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American Roman Cosmic religious sis, and erstwhile actress

Dolores Hart

Dolores Hart 1959.JPG

Hart in 1959

Built-in

Dolores Hicks


(1938-10-xx) October 20, 1938 (age 83) [1]

Chicago, Illinois, U.S.

Nationality American
Alma mater Marymount Higher
Years agile 1963–present (religious)
1957–1963 (actress)

Dolores Hart, O.Due south.B., (born Dolores Hicks; October 20, 1938) is an American Roman Catholic Benedictine nun who was a prominent actress. Following her movie debut with Elvis Presley in Loving You (1957), she made 10 films in five years, including Wild is the Wind (1957), King Creole (1958), and Where the Boys Are (1960). By the early 1960s an established leading lady, she "stunned Hollywood"[2] by announcing that she would forgo her life as an actress, leaving behind her career to enter the Abbey of Regina Laudis monastery in Connecticut, where she serves her monastic customs.[3]

Background [edit]

Built-in Dolores Hicks, she was the but child of actor Bert Hicks and Harriett Hicks, who separated when she was three years onetime, and ultimately divorced. She stated, "As a child I was precocious. My parents married when they were sixteen and 17 and both were cute people. Moss Hart offered my mother, Harriett, a contract merely by so they had me and my father, Bert Hicks, a bit player, definitely a Clark Gable blazon, had flick offers and then he moved from Chicago to Hollywood, I was a Hollywood brat. He lived in Beverly Hills and I used to visit the lots with him. He had a scrap office in Forever Amber. I always wanted to be part of that life."[four]

Hicks was also related past spousal relationship, through an aunt, to singer Mario Lanza. She lived in Chicago with her grandparents, who sent her to a parochial schoolhouse, St. Gregory Cosmic School, not for its religious education but it was closest to dwelling house and she stated, "My grandparents didn't want me to get run over by streetcars."[ citation needed ] It was actually her gramps, a moving-picture show theater projectionist to whom she turned for condolement in lite of her parents' marital problems, whose enthusiasm for films influenced her conclusion to pursue an acting career. She would watch the films, but without sound and then as non to disturb his naps in the berth, and her job was to wake him at the stop of each reel.[1]

Hicks converted to Catholicism when she was x. By historic period xi, she was living again in Beverly Hills with her mother, a restaurant greeter, who married owner Al Gordon. Subsequently high school, she studied at Marymount College. Using the stage name of 'Dolores Hart' in 1956 she was signed to play a supporting role as the love interest to Elvis Presley in the 1957 release Loving You. After this appearance, Hart plant herself in frequent demand, and she made two more films before appearing with Presley again in 1958's King Creole. She has denied ever having had an 'intimate' relationship with Presley off-screen. In interviews during her motion-picture show career she was often asked, "What is it like kissing Elvis?" She chuckled a bit at the retention, "I think the limit for a screen kiss dorsum so was something like 15 seconds. That ane has lasted 40 years." Hart then made her debut on Broadway, winning a 1959 Theatre Earth Award too every bit a Tony Award nomination for Best Featured Extra for her role in The Pleasure of His Company.

Dolores Hart and Elvis Presley

In 1960, Hart starred in Where the Boys Are, a teenage comedy most higher students on spring pause, which developed a near cult-like following.[5] In the film Hart plays a co-ed who struggles to define herself when confronted with her newly discovered sexuality and popularity with the contrary sex activity.[half dozen] Hart starred in the film Francis of Assisi in 1961, in which she played Saint Clare of Assisi. She as well made a sketch of a St. Francis statue, artillery outstretched, while working on the pic.[four] She went on to star in four more films, including the lead role of Lisa in The Inspector, which was based on a novel by Jan de Hartog, and nominated for a Gold World for "All-time Picture – Drama".

In 1963 Hart appeared every bit Kathy Maywood on The Virginian in the episode "The Mountain of the Sun". Hart played a Catholic missionary, who against all warnings risks her life to honour both her vows to God and her desire to continue her dead hubby'southward work to help a customs of poor and sick embattled Indian tribes. It was peradventure a foreshadowing of her soonhoped-for religious life. Information technology was her concluding released acting role(April 17, 1963), a calendar month after Hart's final film role in Come Fly with Me with Hugh O'Brian. At this bespeak she had fabricated up her mind to leave the film industry. The 24-year-sometime actress became a Roman Catholic nun at the Benedictine Abbey of Regina Laudis in Bethlehem, Connecticut. On a 1963 New York promotional finish for Come Wing with Me, she took a i-way machine ride to the abbey in 1963 (merely not in a limousine as reported).

