The representative of Hollywood's charismatic men, Gregory Pike's featured cover release is definitely worth cherishing
Gregory Peck (1916-2003) was an American film star and Oscar winner. He has appeared in more than 60 films, and his calm and elegant gentlemanly demeanor has fascinated countless audiences around the world, and he has become a symbol of Hollywood's Golden Age.
Gregory Peck has been hailed as "a man worth loving all his life", and he has maintained good friendships with the directors he has worked with with him with his kindness and human touch. At the same time, Gregory Pike was also selected as the number one screen hero of "One Hundred Screen Heroes and Villains" in the history of a century-old film.
The real-life Gregory Pike was also a sympathetic participant in the civil rights movement for blacks and won the Joan Hershore Humanitarian Prize. Gregory Peck was politically liberal.
At the Oscars for To Kill a Mockingbird (1962), Gregory Pike said, "In this film, I put into everything I did, everything I felt and learned in my 46 years of life, about family, fathers and children, and my awareness of racism and justice."
Gregory Pike was an avid public servant and held a number of positions in public welfare and film and television.
Promotional photo for the film Captain Horatio Hornblower R.N. (1951).
Stills from the movie "The Yearling in Deer Garden Changchun" (1946).
Promotional photo for the film "Clear Skies and Blood Wars" Twelve O'Clock High (1949).
Promotional photo for the film Roman Holiday (1953).
Promotional photo for the film The Snows of Kilimanjaro (1952).