[Games] I loved this so much! Thank you :)
in reply to a message by Antique_Cherub
Born in 1914, Fay Franklin was the oldest child of a German immigrant family in Pennsylvania. Although she had yet to dye her hair platinum, she was still striking and had always possessed that doe-like gaze, which later become her trademark. Before fame she worked at textile factory, using her meager paycheck to support her parents. It was on a trip to New York to visit her aunt that she was spotted, soon finding work as a model, and eventually, an actress. Her first big role came in 1935, when she starred in "Berlin, Baby!". Though her name at birth was Hildegard Schön, the studios decided to give her something more star-worthy.
The name they gave her was Fay Franklin.
DH: August Johannes Schön
DW: Ida Elisabeth Rosenbaum
August & Ida || Hildegard, Ursula, Erich, Hannelore, and Wolfgang
DD: Hildegard Rosa Schön
DD: Ursula Maria Schön
DS: Erich Helmut Schön
DD/DS: Hannelore Eva Schön // Wolfgang Hans Schön
___
Soon after, Fay Franklin became a household name, starring box-office hit after hit. One of her most memorable roles would be as the seductive Madame Veruschka in the classic noir film "As the Night Fades". In 1940 at age twenty-six, she was married to fellow actor, Claude Lancaster, who she met on the set of her 1939 romance film, "Folie À Deux". He was eight years her senior. They were the perfect Hollywood couple, her with her perfect blonde curls and willowy figure, him with his dark hair, blue eyes, and smoky baritone. Just seven months after their marriage, Fay would give birth to a baby girl, much to the tabloids shock. Only three years later, Fay would file for a divorce. The court proceedings were splashed across the news, and filled with every sordid detail, from the mistresses to the drugs and Fay's supposed alcoholism. Despite it all, she would win full custody of her child.
DH: Claude Leslie Lancaster
DW: Fay Franklin
Claude & Fay || Claude-Fay
DD1: Claude-Fay Ida Lancaster
____
Despite Claude-Fay playing a younger version of her mother's character in "Choir Girl", she would eventually shun the fast-paced and, in her own words, "shallow" lifestyle of Hollywood. Claude-Fay became a well-respected OB/GYN in New York, and married a pediatrician. After years of resentment between the two, Fay and Claude-Fay rekindled their relationship via the birth of Claude-Fay's first child. Now, they maintain a friendship, and spend the holidays together.
DH: Noam David Lieberman
DD1: Claude-Fay Ida Lancaster
Noam & Claude-Fay || Joseph, Esther, and Miriam
DS: Joseph Dov Lieberman
DD: Esther Shira Lieberman
DD: Miriam Chaya Lieberman
____
In 1940 at age 31, Fay would go on to win an Oscar for her portrayal of a heartbroken wife who combs the beach, looking for the husband she lost at sea in “Albatross”. In her speech she thanked her parents for teaching her how to work hard, her daughter, for bring light into her life, and, to the gasps of the audience, her ex-husband for teaching her how to take a punch. Later in an interview, she would recount how her first marriage was “fueled by liquor and jealousy”, and how it was her daughter who gave her strength to leave her abusive relationship.
In 1945, Fay would go on to star in a romantic comedy “The Long Engagement“, opposite Italian heartthrob, Massimo Rossi. After dating for only half a year, they would get married in his hometown of Venice, Italy. Paparazzi fought to get a snap of the bride’s dress, made entirely of Venetian lace, or her twenty-inch train. Her new husband was known for his charm, his accent, and the fact he could speak five languages: Italian, English, French, Spanish, and German. In 1947, Fay would become a mother again to boy-girl twins. Fay and Massimo were together five years, before calling it quits due to “irreconcilable differences”. Luckily, the two remained good friends, and their children would spend their summers in Venice, with their father.
