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  1. Clarence Leon Brown (May 10, 1890 – August 17, 1987) was an American film director. [1] Early life. Born in Clinton, Massachusetts, to Larkin Harry Brown, a cotton manufacturer, and Katherine Ann Brown (née Gaw), Brown moved to Tennessee when he was 11 years old.

  2. Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown (April 18, 1924 – September 10, 2005) was an American singer and multi-instrumentalist from Louisiana. He won a Grammy Award for Best Traditional Blues Album in 1983 for his album, Alright Again!

  3. May 9, 2024 · Clarence Brown was an American filmmaker who was one of the leading directors of Hollywood’s “golden age,” noted for such acclaimed movies as Anna Karenina (1935), National Velvet (1944), and The Yearling (1946).

  4. Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown. American multi-instrumentalist (guitar, fiddle, bass, drums, mandolin, viola, harmonica) and singer, who gained his nickname "Gatemouth" from a high school instructor who said Brown had a "voice like a gate".

  5. Sep 12, 2005 · Clarence “Gatemouth” Brown, perhaps the most versatile of all blues-based musicians, died Saturday at age eighty-one of complications from lung cancer and heart disease.

  6. Aug 19, 1987 · Clarence Brown, the one-time engineer and World War I aviator who became one of the film world’s most prolific directors, enhancing the careers of such diverse stars as Greta Garbo,...

  7. Clarence Brown. Director: Anna Karenina. Clarence Leon Brown was the son of Larkin Harry and Catherine Ann (Gaw) Brown of Clinton, Massachusetts. His family moved to Knoxville, Tennessee, when he was 12 years old.