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  1. Apr 23, 2014 · Writer and director Moss Hart may have made slight nods to his possible bisexuality or homosexuality, but attempts to honor his life and work have ignored that part of his life. The editors of the ...

  2. Biography: Moss Hart was born on October 24, 1904, in a tenement on 105th street in New York, New York, to Barnett Hart and Lillie Solomon Hart. He married actress Kitty Carlisle on August 10, 1946, with whom he had two children, Christopher and Cathy. Hart began his career as a playwright in 1924, working under traveling producer Gus Pitou.

  3. Moss Hart. Moss Hart was an American playwright and director of plays and musical theater. Hart recalled his youth, early career and rise to fame in his autobiography, Act One, adapted to film in 1963, with George Hamilton portraying Hart. Hart grew up at 74 East 105th Street in Manhattan, "a neighborhood not of carriages and hansom cabs, but ...

  4. Sep 28, 2014 · Kaufman and Hart collaborated over the course of ten years, from 1930 to 1940, and during that time created some of the best long-run hits in the history of the American theatre.

  5. With this new edition, the classic best-selling autobiography by the late playwright Moss Hart returns to print in the thirtieth anniversary of its original publication. Issued in tandem with Kitty , the revealing autobiography of his wife, Kitty Carlisle Hart, Act One , is a landmark memoir that incluenced a generation of theatergoers, dramatists, and general book readers everywhere.

  6. Moss Hart was an American playwright and director. He grew up in New York with his parents and younger brother, Bernard. At the age of 17, Hart began working as an office boy for the theatrical producer, Augustus Pitou. For several years he worked as a director for amateur theatre companies and as entertainment director of vacation resorts in ...

  7. Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman have written their most thoroughly ingratiating comedy, You Can’t Take It With You, which was put on at the Booth last evening. It is a study in vertigo about a lovable family of hobby-horse riders, funny without being shrill, sensible without being earnest.