1'000,000.00 dollars
The duration of The Eleanor Roosevelt Story is 1.5 hours.
The Eleanor Roosevelt Story was created on 1965-11-08.
The Eleanor Roosevelt Story - 1965 was released on: USA: 8 November 1965
Sibs - 1991 The Eleanor Roosevelt Story 1-19 was released on: USA: 1992
The Eleanor Roosevelt Story is a documentary film, so it does not feature actors or actresses in the traditional sense. However, it includes archival footage of Eleanor Roosevelt herself, as well as interviews with her family members, associates, and prominent figures from the time.
The books that Eleanor Roosevelt wrote were This Is My Story (1937), This I Remember (1950), On My Own (1958), and Tomorrow Is Now (1963).
The full story of Eleanor Roosevelt's faith and religious convictions is found at www.AnglicanExaminer.com/ER.html. She was a member of the Episcopal Church from infancy.
Eleanor Roosevelt wrote Christmas, a story of St. Nicholas Eve of 1940 and a little girl named Marta.
The title tells the whole story, a photographic biography of the First Lady. It was an illustrated biography of its subject, Eleanor Roosevelt. I have never seen this book, but do not deny it exists. Almost certainly it would have the rumor-ridden photo of the First Lady and The Aviatrix, Amelia Earhart, together, a book has been done(Juvenile) on the friendship between the First Lady and the afirst lady of Flight! _It is called Amelia and Eleanor go for a ride. Very juvenile title.
The Eleanor Roosevelt Story won the Oscar for Documentary - Feature - in 1965.
Better start reading the story because everybody is looking for the same answer. LOL!
Works: Works by Eleanor Roosevelt (1884-1962) 1935 "My Day." The First Lady's syndicated column begins. The six-day-a-week forum for Roosevelt's wide-ranging views would continue until 1962, interrupted only for four days at the time of President Roosevelt's death. 1937 This Is My Story. The First Lady's autobiography covers the years from her childhood to the Democratic convention of 1924 and her husband's election as governor of New York. Candid about herself, Roosevelt is discreet on the details of her marriage. 1938 This Troubled World. The First Lady reflects on what is needed for world peace: brotherly love and the establishment of a strong United Nations-like organization to enforce it. 1940 The Moral Basis of Democracy. The First Lady argues for a moral awakening to rectify inequity based on a "true sense of brotherhood." 1946 If You Ask Me. Eleanor Roosevelt responds to questions on a variety of topics submitted to the Ladies Home Journal. 1949 This I Remember. In a continuation of her previous autobiographical volume, This Is My Story (1937), Roosevelt covers the years 1924 to 1945 in what is regarded as the best memoir produced by a First Lady. 1958 On My Own. The autobiography of Eleanor Roosevelt's life from Franklin's death in 1945 to 1958. 1961 The Autobiography of Eleanor Roosevelt. All the volumes of Eleanor's autobiographies were compiled into this book. This includes This Is My Story (1937), This I Remember (1949), and On My Own (1958). 1962 Tomorrow Is Now. This was Eleanor Roosevelt's final book, and she was finishing it when Dr. Gurewitsch diagonsed what she described as a "tired feeling" as a rare, untreatable blood disease. Eleanor Roosevelt died on November 11, 1962. The book was published posthumously, and she discusses her optimistic hopes for the future in the national and world economic situation, in education, in individual and world peace.