|
STOP! READ THIS! By going beyond this point, you acknowledge that you are 18 years or older. WARNING! The material on Fotos De Susan Hayward Desnuda is adult oriented, sexually explicit and related to Fotos De Susan Hayward Desnuda. Fotos De Susan Hayward Desnuda provides access to images of Fotos De Susan Hayward Desnuda adults possibly engaging in sexual acts, and other material of Fotos De Susan Hayward Desnuda nature. Access is made available only to those who accept the terms of the following agreement: By accepting this agreement, I certify the following: * I do not find images of Fotos De Susan Hayward Desnuda adults, adults engaged in sexual acts, or other sexual material to be offensive or objectionable. * I am at least 18 years of age and have the legal right to possess Fotos De Susan Hayward Desnuda material in my community. * I understand the standards and laws of the community, site and computer to which I am transporting Fotos De Susan Hayward Desnuda material, and am solely responsible for my actions. * I am not a law enforcement agent. * I will not sell and/or in any way redistribute the contents of Fotos De Susan Hayward Desnuda site. * I will not attempt to by-pass any security and/or access feature at Fotos De Susan Hayward Desnuda website. * If I use these services in violation of the above agreement, I understand I may be in violation of local and federal laws and am solely responsible for my actions. * By logging on, I will have released and discharged the providers, owners and creators of this site from any and all liability which might arise. |
![]() |
Fotos De Susan Hayward Desnuda Energetic red-haired leading lady Susan Hayward (born Edythe Marrener) specialized in portraying gutsy women who rebound from adversity. She began working as a photographer's model while still in high school, and when open auditions were held in 1937 for the role of Scarlett O'Hara in Gone With the Wind, she arrived in Hollywood with scores of other actresses. Unlike most of the others, however, she managed to become a contract player. Her roles were initially discouragingly small, although she gradually work her way up to stardom. For her role in Smash-Up: The Story of a Woman (1947) -- the first in which she played a strong-willed, courageous woman -- Hayward received the first of her five Oscar nominations; the others were for performances in My Foolish Heart (1950), With a Song in My Heart (1952), I'll Cry Tomorrow (1956), and I Want to Live (1958), winning for the latter. Although the actress maintained her star status through the late '50s, the early '60s saw her in several unmemorable tearjerkers, and she retired from films in 1964, although later returned to the screen for a few more roles. Her ten-year marriage to actor Jess Barker ended in 1954 with a bitter child-custody battle, and she died in 1975 after a two-year struggle with a brain tumor, one of several cast and crew members from 1956's The Conqueror to be stricken with cancer later in life. ENTER HERE |