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Miriam Hopkins


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Prepared by Daniel B Miller

 

Ellen Miriam Hopkins

(October 18, 1902 – October 9, 1972) was an American film and TV actress known for her versatility.

She first signed with Paramount in 1930, working with Ernst Lubitsch and Joel McCrea, among many others. Her long-running feud with Bette Davis was publicized for effect.

Later she became a pioneer of TV drama. Hopkins was a distinguished Hollywood hostess, who moved in intellectual and creative circles.

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Miriam Hopkins in Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1931)

Early life

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Hopkins was born in Savannah, Georgia to Homer Hopkins and Ellen Cutler and raised in Bainbridge, near the Alabama border. She had an older sister, Ruby (1900-1990). Her maternal great-grandfather, the fourth mayor of Bainbridge, helped establish St. John’s Episcopal Church, in Bainbridge, where Hopkins sang in the choir.

In 1909, she briefly lived in Mexico. After her parents separated, she moved as a teen with her mother to Syracuse, New York, to be near her uncle, Thomas Cramer Hopkins, head of the Geology Department at Syracuse University.

She attended Goddard Seminary in Barre, Vermont (which later became Goddard College in Plainfield, Vermont) and Syracuse University (in New York). She became estranged from her father, and when in 1922 at the age of 19 she applied for a passport in preparation for a theatrical tour of South America, she listed his address as “unknown.”
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Career

At age 20, Hopkins became a chorus girl in New York City. In 1930, she signed with Paramount Pictures, and made her official film debut in Fast and Loose. Her first great success was in the 1931 horror drama film Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, in which she portrayed the character Ivy Pearson, a prostitute who becomes entangled with Jekyll and Hyde. Hopkins received rave reviews, but because of the potential controversy of the film and her character, many of her scenes were cut before the official release, reducing her screen time to approximately five minutes.

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Fast and Loose (1930) Poster

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Miriam Hopkins in Fast and Loose (1930)

Miriam Hopkins in Fast and Loose (1930)

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Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1931) Poster

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Dr. Jekyll And Mr Hyde, lobby card. Dr. Jekyll And Mr Hyde, from left, Miriam Hopkins, Fredric March, Rose Hobart, 1931. (Photo by LMPC via Getty Images)

Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1931) Lobby Card

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Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1931) Lobby Card

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Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1931) Lobby Card

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Fredric March and Miriam Hopkins in Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1931)

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Fredric March and Miriam Hopkins in Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1931)

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Fredric March Rose Hobart and Miriam Hopkins in Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1931)

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Fredric March and Miriam Hopkins in Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1931)

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Fredric March and Miriam Hopkins in Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1931)

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Fredric March Rose Hobart and Miriam Hopkins in Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1931)

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Fredric March and Miriam Hopkins in Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1931)

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Fredric March Rouben Mamoulian and Miriam Hopkins on the set of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1931)

Nevertheless, her career ascended swiftly thereafter and in 1932 she scored her breakthrough in Ernst Lubitsch‘s Trouble in Paradise, where she proved her charm and wit as a beautiful and jealous pickpocket. During the pre-code Hollywood of the early 1930s, she appeared in The Smiling Lieutenant, The Story of Temple Drake and Design for Living, all of which were box office successes and critically acclaimed.

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Trouble in Paradise (1932) Poster

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Herbert Marshall and Miriam Hopkins in Trouble in Paradise (1932)

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Miriam Hopkins and Kay Francis in Trouble in Paradise (1932)

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Kay Francis, Herbert Marshall and Kay Francis in Trouble in Paradise (1932)

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Miriam Hopkins and Herbert Marshall in Trouble in Paradise (1932)

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Trouble in Paradise (1932) Lobby Card

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Herbert Marshall and Miriam Hopkins in Trouble in Paradise (1932)

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The Smiling Lieutenant (1931) Lobby Card

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On the set of The Smiling Lieutenant (1931)

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The Smiling Lieutenant (1931) Press Book

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The Story of Temple Drake (1933) Poster

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The Story of Temple Drake (1933) Lobby Card

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The Story of Temple Drake (1933) Lobby Card

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Miriam Hopkins and Jack La Rue in The Story of Temple Drake (1933)

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Miriam Hopkins in The Story of Temple Drake (1933)

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Miriam Hopkins and Jack La Rue in The Story of Temple Drake (1933)

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Miriam Hopkins in The Story of Temple Drake (1933)

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The Story of Temple Drake (1933) Press Sheet

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Miriam Hopkins in The Story of Temple Drake (1933)

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Design for Living (1933) Poster

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Design for Living (1933) Poster

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Design for Living (1933) Lobby Card

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Design for Living (1933) Lobby Card

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Design for Living (1933) Lobby Card

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Gary Cooper and Fredric March in Design for Living (1933)

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Fredric March, Miriam Hopkins and Gary Cooper in Design for Living (1933)

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 Gary Cooper, Fredric March and Miriam Hopkins in Design for Living (1933)6095691_1

Design for Living (1933) Lobby Card

Her pre-Code films were considered risqué at the time, with The Story of Temple Drake depicting a rape scene and Design for Living featuring a ménage à trois with Fredric March and Gary Cooper.

She also had success during the remainder of the decade with the romantic comedy The Richest Girl in the World (1934), the historical udrama Becky Sharp (1935), for which she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress, Barbary Coast (1935), These Three (1936) (the first of four films with director William Wyler) and The Old Maid (1939).