It was during the filming of Come Fly With Me that she became shut friends with Karl Malden, who also starred in the picture. Malden wrote in his autobiography When Do I Showtime? that when he and his wife Mona wanted to go out, Dolores would spend time babysitting their kids. She adored the Maldens' children and quickly became similar a member of the family unit. It was before long afterwards the motion-picture show that Dolores got engaged and she actually asked Malden'southward daughters Mila and Carla to be her bridesmaids. It was subsequently they had a couple of fittings on their dresses that Dolores appeared at the Maldens' and announced she was calling off the nuptials. A few days later she came over with what amounted to all her worldly possessions, jewelry, purses and knick-knacks, and told the girls to take what they wanted. She said she was moving abroad and that information technology was "an thing of the eye" (her exact words quoted by Malden).[7] She non just left behind her fiancé, she left her acting career too.

Even though she broke off her appointment to Los Angeles architect Don Robinson (April 16, 1933 – November 29, 2011), they remained close friends: she admitted she loved him—"Of course, Don, I love yous." But Robinson said, "Every love doesn't have to current of air up at the altar." He never married, and visited her every year at Christmas and Easter at the abbey in Connecticut until his expiry.[8] [9] [10] [eleven]

Vocational calling [edit]

While Hart was making Francis of Assisi in Rome, she met Pope John XXIII, who was instrumental in her vocation. She told him "I am Dolores Hart, the actress playing Clare." The Pontiff replied, "Tu sei Chiara!" ("No, you are Clare!" in Italian).[12]

Every bit a novice, she told the abbey founder Lady Abbess Benedict Duss, "I will never take to worry once more nigh existence an extra because it was all over and backside me." But Lady Abbess replied, "I'thou pitiful, but you lot're completely incorrect. Now you accept to accept up a office and actually piece of work at information technology." Hart submitted a rejoinder, "I was and then mad when she said that because I really emptied my pockets, and so to speak, and literally had given abroad everything that had meant annihilation to me." The Abbess said, "I'grand sad you did that because there's a lot of things you gave away that you're going to need here." She initially took the religious name Sis Judith, but she changed information technology to Sister Dolores for her final vows. "Hal Wallis wanted to phone call me Susan when I started my movie career, merely I was under age and my mother would not hear of it. She wanted me to be Dolores."[4] She took her final vows in 1970.[1] She chants in Latin eight times a 24-hour interval.[13]

Hart visited Hollywood again in 2006 later on 43 years in the monastery to heighten awareness for idiopathic peripheral neuropathy disorder, a neurological disorder that afflicts her and many Americans. In April 2006 she testified at a Washington congressional hearing on the need for research of the painful and crippling disease amid her ordeal.[fourteen]

Hart, who was compared to Grace Kelly, was instrumental in developing the Abbey of Regina Laudis's project of expansion of its customs connection through the arts, using her fame. Paul Newman helped her with funding for a lighting grid, when she envisioned a year-circular arts school and a amend-equipped stage. Another friend, the Academy Award winning actress Patricia Neal, helped support the abbey's theater. Hart's vision was to meet the abbey'south needs—development and expansion of its open-air theater and arts program for the Bethlehem community. Every summer, the abbey's 38 nuns on 400 acres (i.vi km2) of rural land, aid the community phase a musical, with the 2008 presentation of West Side Story, after previous shows Fiddler on the Roof, The Music Man and My Fair Lady.[ane]

Hart was named prioress of the monastery in 2001, later the election of Female parent David Serna every bit 2d abbess of Regina Laudis, and held that role until 2015. Hart remains a member of the Academy of Flick Arts and Sciences, having in contempo years become the only nun to be an Oscar-voting member.

Hart oftentimes appears in public wearing a beret on top of her habit. When asked about it past an interviewer she stated that early on in her vocation, because nuns take to "cutting your hair quite short in club to become your cap on, your wimple, your bandeau, and all of that," she told her superior that "my caput is freezing even when I put the veil on!"[15] When informed that she could "put another veil on top of it" she thought "oh, that's pretty dull isn't it? And someone gave me a little tam, then I asked if I could vesture that". She was granted permission "and now a lot of the young ones [novices and other nuns] option up the beret [considering] they like it, but it'due south not actually part of our habit. It's part of our tradition that what helps a nun to be herself tin certainly [be] a part of our system."[15]

On October 4, 2008, "The Holy Trinity Apostolate", founded by Rev. John Hardon, S.J., sponsored a "Breakfast with Female parent Dolores Hart". Held at Rochester, Michigan's Royal Park Hotel, Hart told her story: "He Led Me Out into an Open up Space; He Saved Me Because He Loved Me: The Journeying of Mother Dolores Hart to Regina Laudis". Since 1963, when she joined the Bethlehem abbey, she disciplined herself under the Rule of Saint Benedict. At the breakfast, several people spoke, including Patricia Neal and Maria Cooper Janis, the daughter of Hollywood leading man Gary Cooper.[16] [17]

A documentary film most Hart's life, God Is the Bigger Elvis, was a nominee for the 2012 Academy Award for Best Documentary (Short Subject) and was shown on HBO in Apr 2012.[18] [19] Hart attended the 2012 University Awards for the documentary; her last red-carpet Oscar event had been in 1959 as a Hollywood starlet.

