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  1. Carlotta Monterey (born Hazel Nielsen Tharsing; December 28, 1888 – November 18, 1970) was an American stage and film actress. She was the third and final wife of playwright Eugene O'Neill . Carlotta Monterey was born Hazel Nielsen Tharsing on December 28, 1888, in San Francisco, California to Christian Nielsen Tharsing (1848-1932), a Danish immigrant who was a fruit farmer, and Nellie Gotchett (1866-1946). [1]

  2. Once an actress with abandoned dreams of joining a convent, Carlotta Monterey O’Neill collaborated with her playwright husband Eugene O’Neill on some of his most famous work during their five years in “ Tao House ” in Danville, California. She was born Hazel Nielson Taasinge in San Francisco in 1888 to Christian Nielson Taasinge and ...

  3. Carlotta Monterey. Actress: The King on Main Street. Carlotta Monterey was born on December 28, 1888 in San Francisco, California as Hazel Neilson Taasinge. She was an actress, known for Soul-Fire (1925), The King on Main Street (1925), and The Cost (1920).

    • January 1, 1
    • San Francisco, California, USA
    • January 1, 1
    • Westwood, New Jersey, USA
  4. The play was awarded the 1957 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, and is O'Neill's best known work. A resident of the Valley Nursing Home in Westwood, New Jersey, Monterey died there on November 18, 1970. Carlotta Monterey was an American stage and film actress. She was the third and final wife of playwright Eugene O'Neill.

  5. Nov 21, 1970 · Carlotta Monterey was al woman who dazzled men, and O'Neill became a passionate suitor, although Carlotta said later that his greatest need had been for someone to look after him, to put his ...

  6. Dec 1, 2019 · Before going off to London and Paris to be educated and begin the twenty-year professional stage career that preceded her marriage to Eugene O'Neill, Carlotta Monterey (born Hazel Tharsing) spent her formative years in Oakland, California. In addition to occasional brief visits, she returned to Oakland to live several times in adulthood, most notably during her short-lived second marriage to Melvin Chapman Jr., which produced her daughter Cynthia in 1917, although she spent only about a year ...

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  8. Carlotta then began a tug of war to retrieve the manuscript of Long Day’s Journey Into Night, which O’Neill had consigned to the vault of his publisher, Bennett Cerf of Random House, with instructions that it be locked away until 25 years after his death—so that no one would be alive to question its autobiographical origins. Cerf did his best to honor O’Neill’s request but Carlotta, her husband’s legally undisputable heir and executrix, was of course triumphant.