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ACTRESSES WHO DIED 1960
Margaret Sullavan at 50 from barbiturate overdose
Phyllis Haver at 71 from barbiturate overdose
Diana Barrymore at 38 from suicide
Doris Weston at 42 from cancer
Véra Clouzot at 46 from heart attack
Henny Porten at 70 from illness
Lya Mara at 62 from unknown events
Alice Moore at 44 from unknown events
Dimples Cooper at 46 from suicide
Lynn Baggett at 36 from barbiturate overdose
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The Mob (1951)
"Want a room?"
"Nah, I just came in to admire the decorations."
"Three bucks a day."
"What's that include?"
"Sheets on the bed."
"You got a register?"
"Don't be funny."
"Here, take my stuff upstairs."
"This ain't the Waldorf, friend."
"How long d'ya work here before you found that out?"
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Screenland Magazine Vol. 54, No. 10. August, 1950. Original Caption: Nick Cravat, Lynne Baggett, and Burt Lancaster clowning around between scenes of the spectacular "The Flame and The Arrow," Warner release co-starring Burt and Virginia Mayo.
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Edmond O´Brien-Lynne Baggett "Con las horas contadas" (D. O. A.) 1949, de Rudolph Maté.
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Lynne Baggett (American actress, 1923-1960)
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Errol Flynn, Journalists Bill Brogdon, Hub Keavey, W R Wilkinson, actors Juanita Stark, Nancy Coleman , Dennis Morgan, columnist Hedda Hopper actors, Faye Emerson ,Lynn Baggett and Julie Bishop pose outside the airplane they took to Mexico City for the Mexican premiere of director Michael Curtiz's film, 'Yankee Doodle Dandy,' benefiting the Mexican Red Cross Drive 01/01/1943
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Lynne Baggett
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Lynn Baggett
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Lynn Baggett
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Lynn Baggett, 1940′s
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Edmond O’Brien and Lynn Baggett in
D.O.A (1950)
Director: Rudolph Mate
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Lynne Bagggett (Wichita Falls, Texas, 10/05/1923-Hollywood, California, 22/04/1960).
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Lynne Baggett
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D.O.A. (1950) is a film noir drama film directed by Rudolph Maté, considered a classic of the stylistic genre. The frantically-paced plot revolves around a doomed man's quest to find out who has poisoned him – and why – before he dies. The film begins with a scene called "perhaps one of cinema's most innovative opening sequences" by a BBC reviewer. The scene is a long, behind-the-back tracking sequence featuring Frank Bigelow (O'Brien) walking through a hallway into a police station to report a murder: his own. Disconcertingly, the police almost seem to have been expecting him and already know who he is.
Credits
Edmond O'Brien - Frank Bigelow
Pamela Britton - Paula Gibson
Luther Adler - Majak
Beverly Garland - Miss Foster
Lynne Baggett - Mrs. Philips
William Ching - Holliday
Henry Hart - Stanley Philips
Neville Brand - Chester
Laurette Luez - Marla Rakubian
Jess Kirkpatrick - Sam
Cay Forester - Sue
Virginia Lee - Jeanie
Michael Ross - Dave
Lawrence Dobkin - Dr. Schaefer
Frank Gerstle - Dr. MacDonald
Carol Hughes - Kitty
Fred Jaquet - Dr. Matson
Donna Sanborn - Nurse
Director: Rudolph Mate
Writers: Russell Rouse, Clarence Greene
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