DH: Massimo Tomas Rossi
DW: Fay Franklin
Massimo & Fay || Tiziana and Dante
DD2/DS1: Tiziana Silvia Rossi // Dante Francesco Rossi
___
Unlike Claude-Fay, Tiziana would thrive in the spotlight. With her thick black hair, green eyes, and Patrician nose – all curtesy of her father – she would become something of a sex symbol after her film debut in 1966 at the tender age of nineteen. The film, “Madeline Usher“, is a cult classic made with an all-European cast and shot in English. She would go on to star in several more Giallo films, to model for Vogue, and to eventually marry the frontman of the Brit-rock band “Ned Kelley”, Bram Adderley. They are one of the longest enduring couples of Hollywood, and the parents of four children.
DH: Bram John-Paul Adderley
DW: Tiziana Silvia Rossi
Bram & Tiziana || Vito, Leandro, Isadora, and Bianca
DS: Vito Damiano Massimo Adderley
DS: Leandro Titus Lewis Adderley
DD: Isadora Elettra Tiziana Adderley
DD: Bianca Pandora Margherita Adderley
___
Dante would become a photojournalist for Time Magazine. He and his long-time girlfriend, Shirley Moore, were planning on getting married in 1972 when he went missing in Cambodia, thought to be captured by communist guerillas. He was never seen, or heard from, again. Later, his mother would have him declared dead in absentia. It was one of the hardest times in Fay's life, and she would never speak of him publicly again. His girlfriend was only two months pregnant with their child, a little girl, when he disappeared.
DS1: Dante Francesco Rossi
DW: Shirley Elizabeth Moore
Dante & Shirley || Sonia
DD: Sonia Theresa Rossi
___
In 1951, Fay celebrated her fortieth birthday in Provence, where she had recently renovated a Chateau. She was born a day before Christmas, and wore a beautiful red Dior dress and holly in her hair. The Chateau had four real trees and presents for everyone, including her beloved greyhounds Cerberus and Hippolyta. Fay's gift to herself was a new car, a black Cadillac Coupe deVille.
Taking a short break from acting, Fay spent her years between France, England, and Italy. On a rainy day in London, she met a striking young woman in gorgeous Chanel ensemble, giggling without a care in the world that she was being soaked through. They ducked into a quiet café and shared cups and cups of tea, and their life stories. Colette was an up-and-coming singer, known for her soulful rendition of “We’ll Meet Again”. She was Senegalese-French, her father having fought for France during WWI in the Senegalese Tirailleurs; her mother was a seamstress from Hauts-de-France who had moved to Paris to work for a reputable modiste. Fay had never before felt such love for a person, besides her children, and eventually realized her feelings were reciprocated. Fay and Colette were well-known amongst “The Sewing Circle”, a group of Old Hollywood actresses who were openly (as openly as one could be at that time) Lesbian and Bisexual. Among them were such greats as Greta Garbo, Marlene Dietrich (who had long been rumored to have been more than just friends with Colette), Barbara Stanwyck, Joan Crawford, and Katharine Hepburn.
Fay would go on to move in with Colette at the chateau in 1953, were they would host lavish parties, filled with champagne and smoke, and the keenest minds of the time-period. No evening would be complete without Fay accompanying Colette on the piano as she sung her latest hits. Eventually, Fay would even adopt five-year-old twin girls, which was quite unusual for the time, and though it couldn’t be said legally, it was known that they raised them together. They were together for six years, until Colette would lose her beloved father to a long battle with cancer. She needed time alone and moved to London to record a new album. Fay was heartbroken by her decision but didn’t let it get in the way of supporting her long-time love and their children.
DW: Colette Léone Diop "Colette"
DW: Fay Franklin
Colette & Fay || Roselyne and Eugénie
DD3/DD4: Roselyne Elise Franklin // Eugénie Aurore Franklin
___
Roselyne would become a smoky-voiced chanteuse like her mother, known most popularly for singing the theme song for the James Bond film, Death Without Dignity, in 1973 at twenty-five. She would never marry, but had two long term relationships, one with a French-Algerian model, Jean-Pierre Bencharif, who was the male face of Gucci for over fifteen-years; their relationship lasted from 1972 to 1978. They had a son together. Her most recent is with British art-house director, Edward Fox. Together, they had a baby girl.
