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  1. Mercedes de Acosta (1. maaliskuuta 1893 – 9. toukokuuta 1968) oli yhdysvaltalainen kuubalaissyntyinen runoilija, näytelmäkirjailija ja muotisuunnittelija. Hänet kuitenkin tunnetaan parhaiten rakkaussuhteistaan moniin Hollywoodin näyttelijättäriin, muun muassa Marlene Dietrichiin, Greta Garboon, Alla Nazimovaan, Eva Le Gallienneen, Isadora Duncaniin, Katharine Cornelliin, Ona Munsoniin ...

  2. It seems Garbo was cold and reserved even in her letters. Lost and forgotten, in 1960 Mercedes De Acosta sold her Garbo papers to the Rosenbach Museum and library of Philadelphia that had to keep them sealed until 10 years after the death of Garbo. The box contained 88 letters, telegrams and cards was opened in the April 2000 but nothing ...

  3. 20 de may. de 2021 · Abstract: Mercedes de Acosta (1893-1968) was a novelist, playwright, poet, Hollywood scriptwriter, and a prominent member of gay society in New York and Hollywood. The Mercedes de Acosta papers contain correspondence, manuscripts, photographs, and ephemera documenting her professional and personal life.

  4. 1 de dic. de 2001 · Black and White: Mercedes de Acosta's Glorious Enthusiasms. Camera Obscura (2001) 15 (3 (45)): 227–265.

  5. Mercedes de Acosta (March 1, 1893 – May 9, 1968) was an American poet, novelist and playwright.She wrote four famous stage plays. She also published three volumes of poetry and one novel.That novel was not a success, though it did create controversy because of its lesbian themed subject.. De Acosta was born in New York City.She died there at age seventy-five.

  6. Mercedes de Acosta (March 1, 1893 – May 9, 1968) was an American poet, playwright, and novelist. In her 1960 autobiography, Here Lies the Heart, she claimed to have been intimate with Isadora Duncan, Marlene Dietrich , Alice B. Toklas, Marie Laurencin, Eva Le Gallienne, Malvina Hoffman, Adele Astaire and Greta Garbo.

  7. De Acosta, the daughter of affluent Cuban immigrants, grew up in New York where, in the 1920s, she was a figure in both the city’s “high society” and its drag clubs and speakeasies. “These were years guided by the spirit of the New,” she wrote of this period; “We were on fire with fire, with a passion to create and a daring to ...