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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Faith_HubleyFaith Hubley - Wikipedia

    Faith Hubley (née Chestman; September 16, 1924 – December 7, 2001) was an American animator, known for her experimental work both in collaboration with her husband John Hubley, and on her own following her husband's death.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0254454Faith Hubley - IMDb

    Faith Hubley (née Faith Chestman) was born in 1924 in the Hell's Kitchen area of Manhattan. She left home without completing high school to go to Hollywood to pursue a career in filmmaking. She began as a messenger at Columbia Studios, but eventually worked as a sound-effects and music editor.

  3. Windy Day [John & Faith Hubley, 1967] (subtitulado) Un cortometraje de John y Faith Hubley de 1967. Protagonizada por Emily y Georgia Hubley. A 1967 short by John and Faith Hubley. Starring...

  4. cinelatinoamericano.org › versionfcCINEASTA-Faith-Hubley

    Faith Hubley (Estados Unidos de América, 1924-2001) Sus animaciones han recibido amplia aclamación por su visión humanista. Cosmologías indígenas y el arte, las preocupaciones de las mujeres, los niños y el medio ambiente, influenciando como artista y comunicadora.

  5. 8 de dic. de 2001 · Faith Hubley, who with her husband, John, broadened the boundaries of film animation and won three Academy Awards, died Friday of cancer in New Haven, Conn. She was 77.

  6. Faith Hubley (née Faith Elliott) was born in 1924 in the Hells Kitchen area of Manhattan. She left home without completing high school to go to Hollywood to pursue a career in filmmaking. She began as a messenger at Columbia Studios, but eventually worked as a sound-effects and music editor.

  7. womenfilmeditors.princeton.edu › assets › pdfsFaith Hubley: An Interview

    Faith Hubley: An Interview John and Faith Hubley broke away from Hollywood in the mid-1950s to form their own independent, small-scale studio in New York City, making animated films in an anti-Disney visual style that was closer in form and spirit to European surrealism and impressionism. They pioneered the use of name performers and of