DBF1: Jean-Pierre Lucien Bencharif
DGF: Roselyne Elise Franklin
Jean-Pierre & Roselyne || Jérôme
DS: Jérôme Idir Bencharif
DBF2: Edward William Fox
DGF: Roselyne Elise Franklin
Edward & Roselyne || Helena
DD: Helena Margot Fox
___
Eugénie would become a chef whose German, West African, and French fusions had celebrities like Jane Birkin and Serge Gainsbourg, France Gall, and Jean-Paul Belmondo coming back again and again. Her original restaurant called “Méli-Mélo” was happily situated in bustling Paris, but now there is one in Hollywood, London, and even Tokyo. She married her sous-chef and they had four amazing children, who have inherited their parents’ love of food.
DH: Cheikh Adama Sembène
DW: Eugénie Aurore Franklin
Cheikh & Eugénie || Lionel, Babacar, Fleur, and Odile
DS: Lionel Jean-Luc Sembène
DS/DD: Babacar Malick Sembène // Fleur Albane Sembène
DD: Odile Coumba Sembène
___
By 1955 Fay was ready to return to Hollywood. At forty-four, roles were drying up for the starlet, but when she starred in a star-studded adaption of "Macbeth", as Lady Macbeth, she was back on the market. It was a huge hit and cemented her popularity, despite her age. For her role she would win her second Oscar. Fay wowed the audience in her black and white Jacques Fath evening dress.
Shortly after, Fay would act in another epic film, called "Boudica", where she would meet her next love, the young director of the film. Born into a Russian family in New York, Alexander was ten years her junior, and some thought much too plain for such a glamorous woman. With curly auburn hair, a love of turtlenecks, and his iconic round black glasses, they seemed an odd match. But in an interview with Vogue, Fay clarified it was his heart that had attracted her, plus a common affection for animals. For their one-year anniversary Alexandrr gave her a pair of persian kittens, Shahrazad and Parisa. After only being together for only two short years, Fay found out she was pregnant. A lavish wedding was planned, one that would take place in Barcelona and see the likes of Marilyn Monroe, Audrey Hepburn, and Dean Martin in attendance. Unfortunately, it would all come to a standstill when Alexander would die tragically in a plane crash, leaving Fay pregnant and alone. The story of their doomed love was front-page news, and Fay would be the recipient of countless letters of condolences, well-wishes, and prayers.
The studios were not pleased to have their star pregnant and unmarried, and soon Fay would find herself relegated to bit parts and guest appearances on TV shows. She would retire officially from acting in 1960, moving back to her chateau in Provence, where she would write a bestselling biography on her life, called "Forget Me Not". Her later years were marked by animal activism, and charitable work -- she would auction off several of her famous dresses for a local French hospital in '65 -- and the rare interviews, mostly conducted in her 19th century style kitchen, or herb garden. In 1970 Fay would reunite with her former love, the jazz singer Colette, and they would spend the rest of their lives together. Fay would live on to just two weeks shy of her 100th birthday, surrounded by her family and loved ones, her animals, her memories, a photo of her son, lost in Cambodia, and the man who almost became her husband.
DBF: Alexander Leon Kamensky
DGF: Fay Franklin
Alexander & Fay
DD: Sabine Rose Kamensky
---
Sabine would be a media darling from the moment she was born, and they would closely follow her, from the time she was in pink dresses and bobby-socks to her troubled adolescence, which consisted of drugs, alcohol and much-older boyfriends. One of those boyfriends encouraged her to start singing. Sabine would form an all-girl rock band called "Baba Yaga", that would shock audiences with their dark lyrics and onstage antics. While the band only lasted a few short years -- from '79 to '83 -- they would forever be icons for punk girls everywhere. Sabine would have a prosperous solo-career, and a famously rocky marriage with music producer, Kit Vaughn. The marriage lasted ten-years -- ten-years filled with domestic assault allegations, hard-drinking, and affairs. They had two children, and Sabine would lose custody to her husband. Finally, after so many years of hard-living and chaotic episodes, Sabine would go to rehab and stay sober for fifteen years, until her untimely death from lung cancer at fifty-five. A photograph of her, with her flaming red-hair and kohl-streaked eyes, belting out one of her songs, would become a bestselling image and adorn the walls of angst-ridden teens everywhere.