In her autobiography, The Ear of the Heart: An Actress' Journeying From Hollywood to Holy Vows (Ignatius Printing)—co-authored with lifelong friend Richard DeNeut and released May seven, 2013—Hart told her life story, from her birth in Chicago to becoming Cosmic, from her Hollywood adventures to monastery life.[20]

Filmography [edit]

Feature films
Year Title Function
1957 Loving You Susan Jessup
Wild Is the Wind Angie
1958 Lonelyhearts Justy Sargent
King Creole Nellie
1960 The Plunderers Ellie Walters
Where the Boys Are Merritt Andrews
1961 Francis of Assisi Clare
Sail a Kleptomaniacal Ship Elinor Harrison
1962 The Inspector A.Thou.A. Lisa Lisa Held
1963 Come Wing with Me Donna Stuart
2011 God Is the Bigger Elvis Herself
2015 Tab Hunter Confidential Herself
2017 The Seven Ages of Elvis Herself

The 7 Ages of Elvis is a 90-infinitesimal UK feature documentary produced and directed by David Upshal, and circulate by Sky Arts to mark the 40th anniversary of the death of Elvis Presley.[21] [22] [23] [24]

Television
Year Series Episode Role
1957 Alfred Hitchcock Presents "Silent Witness" Claudia Powell
1963 The Virginian "The Mountain of the Sun" Cathy Maywood

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Rizzo, Frank (Oct 24, 2008). "Nun using film fame for abbey". The Columbus Dispatch. The Hartford Courant. Archived from the original on January nineteen, 2013. Retrieved January 9, 2009.
  2. ^ Ephriam Katz, The Film Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition, HarperCollins, 1998, p.598
  3. ^ "Female parent Dolores Hart". Abbey of Regina Laudis. Retrieved September 6, 2015.
  4. ^ a b c Cloud, Barbara (April 8, 1998). "Dolores Hart: How a movie extra left Hollywood for a contract with God". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette . Retrieved January 9, 2009.
  5. ^ "Where the Boys Are (1960) Directed by Henry Levin". LETTERBOXD . Retrieved October 11, 2018.
  6. ^ Levy, Emanuel. "WHERE THE BOYS ARE (1960): Iconic Leap Interruption Flick, Starring Connie Francis, Dolores Hart, Yvette Mimieux". EmanuelLevy.com. Emanuel Levy - Cinema 24/7. Retrieved March 25, 2013.
  7. ^ Malden, Karl. Where Practice I Starting time?: A Memoir. Limelight Editions. pp. 293–294.
  8. ^ "Donald Robinson obituary". Legacy. Retrieved December 24, 2011.
  9. ^ "Mother Delores Hart". Vocation.com. Archived from the original on July 21, 2009. Retrieved June ten, 2009.
  10. ^ "Dolores Hart Biography". Perfect people. Retrieved January 9, 2009.
  11. ^ "Obituary", The Los Angeles times, Legacy .
  12. ^ Middleton, Barbara (September 27, 2008). "An Interview with Female parent Dolores Hart". Catholic Exchange. Retrieved January nine, 2009.
  13. ^ Isle of man, Begetter Frank (Baronial 23, 2008). "Female parent Dolores Hart". The Tablet. Archived from the original on Dec 1, 2008. Retrieved January ix, 2009.
  14. ^ "Rev. Mother Dolores Hart Returns To Hollywood". Elvis.com.au. May 9, 2006. Retrieved January nine, 2009.
  15. ^ a b Elizabeth Scalia (June xiii, 2013). "Part II The Chanting Coffin-Maker: Mother Dolores & Agape".
  16. ^ "Holy Trinity Apostolate". Holy Trinity Apostolate. Retrieved January 9, 2009.
  17. ^ "Speroforum.com, From Hollywood to an Abbey: A life in total". Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved October 31, 2008.
  18. ^ Maureen Dowd (February eighteen, 2012). "Where the Boys Aren't". The New York Times.
  19. ^ Jacqui Goddard (Feb 18, 2012). "Starlet-turned-nun gets some other taste of the Ruby Carpeting treatment". The Daily Telegraph.
  20. ^ Ncregister.com
  21. ^ "The Seven Ages Of Elvis". c21media.
  22. ^ "What's On Television set Today". thetimes.co.u.k..
  23. ^ "Axle me upward, Presley! Elvis was a huge Star Trek fan and even named his equus caballus later on the prove". mirror.co.uk.
  24. ^ "The Seven Ages Of Elvis". sky.com.

External links [edit]

  • Dolores Hart at IMDb
  • Abbey of Regina Laudis Spider web site
  • "How A Movie Actress Left Hollywood for a Contract with God", Pittsburgh Mail-Gazette
  • The Ear of the Middle: An Extra' Journey from Hollywood to Holy Vows (Ignatius Press: ISBN 9781586177478)
  • "A Cloistered Life" [ dead link ] in Psychology Today
  • TVNow.com Dolores Hart"

hernandezevervall.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dolores_Hart

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