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The Richest Girl in the World (1934) Poster

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Miriam Hopkins in The Richest Girl in the World (1934) 

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Joel McCrea and Miriam Hopkins in The Richest Girl in the World (1934) 

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Miriam Hopkins in The Richest Girl in the World (1934)

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Becky Sharp (1935) Poster

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Miriam Hopkins in Becky Sharp (1935)

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Becky Sharp (1935) Poster

 

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Becky Sharp (1935) Poster

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Miriam Hopkins in Becky Sharp (1935) Production Still

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Miriam Hopkins in Becky Sharp (1935) 

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Miriam Hopkins in Becky Sharp (1935) 

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Becky Sharp (1935) Magazine Cover 

 

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Barbary Coast (1935) Poster

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Barbary Coast AKA Port of Wickedness (1935) Lobby Card

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Barbary Coast AKA Port of Wickedness (1935) Poster

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Barbary Coast AKA Port of Wickedness (1935) Lobby Card

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Miriam Hopkins in Barbary Coast AKA Port of Wickedness (1935)  

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Miriam Hopkins in Barbary Coast AKA Port of Wickedness (1935)  

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These Three (1936) Poster

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These Three (1936) Poster

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These Three (1936) Production Still

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These Three (1936) Poster

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These Three (1936) Lobby Cards

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These Three (1936) Poster

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The Old Maid (1939) Poster

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Bette Davis, George Brent and Miriam Hopkins in The Old Maid (1939)

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The Old Maid (1939) Poster

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The Old Maid (1939) Lobby Card

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The Old Maid (1939) Poster

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Bette Davis and Miriam Hopkins in The Old Maid (1939) 

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Bette Davis, Miriam Hopkins and George Brent in The Old Maid (1939)

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The Old Maid (1939) Poster

Hopkins was one of the first actresses approached to play the role of Ellie Andrews in It Happened One Night (1934). However, she rejected the part, and Claudette Colbert was cast instead. She did audition for the role of Scarlett O’Hara in Gone with the Wind, having one advantage none of the other candidates had: she was a native Georgian. But the part went to Vivien Leigh. Interestingly, both Colbert and Leigh won Oscars for their performances.

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Hopkins had well-publicized fights with her arch-enemy Bette Davis (Hopkins believed Davis was having an affair with Hopkins’ husband at the time, Anatole Litvak), when they co-starred in their two films The Old Maid (1939) and Old Acquaintance(1943).

Davis admitted to enjoying very much a scene in Old Acquaintance in which she shakes Hopkins forcefully during a scene where Hopkins’ character makes unfounded allegations against Davis’s. There were even press photos taken with both divas in a boxing ring with gloves up and director Vincent Sherman between the two. Davis described Hopkins as a “terribly good actress” but also “terribly jealous” in later interviews.

 

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Old Acquaintance (1943) Poster 

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Miriam Hopkins in Old Acquaintance (1943) 

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Old Acquaintance (1943) Poster 

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Old Acquaintance (1943) Poster 

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Miriam Hopkins and Bette Davis in Old Acquaintance (1943) 

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Old Acquaintance (1943) Lobby Card

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Bette Davis and Miriam Hopkins in Old Acquaintance (1943) 

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Old Acquaintance (1943) Lobby Card

After Old Acquaintance, Hopkins did not work again in films until The Heiress (1949), where she played the lead character’s aunt. In Mitchell Leisen‘s 1951’s comedy The Mating Season, she gave a comic performance as Gene Tierney‘s character’s mother. She also acted in The Children’s Hour, which is the theatrical basis of her film These Three (1936). In the remake, she played the aunt to Shirley MacLaine, who took Hopkins’ original role.

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The Heiress (1949) Poster

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The Heiress (1949) Lobby Card

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The Heiress (1949) Lobby Card

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The Heiress (1949) Lobby Cards

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The Mating Season (1951) Poster

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Gene Tierney and Miriam Hopkins in The Mating Season (1951) 

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The Children’s Hour (1961) Poster

Hopkins was a television pioneer, performing in teleplays in three decades, spanning the late 1940s through the late 1960s, in such programs as The Chevrolet Tele-Theatre (1949), Pulitzer Prize Playhouse (1951), Lux Video Theatre (1951–1955), The Outer Limits (1964) and even an episode of The Flying Nun in 1969.

She has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame: one for motion pictures at 1701 Vine Street, and one for television at 1708 Vine Street.

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Miriam Hopkins

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The Playhouse Theatre Programme

 

Private life

Hopkins was married and divorced four times: first to actor Brandon Peters, second to aviator, screenwriter Austin Parker, third to the director Anatole Litvak, and fourth to war correspondent Raymond B. Brock. In 1932, Hopkins adopted a son, Michael T. Hopkins (March 29, 1932 – October 5, 2010).

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Brandon Peters

 

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Austin Parker

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Anatole Litvak

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Miriam Hopkins and Anatole Litvak

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Miriam Hopkins and Anatole Litvak

She was known for hosting elegant parties. John O’Hara, a frequent guest, noted that

most of her guests were chosen from the world of the intellect…Miriam knew them all, had read their work, had listened to their music, had bought their paintings. They were not there because a secretary had given her a list of highbrows.

She was a staunch Democrat who strongly supported the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt.

Death

Hopkins died in New York City from a heart attack nine days before her 70th birthday. She is buried in Oak City Cemetery in Bainbridge, Georgia.