DD5: Sabine Rose Kamensky
DexH: Kit Samson Vaughn
Sabine & Kit || Sage and Jude
DS/DS: Sage Conrad Vaughn // Jude Hart Vaughn
masculine list: https://www.behindthename.com/pnl/191050/124079
feminine list: https://www.behindthename.com/pnl/191050/124080
The name they gave her was Fay Franklin.
DH: August Johannes Schön
DW: Ida Elisabeth Rosenbaum
August & Ida || Hildegard, Ursula, Erich, Hannelore, and Wolfgang
DD: Hildegard Rosa Schön
DD: Ursula Maria Schön
DS: Erich Helmut Schön
DD/DS: Hannelore Eva Schön // Wolfgang Hans Schön
___
Soon after, Fay Franklin became a household name, starring box-office hit after hit. One of her most memorable roles would be as the seductive Madame Veruschka in the classic noir film "As the Night Fades". In 1940 at age twenty-six, she was married to fellow actor, Claude Lancaster, who she met on the set of her 1939 romance film, "Folie À Deux". He was eight years her senior. They were the perfect Hollywood couple, her with her perfect blonde curls and willowy figure, him with his dark hair, blue eyes, and smoky baritone. Just seven months after their marriage, Fay would give birth to a baby girl, much to the tabloids shock. Only three years later, Fay would file for a divorce. The court proceedings were splashed across the news, and filled with every sordid detail, from the mistresses to the drugs and Fay's supposed alcoholism. Despite it all, she would win full custody of her child.
DH: Claude Leslie Lancaster
DW: Fay Franklin
Claude & Fay || Claude-Fay
DD1: Claude-Fay Ida Lancaster
____
Despite Claude-Fay playing a younger version of her mother's character in "Choir Girl", she would eventually shun the fast-paced and, in her own words, "shallow" lifestyle of Hollywood. Claude-Fay became a well-respected OB/GYN in New York, and married a pediatrician. After years of resentment between the two, Fay and Claude-Fay rekindled their relationship via the birth of Claude-Fay's first child. Now, they maintain a friendship, and spend the holidays together.
DH: Noam David Lieberman
DD1: Claude-Fay Ida Lancaster
Noam & Claude-Fay || Joseph, Esther, and Miriam
DS: Joseph Dov Lieberman
DD: Esther Shira Lieberman
DD: Miriam Chaya Lieberman
____
In 1940 at age 31, Fay would go on to win an Oscar for her portrayal of a heartbroken wife who combs the beach, looking for the husband she lost at sea in “Albatross”. In her speech she thanked her parents for teaching her how to work hard, her daughter, for bring light into her life, and, to the gasps of the audience, her ex-husband for teaching her how to take a punch. Later in an interview, she would recount how her first marriage was “fueled by liquor and jealousy”, and how it was her daughter who gave her strength to leave her abusive relationship.
In 1945, Fay would go on to star in a romantic comedy “The Long Engagement“, opposite Italian heartthrob, Massimo Rossi. After dating for only half a year, they would get married in his hometown of Venice, Italy. Paparazzi fought to get a snap of the bride’s dress, made entirely of Venetian lace, or her twenty-inch train. Her new husband was known for his charm, his accent, and the fact he could speak five languages: Italian, English, French, Spanish, and German. In 1947, Fay would become a mother again to boy-girl twins. Fay and Massimo were together five years, before calling it quits due to “irreconcilable differences”. Luckily, the two remained good friends, and their children would spend their summers in Venice, with their father.
DH: Massimo Tomas Rossi
DW: Fay Franklin
Massimo & Fay || Tiziana and Dante
DD2/DS1: Tiziana Silvia Rossi // Dante Francesco Rossi
___
Unlike Claude-Fay, Tiziana would thrive in the spotlight. With her thick black hair, green eyes, and Patrician nose – all curtesy of her father – she would become something of a sex symbol after her film debut in 1966 at the tender age of nineteen. The film, “Madeline Usher“, is a cult classic made with an all-European cast and shot in English. She would go on to star in several more Giallo films, to model for Vogue, and to eventually marry the frontman of the Brit-rock band “Ned Kelley”, Bram Adderley. They are one of the longest enduring couples of Hollywood, and the parents of four children.
