Lucille Ball and Orson Welles during the shooting of episode #155 of I Love Lucy, «Lucy Meets Orson Welles», which first aired on June 14, 1956.
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Portrait of Lucille Ball, Fred Astaire and Harpo Marx practicing a routine for a U.S.O. tour during WWII.
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“She is a monster of staggering charmlessness and monumental lack of humour …. I am coldly sarcastic with her to the point of outright contempt but she hears only what she wants to hear …. She is a tired old woman and lives entirely on that weekly show which she has been doing and successfully doing for 19 years. Nineteen solid years of double-takes and pratfalls and desperate upstaging and cutting out other people’s laughs if she can, nervously watching the ‘ratings’ as she does so … I loathe her today but now I also pity her. I make a point of never seeing her again …. Milady Ball can thank her lucky stars that I am not drinking. There is a chance that if I had I might have killed her. Jack Benny, the most amiable man in the world, and one of the truly great comedians of our time, says that in 4 days she reduced his life expectancy by 10 years.”
Richard Burton on Lucille Ball.
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Lucille Ball and Orson Welles during the shooting of episode #155 of I Love Lucy, «Lucy Meets Orson Welles», which first aired on June 14, 1956.
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