American Actress

Clara Bow Bra Size & Body Measurements

Clara Bow is one of those rare female stars whose image graces both the pages of history and a postage stamp. Born in 1886, Clara Bow became a household name after her appearance in a children’s book. She rose to worldwide fame later that year, when she played the lead role in the silent movie “The Mysterious Lady”, which was promptly made into a blockbuster. Her distinctive look as an independent, shopgirl girl in the famous film was instantly transformed into a glamorous face on postage stamps. She went on to receive four additional Oscar nominations for her work in silent movies.

Clara Bow was raised in San Francisco, California, the daughter of a seamstress and a cab driver. Growing up, she was always interested in things “around the corner”. As a child, she used to spend countless hours gossiping with her mother and other women about the lives of their neighborhood “townies”. As a teenager, she also participated in numerous reformatory institutions, where she met the man who would become her husband, Louis B. Mayer.

Bra Size & Body Measurements

Bra Size 40 C
Waist Size 32 Inches
Hips Size 40 Inches
Shoe Size 8  (US)
Body  Measurements 40-32-40 Inches

Growing up, Bow became interested in acting, traveling, singing and writing. She performed well throughout her teen years, including such classics as “Dixie,” “That Hideous Lamb,” “My Fair Lady,” “Look Who’s Married Now” and “How I Live Now.” She appeared in a number of films during the period, including “Gone with the Wind” and “The Rose.” These films appeared after the turn of the 20th century, when woman were no longer subject to being referred to as girls, but women were instead viewed as sex objects.

Clara Bow lived for a short time in New York City, where her husband moved to. While living there, she met and fell in love with John Lindley, who was a director. The couple married and traveled to Hawaii to spend time with relatives and raise money for their film projects. Eventually the couple decided to make a film in Hawaii on their honeymoon, hoping to raise enough money to complete the film on their own. This plan was foiled when John died of a heart attack while on the shoot.

As she was growing up, Bow had a reputation for always having an idea that she had made a great film. After her marriage to John, she began to work on a script for a film that chronicled the efforts of a woman to get a divorce after her husband had cheated on her. The biographer states that although she was extremely disappointed with the finished product, it still held her interest because she felt that the woman in the film was so human. Clara Bow’s lack of self-confidence may have been the cause of this lack of confidence, but she was determined to prove to herself and to the world that she had indeed made a fantastic film.

As she went on to adulthood, she continued to produce successful movies, most notably “My Fair Lady.” She also managed to reinvent herself as an actress, playing opposite Richard Burton in “Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber Of Fleet Street” and “The Lion King.” She finally established her own name with “A Woman’s Revenge,” which was made in 1963 and starred Yul Brynner and Steve McQueen. Although “A Woman’s Revenge” failed to receive distribution with Disney studios, it was successful enough to establish Bow as a leading female actor in Hollywood. She went on to star in “Elvira” and” Witness” for which she received an Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role.

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