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  1. Adrianne Allen. Actress: Merrily We Go to Hell. Adrianne Allen was married to Raymond Massey from 1929 to 1939. The Masseys were great friends with William and Dorothy Whitney, who were divorced in the late 1930s. William was an international lawyer, and Adrianne went to him for the divorce.

  2. Adrianne Allen. Actress: Merrily We Go to Hell. Adrianne Allen was married to Raymond Massey from 1929 to 1939. The Masseys were great friends with William and Dorothy Whitney, who were divorced in the late 1930s. William was an international lawyer, and Adrianne went to him for the divorce.

  3. Feb 7, 2013 · A biography of Adrianne Allen, actress who rose to fame in Noel Coward's Private Lives. Her sparse film career included two 1932 Paramount gems, Merrily We Got to Hell and The Night of June 13th. The former Mrs. Raymond Massey and mother of actors Daniel Massey and Anna Massey.

  4. Merrily We Go to Hell. Addiction, nonmonogamy, and female sexual liberation: decades before such ideas were widely discussed, Dorothy Arzner, the only woman to work as a director in 1930s Hollywood, brought them to the screen with striking frankness, sophistication, and wit—a mature treatment that stands out even in the pre-Code era.

  5. Adrianne Allen made her screen debut in 1930 with Loose Ends; she also appeared in The Night of June 13th, Merrily We Go to Hell, The Morals of Marcus, The October Man, Vote for Huggett, The Final Test, and the 1954 movie Meet Mr. Malcolm.

  6. An English theater and film actress, born on February 7, 1907 in Manchester, United Kingdom and the mother of actors Danielle Massey and Anna Massey.

  7. Adrianne Allen. Highest Rated: 100% Merrily We Go to Hell (1932) Lowest Rated: 100% Merrily We Go to Hell (1932) Birthday: Feb 7, 1907. Birthplace: Manchester, England, UK. Delicately lovely...

  8. Delicately lovely British actress, primarily on stage in light, brittle comedy from the mid-1920s until the late 50s. After training at RADA, Allen made her London stage debut in Noel Coward's "Easy Virtue" in 1926.