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Miriam Hopkins Grave

Filmography

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Year Title Role Notes
1930 Fast and Loose Marion Lenox Hopkins’s film debut
1931 The Smiling Lieutenant Princess Anna The first of three films Hopkins made with Lubitsch
1931 24 Hours Rosie Duggan
1931 Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Ivy Pearson
1932 Two Kinds of Women Emma Krull
1932 Dancers in the Dark Gloria Bishop
1932 The World and the Flesh Maria Yaskaya
1932 Trouble in Paradise Lily Second film directed by Lubitsch and starring Hopkins
1933 The Story of Temple Drake Temple Drake
1933 The Stranger’s Return Louise Starr
1933 Design for Living Gilda Farrell Third and final film Hopkins and Lubitsch made together
1934 All of Me Lydia Darrow
1934 She Loves Me Not Curly Flagg
1934 The Richest Girl in the World Dorothy Hunter First of five films Hopkins and McCrea made together
1935 Becky Sharp Becky Sharp Nominated – Academy Award for Best Actress
The first feature film made in the three strip Technicolor process
1935 Barbary Coast Mary ‘Swan’ Rutledge Second film starring Hopkins and McCrea
1935 Splendor Phyllis Manning Lorrimore Third film starring Hopkins and McCrea
1936 These Three Martha Dobie The film was adapted from the 1934 play The Children’s Hour by Lillian Hellman.
Fourth film starring Hopkins and McCrea
1936 Men Are Not Gods Ann Williams
1937 The Woman I Love Madame Helene Maury Hopkins married director Anatole Litvak shortly after this film was made.
It is the only film Hopkins made with Paul Muni
1937 Woman Chases Man Virginia Travis Final film Hopkins and McCrea made together
1937 Wise Girl Susan ‘Susie’ Fletcher
1939 The Old Maid Delia Lovell Ralston The first of two films Hopkins made with Bette Davis
1940 Virginia City Julia Hayne Hopkins co-starred with Errol Flynn
1940 Lady with Red Hair Mrs. Leslie Carter
1942 A Gentleman After Dark Flo Melton
1943 Old Acquaintance Millie Drake Second of two films Hopkins made with Bette Davis.
1949 The Heiress Lavinia Penniman Nominated – Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture
1951 The Mating Season Fran Carleton
1952 The Outcasts of Poker Flat Mrs. Shipton/’The Duchess’
1952 Carrie Julie Hurstwood
1961 The Children’s Hour Lily Mortar Hopkins had starred in the original film adaptation of the play The Children’s Hour entitled These Three in the role of Martha Dobie. In this film Shirley MacLaine played Martha and Miriam Hopkins played her Aunt Lily.
1964 Fanny Hill Mrs. Maude Brown
1966 The Chase Mrs. Reeves Hopkins played the mother of Robert Redford’s character
1970 Savage Intruder Katharine Parker Hopkins’s last film

Short Subjects:

  • “The Home Girl” (1928)
  • “Hollywood on Parade No. B-1” (1933)

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Miriam Hopkins 6

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References

  1. Jump up^ Obituary Variety, October 11, 1972, p. 71.
  2. Jump up^ Virginia, Marriage Records 1936-2014
  3. Jump up^ 1910 United States Federal Census
  4. Jump up^ http://www.episcopalchurch.org/parish/st-johns-episcopal-church-bainbridge-ga
  5. Jump up^ “Miriam Hopkins (1902-1972)”. Georgiaencyclopedia.org. August 28, 2013. Retrieved October 17, 2015.
  6. ^ Jump up to:ab Profile, archives.syr.edu; accessed June 27, 2015.
  7. Jump up^ [Ancestry.com] U.S. Passports Applications, 1795-1925, “Meriam Hopkins, Passport Issue Date 30 January 1922”
  8. Jump up^ Profile, allanellenberger.com; accessed June 27, 2015.
  9. Jump up^ Profile, imdb.com; accessed June 27, 2015.
  10. Jump up^ Wiley, Mason; Damien Bona (1987). Inside Oscar: The Unofficial History of the Academy Awards. Ballantine Books. p. 54. ISBN0-345-34453-7.
  11. Jump up^ Soares, Andre (December 3, 2006). “Miriam Hopkins Biography in the Works”. Alternative Film Guide.
  12. Jump up^ “TimesMachine”. Timesmachine.nytimes.com. Retrieved October 17, 2015.
  13. Jump up^ Michael Janeway (August 22, 2009). The Fall of the House of Roosevelt: Brokers of Ideas and Power from FDR to LBJ. Books.google.com. Retrieved October 17,2015.

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Carole Lombard


Prepared by Daniel B Miller

Carole Lombard (born Jane Alice Peters, October 6, 1908 – January 16, 1942) was an American film actress. She was particularly noted for her energetic, often off-beat roles in the screwball comedies of the 1930s. She was the highest-paid star in Hollywood in the late 1930s. She was the second wife of actor Clark Gable.

Lombard was born into a wealthy family in Fort Wayne, Indiana, but was raised in Los Angeles by her single mother. At 12, she was recruited by the film director Allan Dwan and made her screen debut in A Perfect Crime (1921). Eager to become an actress, she signed a contract with the Fox Film Corporation at age 16, but mainly played bit parts.

Carole Lombard in A Perfect Crime (1921)

She was dropped by Fox after a car accident left a scar on her face. Lombard appeared in 15 short comedies for Mack Sennett between 1927 and 1929, and then began appearing in feature films such as High Voltage and The Racketeer. After a successful appearance in The Arizona Kid (1930), she was signed to a contract with Paramount Pictures.

Paramount quickly began casting Lombard as a leading lady, primarily in drama films. Her profile increased when she married William Powell in 1931, but the couple divorced after two years.

