Jimmy Stewart Was Not Racist. Here’s Why.
A rumor casts a shadow on the legacy of Jimmy Stewart. Was Jimmy Stewart Racist? The answer is no. Here's why.
Confessions of a Nazi Spy (1939)
Edward G. Robinson Receives Death Threats from Nazis, Almost Joins the French Army, Is the First Movie Star in Normandy After D-Day, and Inspires the German Underground
Kid Galahad (1937), Bette Davis, Bogie, & Eddie G.
Bette Davis Battles It Out with Jack Warner in London, Edward G. Robinson Gets Script Approval, and Humphrey Bogart Almost Leaves Hollywood.
Little Caesar (1931) and Edward G. Robinson
Edward G. Robinson Fights for the Lead, Has Trouble with a Machine Gun, Becomes a Superstar Overnight, and Buys a Renoir.
Edward G. Robinson: The Screen’s Cultured Gangster
Edward G. Robinson Epitomizes the American Dream, Loves Cigars, Overcomes the Blacklist, and is Nothing Like His Gangster Screen Image.
Bullets or Ballots (1936), Eddie G., Bogie, & Blondell
Edward G. Robinson is A Good Guy, Bogie Plays the Gangster, and Joan Blondell Gets a Chance at Stardom. From 1936, it's Bullets or Ballots.