DH: Bram John-Paul Adderley
DW: Tiziana Silvia Rossi
Bram & Tiziana || Vito, Leandro, Isadora, and Bianca
DS: Vito Damiano Massimo Adderley
DS: Leandro Titus Lewis Adderley
DD: Isadora Elettra Tiziana Adderley
DD: Bianca Pandora Margherita Adderley
___
Dante would become a photojournalist for Time Magazine. He and his long-time girlfriend, Shirley Moore, were planning on getting married in 1972 when he went missing in Cambodia, thought to be captured by communist guerillas. He was never seen, or heard from, again. Later, his mother would have him declared dead in absentia. It was one of the hardest times in Fay's life, and she would never speak of him publicly again. His girlfriend was only two months pregnant with their child, a little girl, when he disappeared.
DS1: Dante Francesco Rossi
DW: Shirley Elizabeth Moore
Dante & Shirley || Sonia
DD: Sonia Theresa Rossi
___
In 1951, Fay celebrated her fortieth birthday in Provence, where she had recently renovated a Chateau. She was born a day before Christmas, and wore a beautiful red Dior dress and holly in her hair. The Chateau had four real trees and presents for everyone, including her beloved greyhounds Cerberus and Hippolyta. Fay's gift to herself was a new car, a black Cadillac Coupe deVille.
Taking a short break from acting, Fay spent her years between France, England, and Italy. On a rainy day in London, she met a striking young woman in gorgeous Chanel ensemble, giggling without a care in the world that she was being soaked through. They ducked into a quiet café and shared cups and cups of tea, and their life stories. Colette was an up-and-coming singer, known for her soulful rendition of “We’ll Meet Again”. She was Senegalese-French, her father having fought for France during WWI in the Senegalese Tirailleurs; her mother was a seamstress from Hauts-de-France who had moved to Paris to work for a reputable modiste. Fay had never before felt such love for a person, besides her children, and eventually realized her feelings were reciprocated. Fay and Colette were well-known amongst “The Sewing Circle”, a group of Old Hollywood actresses who were openly (as openly as one could be at that time) Lesbian and Bisexual. Among them were such greats as Greta Garbo, Marlene Dietrich (who had long been rumored to have been more than just friends with Colette), Barbara Stanwyck, Joan Crawford, and Katharine Hepburn.
Fay would go on to move in with Colette at the chateau in 1953, were they would host lavish parties, filled with champagne and smoke, and the keenest minds of the time-period. No evening would be complete without Fay accompanying Colette on the piano as she sung her latest hits. Eventually, Fay would even adopt five-year-old twin girls, which was quite unusual for the time, and though it couldn’t be said legally, it was known that they raised them together. They were together for six years, until Colette would lose her beloved father to a long battle with cancer. She needed time alone and moved to London to record a new album. Fay was heartbroken by her decision but didn’t let it get in the way of supporting her long-time love and their children.
DW: Colette Léone Diop "Colette"
DW: Fay Franklin
Colette & Fay || Roselyne and Eugénie
DD3/DD4: Roselyne Elise Franklin // Eugénie Aurore Franklin
___
Roselyne would become a smoky-voiced chanteuse like her mother, known most popularly for singing the theme song for the James Bond film, Death Without Dignity, in 1973 at twenty-five. She would never marry, but had two long term relationships, one with a French-Algerian model, Jean-Pierre Bencharif, who was the male face of Gucci for over fifteen-years; their relationship lasted from 1972 to 1978. They had a son together. Her most recent is with British art-house director, Edward Fox. Together, they had a baby girl.
DBF1: Jean-Pierre Lucien Bencharif
DGF: Roselyne Elise Franklin
Jean-Pierre & Roselyne || Jérôme
DS: Jérôme Idir Bencharif
DBF2: Edward William Fox
DGF: Roselyne Elise Franklin
Edward & Roselyne || Helena
DD: Helena Margot Fox
___
Eugénie would become a chef whose German, West African, and French fusions had celebrities like Jane Birkin and Serge Gainsbourg, France Gall, and Jean-Paul Belmondo coming back again and again. Her original restaurant called “Méli-Mélo” was happily situated in bustling Paris, but now there is one in Hollywood, London, and even Tokyo. She married her sous-chef and they had four amazing children, who have inherited their parents’ love of food.