A turning point in Lombard’s career came when she starred in Howard Hawks‘ pioneering screwball comedy Twentieth Century (1934). The actress found her niche in this genre, and continued to appear in films such as Hands Across the Table (1935) (forming a popular partnership with Fred MacMurray), My Man Godfrey (1936), for which she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress, and Nothing Sacred (1937).

At this time, Lombard married “the King of Hollywood”, Clark Gable, and the supercouple gained much attention from the media. Keen to win an Oscar, at the end of the decade, Lombard began to move towards more serious roles. Unsuccessful in this aim, she returned to comedy in Alfred Hitchcock‘s Mr. & Mrs. Smith (1941) and Ernst Lubitsch‘s To Be or Not to Be (1942) — her final film role.

Lombard’s career was cut short when she died at the age of 33 in an aircraft crash on Mount Potosi, Nevada while returning from a war bond tour. Today, she is remembered as one of the definitive actresses of the screwball comedy genre and American comedy, and ranks among the American Film Institute‘s greatest female stars of classic Hollywood cinema.

Early years

Childhood

Lombard was born in Fort Wayne, Indiana, on October 6, 1908 at 704 Rockhill Street.

Christened with the name Jane Alice Peters, she was the third child and only daughter of Frederick Christian Peters (1875–1935) and Elizabeth Jayne “Bessie” (Knight) Peters (1876–1942). Her two older brothers, to each of whom she was close, both growing up and in adulthood, were Frederick Charles (1902–1979) and John Stuart (1906–1956).

Lombard’s parents both descended from wealthy families and her early years were lived in comfort, with the biographer Robert Matzen calling it her “silver spoon period”.

The marriage between her parents was strained, however, and in October 1914, her mother took the children and moved to Los Angeles. Although the couple did not divorce, the separation was permanent. Her father’s continued financial support allowed the family to live without worry, if not with the same affluence they had enjoyed in Indiana, and they settled into an apartment near Venice Boulevard in Los Angeles.

At age 12, Lombard had a small role in the film A Perfect Crime (1921).

 

Described by her biographer Wes Gehring as “a free-spirited tomboy“, the young Lombard was passionately involved in sports and enjoyed watching movies.

At Virgil Junior High School, she participated in tennis, volleyball, and swimming, and won trophies for her achievements in athletics. At the age of 12, this hobby unexpectedly landed Lombard her first screen role. While playing baseball with friends, she caught the attention of the film director Allan Dwan, who later recalled seeing “a cute-looking little tomboy … out there knocking the hell out of the other kids, playing better baseball than they were. And I needed someone of her type for this picture.”

With the encouragement of her mother, Lombard happily took a small role in the melodrama A Perfect Crime (1921). She was on set for two days, playing the sister of Monte Blue. Dwan later commented, “She ate it up”.

Aspiring actress, Fox (1921–26)

A Perfect Crime was not widely distributed, but the brief experience spurred Lombard and her mother to look for more film work. The teenager attended several auditions, but none was successful.

While appearing as the queen of Fairfax High School‘s May Day Carnival at the age of 15, she was scouted by an employee of Charlie Chaplin and offered a screen test to appear in his film The Gold Rush (1925). Lombard was not given the role, but it raised Hollywood’s awareness of the aspiring actress.

Her test was seen by the Vitagraph Film Company, which expressed an interest in signing her to a contract. Although this did not materialize, the condition that she adopt a new first name (“Jane” was considered too dull) lasted with Lombard throughout her career. She selected the name “Carol” after a girl with whom she played tennis in middle school.

In October 1924, shortly after these disappointments, 16-year-old Lombard was signed to a contract with the Fox Film Corporation. How this came about is uncertain: in her lifetime, it was reported that a director for the studio scouted her at a dinner party, but more recent evidence suggests that Lombard’s mother contacted Louella Parsons, the gossip columnist, who then got her a screen test.

According to the biographer Larry Swindell, Lombard’s beauty convinced Winfield Sheehan, head of the studio, to sign her to a $75-per-week contract.

The teenager abandoned her schooling to embark on this new career. Fox was happy to use the name Carol, but unlike Vitagraph, disliked her surname. From this point, she became “Carol Lombard”, the new name taken from a family friend.

The majority of Lombard’s appearances with Fox were bit parts in low-budget Westerns and adventure films. She later commented on her dissatisfaction with these roles: “All I had to do was simper prettily at the hero and scream with terror when he battled with the villain.” She fully enjoyed the other aspects of film work, however, such as photo shoots, costume fittings, and socializing with actors on the studio set. Lombard embraced the flapper lifestyle and became a regular at the Coconut Grove nightclub, where she won several Charleston dance competitions.

In March 1925, Fox gave Lombard a leading role in the drama Marriage in Transit, opposite Edmund Lowe. Her performance was well received, with a reviewer for Motion Picture News writing that she displayed “good poise and considerable charm.”

Despite this, the studio heads were unconvinced that Lombard was leading lady material, and her one-year contract was not renewed. Gehring has suggested that a facial scar she obtained in an automobile accident was a factor in this decision. Fearing that the scar — which ran across her cheek — would ruin her career, the 17-year-old had an early plastic surgery procedure to make it less visible. For the remainder of her career, Lombard learned to hide the mark with make-up and careful lighting.

Breakthrough

Sennett and Pathé (1927–29)

Lombard in the comedy short Run, Girl, Run (1928), from her time as a “Mack Sennett girl”

After a year without work, Lombard obtained a screen test for the “King of Comedy” Mack Sennett. She was offered a contract, and although she initially had reservations about performing in slapstick comedies, the actress joined his company as one of the “Sennett Bathing Beauties“.

