![]() Tierney exuded a patrician air and was strikingly attractive, causing some critics to suggest that her acting did not live up to her presence. Two years after this movie, Tierney was nominated for an Academy Award for her melodramatic role as a self-centered woman who commits suicide in Leave Her to Heaven (1945). In this movie she played a high-society woman who is an apparent murder victim and with whom a police detective, played by Dana Andrews, falls in love through her pictures. It was, however, her 1944 portrayal of the title character in the murder mystery Laura that established Tierney as a major screen star. Her early films included The Return of Frank James (1940), Belle Star (1941), and Heaven Can Wait (1943). In the early 1940s she went to Hollywood and established herself as a star for 20th Century Fox, usually playing elegant social characters. ![]() ![]() After completing her schooling, where she had exhibited some interest in acting, Tierney earned a supporting part in the Broadway comedy Ring Two in 1939. ![]() Her father, a successful insurance broker, and her mother were wealthy socialites, and as a child Tierney enjoyed a privileged life that included private schools in Connecticut and finishing school in Switzerland. ![]() Gene Tierney, movie star, was born in Brooklyn, New York, on November 20, 1920, the daughter of Howard S. ![]()
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