DH: Cheikh Adama Sembène
DW: Eugénie Aurore Franklin
Cheikh & Eugénie || Lionel, Babacar, Fleur, and Odile
DS: Lionel Jean-Luc Sembène
DS/DD: Babacar Malick Sembène // Fleur Albane Sembène
DD: Odile Coumba Sembène
___
By 1955 Fay was ready to return to Hollywood. At forty-four, roles were drying up for the starlet, but when she starred in a star-studded adaption of "Macbeth", as Lady Macbeth, she was back on the market. It was a huge hit and cemented her popularity, despite her age. For her role she would win her second Oscar. Fay wowed the audience in her black and white Jacques Fath evening dress.
Shortly after, Fay would act in another epic film, called "Boudica", where she would meet her next love, the young director of the film. Born into a Russian family in New York, Alexander was ten years her junior, and some thought much too plain for such a glamorous woman. With curly auburn hair, a love of turtlenecks, and his iconic round black glasses, they seemed an odd match. But in an interview with Vogue, Fay clarified it was his heart that had attracted her, plus a common affection for animals. For their one-year anniversary Alexandrr gave her a pair of persian kittens, Shahrazad and Parisa. After only being together for only two short years, Fay found out she was pregnant. A lavish wedding was planned, one that would take place in Barcelona and see the likes of Marilyn Monroe, Audrey Hepburn, and Dean Martin in attendance. Unfortunately, it would all come to a standstill when Alexander would die tragically in a plane crash, leaving Fay pregnant and alone. The story of their doomed love was front-page news, and Fay would be the recipient of countless letters of condolences, well-wishes, and prayers.
The studios were not pleased to have their star pregnant and unmarried, and soon Fay would find herself relegated to bit parts and guest appearances on TV shows. She would retire officially from acting in 1960, moving back to her chateau in Provence, where she would write a bestselling biography on her life, called "Forget Me Not". Her later years were marked by animal activism, and charitable work -- she would auction off several of her famous dresses for a local French hospital in '65 -- and the rare interviews, mostly conducted in her 19th century style kitchen, or herb garden. In 1970 Fay would reunite with her former love, the jazz singer Colette, and they would spend the rest of their lives together. Fay would live on to just two weeks shy of her 100th birthday, surrounded by her family and loved ones, her animals, her memories, a photo of her son, lost in Cambodia, and the man who almost became her husband.
DBF: Alexander Leon Kamensky
DGF: Fay Franklin
Alexander & Fay
DD: Sabine Rose Kamensky
---
Sabine would be a media darling from the moment she was born, and they would closely follow her, from the time she was in pink dresses and bobby-socks to her troubled adolescence, which consisted of drugs, alcohol and much-older boyfriends. One of those boyfriends encouraged her to start singing. Sabine would form an all-girl rock band called "Baba Yaga", that would shock audiences with their dark lyrics and onstage antics. While the band only lasted a few short years -- from '79 to '83 -- they would forever be icons for punk girls everywhere. Sabine would have a prosperous solo-career, and a famously rocky marriage with music producer, Kit Vaughn. The marriage lasted ten-years -- ten-years filled with domestic assault allegations, hard-drinking, and affairs. They had two children, and Sabine would lose custody to her husband. Finally, after so many years of hard-living and chaotic episodes, Sabine would go to rehab and stay sober for fifteen years, until her untimely death from lung cancer at fifty-five. A photograph of her, with her flaming red-hair and kohl-streaked eyes, belting out one of her songs, would become a bestselling image and adorn the walls of angst-ridden teens everywhere.
DD5: Sabine Rose Kamensky
DexH: Kit Samson Vaughn
Sabine & Kit || Sage and Jude
DS/DS: Sage Conrad Vaughn // Jude Hart Vaughn
masculine list: https://www.behindthename.com/pnl/191050/124079
feminine list: https://www.behindthename.com/pnl/191050/124080