She appeared in 15 short films between September 1927 and March 1929, and greatly enjoyed her time at the studio. It gave Lombard her first experiences in comedy and provided valuable training for her future work in the genre. In 1940, she called her Sennett years “the turning point of [my] acting career.”

Sennett’s productions were distributed by Pathé Exchange, and the company began casting Lombard in feature films. She had prominent roles in Show Folks and Ned McCobb’s Daughter (both 1928), where reviewers observed that she made a “good impression” and was “worth watching”.

The following year, Pathé elevated Lombard from a supporting player to a leading lady. Her success in Raoul Walsh‘s picture Me, Gangster (also 1928), opposite June Collyer and Don Terry on his film debut, finally eased the pressure her family had been putting on her to succeed. In Howard Higgin‘s High Voltage (1929), her first talking picture, she played a criminal in the custody of a deputy sheriff, both of whom are among bus passengers stranded in deep snow.

Her next film, the comedy Big News (1929), cast her opposite Robert Armstrong and was a critical and commercial success. Lombard was reunited with Armstrong for the crime drama The Racketeer, released in late 1929. The review in Film Daily wrote, “Carol Lombard proves a real surprise, and does her best work to date. In fact, this is the first opportunity she has had to prove that she has the stuff to go over.”

Paramount, Powell marriage (1930–33)

 

Lombard returned to Fox for a one-off role in the western The Arizona Kid (1930). It was a big release for the studio, starring the popular actor Warner Baxter, in which Lombard received third billing. Following the success of the film, Paramount Pictures recruited Lombard and signed her to a $350-per-week contract (gradually increasing to $3,500 per week by 1936). They cast her in the Buddy Rogers comedy Safety in Numbers (also 1930), and one critic observed of her work, “Lombard proves [to be] an ace comedienne.”

For her second assignment, Fast and Loose (also 1930) with Miriam Hopkins, Paramount mistakenly credited the actress as “Carole Lombard”. She decided she liked this spelling and it became her permanent screen name.

Lombard appeared in five films released during 1931, beginning with the Frank Tuttle comedy It Pays to Advertise. Her next two films, Man of the World and Ladies Man, both featured William Powell, Paramount’s top male star.

Lombard had been a fan of the actor before they met, attracted to his good looks and debonair screen persona, and they were soon in a relationship.

The differences between the pair have been noted by biographers: she was 22, carefree, and famously foul-mouthed, while he was 38, intellectual, and sophisticated. Despite their disparate personalities, Lombard married Powell on June 6, 1931, at her Beverly Hills home. Talking to the media, she argued for the benefits of “love between two people who are diametrically different”, claiming that their relationship allowed for a “perfect see-saw love”.

With William Powell, her husband from June 1931 to August 1933

 

The marriage to Powell increased Lombard’s fame, while she continued to please critics with her work in Up Pops the Devil and I Take this Woman (both 1931).

In reviews for the latter film, which co-starred Gary Cooper, several critics predicted that Lombard was set to become a major star. She went on to appear in five films throughout 1932. No One Man and Sinners in the Sun were not successful, but Edward Buzzell‘s romantic picture Virtue was well received.

After featuring in the drama No More Orchids, Lombard was cast as the wife of a con artist in No Man of Her Own. Her co-star for the picture was Clark Gable, who was rapidly becoming one of Hollywood’s top stars. The film was a critical and commercial success, and Wes Gehring writes that it was “arguably Lombard’s finest film appearance” to that point.

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It was the only picture that Gable and Lombard, future husband and wife, made together.

There was no romantic interest at this time however, as she recounted to Garson Kanin: “[we] did all kinds of hot love scenes … and I never got any kind of tremble out of him at all”. In August 1933, Lombard and Powell divorced after 26 months of marriage, although they remained very good friends until the end of Lombard’s life. At the time, she blamed it on their careers, but in a 1936 interview, she admitted that this “had little to do with the divorce. We were just two completely incompatible people”.

She appeared in five films that year, beginning with the drama From Hell to Heaven and continuing with Supernatural, her only horror vehicle. After a small role in The Eagle and the Hawk, a war film starring Fredric March and Cary Grant, she starred in two melodramas: Brief Moment, which critics enjoyed, and White Woman, where she was paired with Charles Laughton.

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Hollywood star

Screwball beginnings (1934–35)

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Lombard made four comedies with Fred MacMurray, beginning with Hands Across the Table (1935).

The year 1934 marked a high point in Lombard’s career. She began with Wesley Ruggles‘s musical drama Bolero, where George Raft and she showcased their dancing skills in an extravagantly staged performance to Maurice Ravel‘s “Boléro“.

Before filming began, she was offered the lead female role in It Happened One Night, but turned it down because of scheduling conflicts with this production. Bolero was favorably received, while her next film, the musical comedy We’re Not Dressing with Bing Crosby, was a box-office hit.

Lombard was then recruited by the director Howard Hawks, to star in his screwball comedy film Twentieth Century  which proved a watershed in her career and made her a major star. Hawks had seen the actress inebriated at a party, where he found her to be “hilarious and uninhibited and just what the part needed”, and she was cast opposite John Barrymore.

In Twentieth Century, Lombard played an actress who is pursued by her former mentor, a flamboyant Broadway impresario.

