Thinking of your post, I read online an article that listed a dozen of her movies. Of course there was the movie with the famous kiss, and one of my favorite musicals "The King & I." And the sappy but totally wonderful "An Affair to Remember." The article listed:
Quote:
- "The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp" (1943). With three roles, Kerr had a launching pad to stardom in the movie inspired by David Low's cartoons.
- "I See a Dark Stranger" (1946). Kerr's character hates the British so much that she becomes Nazi-recruiting bait until she meets a British intelligence officer (Trevor Howard).
- "Black Narcissus" (1947). Sexual repression and nuns in the Himalayas — arguably Kerr's best.
- "King Solomon's Mines" (1950). MGM's jungle-treasure epic won a best-picture nomination.
- "From Here to Eternity" (1953). Kerr got her second Oscar nomination and with Lancaster, an unforgettable Pacific-surf love scene.
- "The King and I" (1956). If you think of one Kerr role, her Anna may be it.
- "Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison" (1957). Robert Mitchum stars as a World War II Marine and Kerr as a nun in a comedy-drama that got her nomination No. 4.
- "An Affair to Remember" (1957). If anything, director Leo McCarey's remake of his own 1939 "Love Affair" is a bigger movie now than then.
- "Separate Tables" (1958). Cast as a mother-dominated spinster in a British seaside hotel. Nomination No. 5.
- "The Sundowners" (1960). Kerr and Robert Mitchum are married sheep-drovers trying to make a go of it in the Outback. Her sixth and final nomination.
- "The Innocents" (1961). This adaptation of Henry James' "The Turn of the Screw" is rated infinitely higher than, say, "Ghost" in the annals of ghost movies.
- "The Night of the Iguana" (1964). Ava Gardner is rightfully credited with stealing John Huston's movie of Tennessee Williams' play. But Kerr has some wonderful scenes opposite Richard Burton.
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