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Does the female statue represent any one in particular ... columbia picture logo?

2006-06-08 08:21:44 · 16 answers · asked by saphiregold50 1 in Entertainment & Music Movies

16 answers

She doesn't represent anyone; just an artist's rendering. Various women have claimed to be the model since its inception. One rumor is that the model was updated in the 80s to Annette Benning's face; in actuality it's a composite.

Here's complete info:

http://www.reelclassics.com/Studios/Columbia/columbia-article-logo.htm

2006-06-08 08:23:12 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 3

That's My Nanny, I'm Dave W. Jacques The Grandson In Question. I Didn't Belive It When I Was 11 Until My Aunt Betty Wrote The Chicago Daley News. People Mag. Did An Interview. And So Did The Suntimes In 2001. That's Her In Crestwood Nursing Home I Visited Her Many Times There. As Sad As It Was To See Her In That State I Still Loved My Nanny. That's My Photo Bottomleft Sticking In The Frame To The Right, Longhair & Guitar From Senior Photos, My Grandmother Passes Her Great Legacy To Her Great Grand Daughter Erika Jessica Jacques. She's In The Photo To The Left, First Picture From The Hospital @ 1 Day Old. I Love My Nanny God Bless Her Soul, See You Sometime Up In Heaven....

2015-01-16 03:42:38 · answer #2 · answered by dave 1 · 0 0

Columbia Pictures Lady

2016-09-28 06:42:40 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

The "Columbia Lady" who has worn her toga and held her torch high for most of Columbia Pictures' seventy-five year history, has a history of her own, although the facts get a little fuzzy in places and are completely missing in others.

The logo first appeared in 1924, and though multiple models have come forward over the years and claimed to have posed as the original lady, Columbia Pictures themselves (now owned by Sony Pictures Entertainment) says they have no records or documentation to verify any of the claims.

In Bette Davis' 1962 autobiography The Lonely Life, she makes a passing reference to "Little Claudia Dell", an actress from the 1930s and early '40s, "whose image," Bette remarks, "was used as Columbia Pictures' signature for years." But there are others. In 1987, People Magazine reported that a Texas-born model and Columbia bit-player named Amelia Batchler had modeled for the logo in 1933. And a February 2001 article in the Chicago Sun-Times reported claims by a local woman named Jane Bartholomew, who worked as an extra at Columbia in the 1930s, that she was the model for the version of the logo that appeared late in that decade. Given the many incarnations of the woman in the logo over the years, it is even possible that all three of these women posed as Miss Liberty at some point, each for a different version of the image.

2006-06-08 08:26:28 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

This Site Might Help You.

RE:
Who is the women statue of in the columbia movie pictures logo?
Does the female statue represent any one in particular ... columbia picture logo?

2015-08-06 08:58:08 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Statue Of Liberty Logo

2016-12-14 08:02:58 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

ISIS, the Egyptian Goddess and the torch is a tribute to Satan who the high-level masons see as the bringer of light. It's not surprising that Illuminati Hollywood or more specifically, Columbia pictures uses it for their icon. Don't even get me started on Washington DC. The battle between the light and dark side is everywhere. You just need to where to look

2015-01-03 10:54:31 · answer #7 · answered by ? 2 · 0 2

I saw an interview with the lady who posed for the statue/picture; she's a tiny little bit of a thing now, very old & frail - they just chose her randomly because they liked the way she looked! & now she's famous but nobody knows her name or anything. (I've forgotten it, too)

2006-06-08 08:26:25 · answer #8 · answered by pumpkin 6 · 0 2

Her name is not Jenny Joseph. She was Billie Jean who she modeled to artist. This art was made digitally to not look like anybody. The model was very similar looking only her chin got modified. She wanted to be nameless. This art represent freedom in films.

2015-11-03 00:56:48 · answer #9 · answered by BRUCE 2 · 0 0

Jen Joseph, & Amelia Batchler.

2016-10-06 14:50:12 · answer #10 · answered by Renard 1 · 1 0

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