Hawks and Barrymore were unimpressed with her work in rehearsals, finding that she was “acting” too hard and giving a stiff performance. The director encouraged Lombard to relax, be herself, and act on her instincts.

She responded well to this tutoring, and reviews for the film commented on her unexpectedly “fiery talent” — “a Lombard like no Lombard you’ve ever seen”. The Los Angeles Times critic felt that she was “entirely different” from her formerly cool, “calculated” persona, adding, “she vibrates with life and passion, abandon and diablerie”.

The next films in which Lombard appeared were Henry Hathaway‘s Now and Forever (1934), featuring Gary Cooper and the new child star Shirley Temple, and Lady by Choice (1934), which was a critical and commercial success.

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The Gay Bride (1934) placed her opposite Chester Morris in a gangster comedy, but this outing was panned by critics.

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After reuniting with George Raft for another dance picture, Rumba (1935), Lombard was given the opportunity to repeat the screwball success of Twentieth Century. In Mitchell Leisen‘s Hands Across the Table (1935), she portrayed a manicurist in search of a rich husband, played by Fred MacMurray.

Critics praised the film, and Photoplay’s reviewer stated that Lombard had reaffirmed her talent for the genre. It is remembered as one of her best films, and the pairing of Lombard and MacMurray proved so successful that they made three more pictures together.

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Continued success (1936–37)

Lombard’s first film of 1936 was Love Before Breakfast, described by Gehring as “The Taming of the Shrew, screwball style”.

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In William K. Howard‘s The Princess Comes Across, her second comedy with MacMurray, she played a budding actress who wins a film contract by masquerading as a Swedish princess. The performance was considered a satire of Greta Garbo, and was widely praised by critics.

 

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Lombard’s success continued as she was recruited by Universal Studios to star in the screwball comedy My Man Godfrey (1936).

William Powell, who was playing the eponymous Godfrey, insisted on her being cast as the female lead; despite their divorce, the pair remained friendly and Powell felt she would be perfect in the role of Irene, a zany heiress who employs a “forgotten man” as the family butler.

The film was directed by Gregory LaCava, who knew Lombard personally and advised that she draw on her “eccentric nature” for the role. She worked hard on the performance, particularly with finding the appropriate facial expressions for Irene. My Man Godfrey was released to great acclaim and was a box office hit.

It received six nominations at the 9th Academy Awards, including Lombard for Best Actress. Biographers cite it as her finest performance, and Frederick Ott says it “clearly established [her] as a comedienne of the first rank.”

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By 1937, Lombard was one of Hollywood’s most popular actresses, and also the highest-paid star in Hollywood following the deal which Myron Selznick negotiated with Paramount that brought her $450,000, more than five times the salary of the U.S. President.

As her salary was widely reported in the press, Lombard stated that 80% of her earnings went in taxes, but that she was happy to help improve her country. The comments earned her much positive publicity, and President Franklin D. Roosevelt sent her a personal letter of thanks.

Her first release of the year was Leisen’s Swing High, Swing Low, a third pairing with MacMurray. The film focused on a romance between two cabaret performers, and was a critical and commercial success. It had been primarily a drama, with occasional moments of comedy, but for her next project, Lombard returned to the screwball genre. Producer David O. Selznick was eager to make a comedy with the actress, impressed by her work in My Man Godfrey, and hired Ben Hecht to write an original screenplay for her.

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Nothing Sacred, directed by William Wellman and co-starring Fredric March, satirized the journalism industry and “the gullible urban masses”, with Lombard playing a small-town girl who pretends to be dying and finds her story exploited by a New York reporter. Marking her only appearance in Technicolor, the film was highly praised and was one of Lombard’s personal favorites.

 

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Lombard continued with screwball comedies, next starring in what Swindell calls one of her “wackiest” films, True Confession (1937). She played a compulsive liar who wrongly confesses to murder. Lombard loved the script and was excited about the project, which reunited her with John Barrymore and was her final appearance with MacMurray. Her prediction that it “smacked of a surefire success” proved accurate, as critics responded positively and it was popular at the box office.

 

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Gable marriage, dramatic efforts 

 

True Confession was the last film Lombard made on her Paramount contract, and she remained an independent performer for the rest of her career.

Her next film was made at Warner Bros., where she played a famous actress in Mervyn LeRoy‘s Fools for Scandal (1938). The comedy met with scathing reviews and was a commercial failure, with Swindell calling it “one of the most horrendous flops of the thirties”. Fools for Scandal was the only film Lombard made in 1938.

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By this time, she was devoted to a relationship with Clark Gable. Four years after their teaming on No Man of Her Own, the pair had reunited at a Hollywood party and began a romance early in 1936. The media took great interest in their partnership and frequently questioned if they would wed. Gable was separated from his wife, Rhea Langham, but she did not want to grant him a divorce.

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As his relationship with Lombard became serious, Langham eventually agreed to a settlement worth half a million dollars. The divorce was finalized in March 1939, and Gable and Lombard eloped in Kingman, Arizona, on March 29.

The couple — both lovers of the outdoors — bought a 20-acre ranch in Encino, California, where they kept barnyard animals and enjoyed hunting trips. Almost immediately, Lombard wanted to start a family, but her attempts failed; after two miscarriages and numerous trips to fertility specialists, she was unable to have children. In early 1938, Lombard officially joined the Bahá’í Faith, of which her mother had been a member since 1922.

While continuing with a slower work-rate, Lombard decided to move away from comedies and return to dramatic roles.

