single to Brad Miller that made it 3-1 ... ScottFeldman....
Roenis Elias vs. ScottFeldman, 5.10pmQuick one today, as Feldman’s a well-known quantity and because there’ve been so many moves, they deserve a separate post. To refresh your memory, Feldman’s a cutter/sinker guy with a curve as his breaking b...... ....
Houston starter ScottFeldman left the game with right shoulder discomfort after walking five and giving up three hits and three runs in 2 2-3 innings ...Seth Smith followed with a triple before the Mariners added another run after Feldman walked three consecutive batters with two outs in the inning ... Seattle'sTaijuan Walker (10-7, 4.53) opposes ScottKazmir (7-9, 2.45) when the series wraps up on Wednesday....
It was ScottFeldman who put Houston in an early hole, walking five and allowing three runs in just 3 1/3 innings ... The righty rookie took over after Feldman’s erratic innings and immediately stabilized the game for Houston ... Given Feldman’s uncertain status, Velasquez may even be called on for a spot start going forward....
The Astros (73-59) were at it again on Monday night slugging three home runs to back the six hit, eight strikeout performance of Dallas Keuchel in an 8-3 win over the Seattle Mariners (61-71) at Minute Maid Park. One night after giving up seven runs and having a streak of 11 consecutive games of allowing three runs or less snapped, the Astros started a new one ...Houston will hand the ball to ScottFeldman in game two of the game set ... ....