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Fonda went ballistic when he found out about his buddy’s clandestine work, accusing him of being an informant. “You stupid son of a bitch,” Stewart’s wife, Gloria, recalled him saying. “The FBI ...
According to Alfred Hitchcock, James Stewart considered the role he had in this 1948 thriller to be "the toughest job an ...
While James Stewart first gained prominence as a likeable all-American everyman, one1950s movie saw him transition toward morally ambiguous roles.
James Stewart's favourite co-star wasn't just a friend and colleague, but a mentor and the person who did more for his career than anyone else.
There's perhaps no career in cinema like the one Alfred Hitchcock had as a director. It is well-known that he is historically ...
It sounds like sentimental tripe, and that’s exactly what Stewart thought. Reflecting on his filmic highs and lows, he called Pot o’ Gold “easily the worst film I ever made.” In fact, in Michael ...
James Stewart will always be remembered as the everyman of 1940s Hollywood, but his had a surprising evolution. Sadly, it ended on a bad note.
John Wayne & James Stewart's best collaboration was their first movie together, "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance." The film ...