 

She appeared in a second David O. Selznick production, Made for Each Other (1939), which paired her with James Stewart to play a couple facing domestic difficulties. Reviews for the film were highly positive, and praised Lombard’s dramatic effort; financially, it was a disappointment.

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Lombard’s next appearance came opposite Cary Grant in the John Cromwellromance In Name Only (1939), a credit she personally negotiated with RKO Radio Pictures upon hearing of the script and Grant’s involvement.

The role mirrored her recent experiences, as she played a woman in love with a married man whose wife refuses to divorce. She was paid $150,000 for the film, continuing her status as one of Hollywood’s highest-paid actresses, and it was a moderate success. Lombard was eager to win an Academy Award, and selected her next project — from several possible scripts — with the expectation that it would bring her the trophy.

Vigil in the Night (1940), directed by George Stevens, featured Lombard as a nurse who faces a series of personal difficulties.

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Although the performance was praised, she did not get her nomination, as the sombre mood of the picture turned audiences away and box-office returns were poor. Despite the realization that she was best suited to comedies, Lombard completed one more drama: They Knew What They Wanted (1940), co-starring Charles Laughton, which was mildly successful.

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Final roles (1941–1942)

Accepting that “my name doesn’t sell tickets to serious pictures”, Lombard returned to comedy for the first time in three years to film Mr. & Mrs. Smith (1941), about a couple who learns that their marriage is invalid, with Robert Montgomery.

Lombard was influential in bringing Alfred Hitchcock, whom she knew through David O. Selznick, to direct one of his most atypical films. It was a commercial success, as audiences were happy with what Swindell calls “the belated happy news … that Carole Lombard was a screwball once more.”

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It was nearly a year before Lombard committed to another film, as she focused instead on her home and marriage. Determined that her next film be “an unqualified smash hit”, she was also careful in selecting a new project.

Through her agent, Lombard heard of Ernst Lubitsch‘s upcoming film: To Be or Not to Be (1942), a dark comedy that satirized the Nazi takeover of Poland.

The actress had long wanted to work with Lubitsch, her favorite comedy director, and felt that the material — although controversial — was a worthy subject. Lombard accepted the role of actress Maria Tura, despite it being a smaller part than she was used to, and was given top billing over the film’s lead, Jack Benny. Filming took place in the fall of 1941, and was reportedly one of the happiest experiences of Lombard’s career.

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Death

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When the U.S. entered World War II at the end of 1941, Lombard traveled to her home state of Indiana for a war bond rally with her mother, Bess Peters, and Clark Gable’s press agent, Otto Winkler.

Lombard was able to raise over $2 million ($35 million in 2016) in defense bonds in a single evening. Her party had initially been scheduled to return to Los Angeles by train, but Lombard was anxious to reach home more quickly and wanted to fly by a scheduled airline.

 

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Her mother and Winkler were both afraid of flying and insisted they follow their original travel plans. Lombard suggested they flip a coin; they agreed and Lombard won the toss.

In the early morning hours of January 16, 1942, Lombard, her mother, and Winkler boarded a Transcontinental and Western AirDouglas DST (Douglas Sleeper Transport) aircraft to return to California.

After refueling in Las Vegas, TWA Flight 3 took off at 7:07 p.m. and around 13 minutes later, crashed into “Double Up Peak” near the 8,300-foot (2,530 m) level of Potosi Mountain, 32 statute miles (51 km) southwest of Las Vegas. All 22 aboard, Lombard and her mother included, plus fifteen army servicemen, were killed instantly.

 

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Aftermath

 

Gable was flown to Las Vegas after learning of the tragedy to claim the bodies of his wife, mother-in-law, and Winkler, who aside from being his press agent, had been a close friend.

Lombard’s funeral was January 21 at Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California. She was interred beside her mother under the name of Carole Lombard Gable.

 

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Despite remarrying twice following her death, Gable chose to be interred beside Lombard when he died in 1960.

Lombard’s final film, To Be or Not to Be (1942), directed by Ernst Lubitsch and co-starring Jack Benny, a satire about Nazism and World War II, was in post-production at the time of her death.

The film’s producers decided to cut part of the film in which Lombard’s character asks, “What can happen on a plane?” out of respect for the circumstances surrounding her death.

When the film was released, it received mixed reviews, particularly about its controversial content, but Lombard’s performance was hailed as the perfect send-off to one of 1930s Hollywood’s most important stars.

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At the time of her death, Lombard had been scheduled to star in the film They All Kissed the Bride; when production started, she was replaced by Joan Crawford.

Crawford donated all of her salary for the film to the Red Cross, which had helped extensively in the recovery of bodies from the air crash. Shortly after Lombard’s death, Gable, who was inconsolable and devastated by his loss, joined the United States Army Air Forces.

Lombard had asked him to do that numerous times after the United States had entered World War II. After officer training, Gable headed a six-man motion picture unit attached to a B-17 bomb group in England to film aerial gunners in combat, flying five missions himself.

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In December 1943, the United States Maritime Commission announced that a Liberty ship named after Carole Lombard would be launched. Gable attended the launch of the SS Carole Lombard on January 15, 1944, the two-year anniversary of Lombard’s record-breaking war bond drive.

The ship was involved in rescuing hundreds of survivors from sunken ships in the Pacific and returning them to safety.In 1962, Mrs. Jill Winkler Rath, widow of publicist Otto Winkler, filed a $100,000 lawsuit against the $2,000,000 estate of Clark Gable in connection with Winkler’s death in the plane crash with Carole Lombard.

