Ninety-three years have passed since audiences were first introduced to the legendary King Kong. Often called the "Eighth Wonder of the World," this colossal gorilla has been a global pop culture icon ...
NEW YORK (AP) -- Fay Wray, who won everlasting fame as the damsel held atop the Empire State Building by the giant ape in the 1933 film classic "King Kong," has died, a close friend said Monday. She ...
About 43 minutes into the 1933 pre-code horror classic “King Kong,” aspiring actress Ann Darrow (Fay Wray) finds herself on a remote island struggling to free herself from the two stone pillars she’s ...
Actress Fay Wray, who famously struggled helplessly in the giant hand of King Kong, died Sunday at her Manhattan apartment. She was 96. She appeared in more than 70 features, but her name will be ...
NEW YORK -- Fay Wray, who won everlasting fame as the damsel held atop the Empire State Building by the giant ape in the 1933 film classic "King Kong," has died, a close friend said Monday. She was 96 ...
Fay Wray, who won everlasting fame as the damsel held atop the Empire State Building by the giant ape in the 1933 film classic "King Kong," has died, a close friend said Monday. She was 96. Wray died ...
On this day in horror history, Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack unleashed King Kong back in 1933. Fay Wray stars in the monster movie adventure with Robert Armstrong and Bruce Cabot. James ...
Fay Wray, an actress who appeared in about 100 movies but whose fame is inextricably linked with the hours she spent struggling, helplessly screaming, in the 8-foot hand of King Kong, is dead. Wray, ...
NEW YORK - Fay Wray, who won everlasting fame as the damsel held atop the Empire State Building by the giant ape in the 1933 film classic "King Kong," has died, a close friend said Monday. She was 96.
NEW YORK -- Fay Wray, who won everlasting fame as the damsel held atop the Empire State Building by the giant ape in the 1933 film classic "King Kong," has died, a close friend said Monday. She was 96 ...
After appearing in Erich von Stroheim's 1928 silent "The Wedding March," playing a poor Viennese girl abandoned by her lover, a playboy prince, Wray became a much-employed leading lady. In 1933, the ...
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