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The suit was dismissed in Los Angeles Superior Court. Mrs. Rath, in her action, claimed Gable promised to provide financial aid for her if she would not bring suit against the airline involved.

Mrs. Rath stated she later learned that Gable settled his claim against the airline for $10. He did so because he did not want to repeat his grief in court and subsequently provided her no financial aid in his will.

Assessment and legacy

Author Robert D. Matzen has cited Lombard as “among the most commercially successful and admired film personalities in Hollywood in the 1930s”, and feminist writer June Sochen believes that Lombard “demonstrated great knowledge of the mechanics of film making”.

George Raft, her co-star in Bolero, was extremely fond of the actress, remarking “I truly loved Carole Lombard. She was the greatest girl that ever lived and we were the best of pals. Completely honest and outspoken, she was liked by everyone”.

 

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Lombard was particularly noted for the zaniness of her performances, described as a “natural prankster, a salty tongued straight-shooter, a feminist precursor and one of the few stars who was beloved by the technicians and studio functionaries who worked with her”.

Life magazine noted that her film personality transcended to real life, “her conversation, often brilliant, is punctuated by screeches, laughs, growls, gesticulations and the expletives of a sailor’s parrot”.

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Graham Greene praised the “heartbreaking and nostalgic melodies” of her faster-than-thought delivery. “Platinum blonde, with a heart-shaped face, delicate, impish features and a figure made to be swathed in silver lamé, Lombard wriggled expressively through such classics of hysteria as Twentieth Century and My Man Godfrey.”

In 1999, the American Film Institute ranked Lombard 23rd on its list of the 25 greatest American female screen legends of classic Hollywood cinema, and she has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, at 6930 Hollywood Blvd. Lombard received one Academy Award for Best Actress nomination, for My Man Godfrey.

VIGIL IN THE NIGHT, Carole Lombard, 1940

Actresses who have portrayed her in films include Jill Clayburgh in Gable and Lombard (1976), Sharon Gless in Moviola: The Scarlett O’Hara War (1980), Denise Crosby in Malice in Wonderland (1985), Anastasia Hille in RKO 281 (1999) and Vanessa Gray in Lucy (2003).

Lombard’s Fort Wayne childhood home has been designated a historic landmark. The city named the nearby bridge over the St. Mary’s River the Carole Lombard Memorial Bridge.

 

Filmography

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References

Notes

  1. Jump up^ The automobile accident happened in 1925; Lombard was in a car with a friend, stopped at a red light, when the car in front of them rolled backward, hit their car, and caused the windshield to shatter.[21]
  2. Jump up^ In her lifetime, the media reported that Lombard added the extra “e” to Carol at the advice of a numerologist.[37] She denied this to Garson Kanin, saying, “That’s a lot of bunk.”[38] Some of the Mack Sennett shorts had already used the spelling “Carole”, but this is thought to have been an accident.[37] Her name was not consistently billed and reported with this spelling until 1930.[39] She legally changed her name to “Carole Lombard” in 1936.[40]
  3. Jump up^ At the time, Lombard was married to Powell (and told Kanin she was “on my ear about a different number at that time”)[51] while Gable was married to Rhea Langham and having an affair with Joan Crawford.[52]
  4. Jump up^ It Happened One Night went on to be a major success and won five Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Actress for Claudette Colbert in the role that Lombard would have played.[58]
  5. Jump up^ Hawks recalled, “She acted like a schoolgirl … and she was stiff, she would try to imagine a character and then act according to her imaginings instead of being herself.” When he felt that Lombard had overcome this in a scene, he said to Barrymore, “you’ve just seen a girl that’s probably going to be a big star, and if we can just keep her from acting, we’ll have a hell of a picture.”[64]
  6. Jump up^ At the Academy Awards ceremony, Lombard was announced as the nominee with the second-highest number of votes. The award went to Luise Rainer for The Great Ziegfeld.[76]
  7. Jump up^ Gable had to give Langham $350,000 in cash plus additional property, leading to a total settlement worth more than half a million.[97] The expense of the divorce contributed to Gable’s agreement to portray Rhett Butler in Gone With the Wind.[98]
  8. Jump up^ Rumors at this time stated that Gable and Lombard were experiencing marital difficulties; in 1941, they put their home up for sale, but soon took it off the market, which was taken as evidence that they had separated and then reconciled. Lombard was also eager to get pregnant, but had difficulty conceiving.[116]
  9. Jump up^ The Douglas DST or Douglas Sleeper Transport was an airliner with either 24 passenger seats in daytime operation or fitted out with 16 sleeper bunks in the cabin.[120]

Carole Lombard 25

Citations

  1. Jump up^ Indiana, Birth Certificates, 1907-1940
  2. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 19.
  3. Jump up^ Matzen 1988, p. 1; Gehring 2003, p. 19.
  4. ^ Jump up to:a b Gehring 2003, p. 23.
  5. ^ Jump up to:a b Ott 1972, p. 16.
  6. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 25.
  7. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 20.
  8. ^ Jump up to:a b Gehring 2003, pp. 27–28.
  9. Jump up^ Ott 1972, p. 17.
  10. Jump up^ Matzen 1988, p. 5.
  11. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 29.
  12. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 39–41.
  13. ^ Jump up to:a b c Matzen 1988, p. 6.
  14. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 44–45.
  15. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, p. 40.
  16. ^ Jump up to:a b Gehring 2003, p. 46.
  17. Jump up^ Matzen 1988, p. 6; Gehring 2003, p. 47.
  18. Jump up^ Ott 1972, pp. 18; 49.
  19. Jump up^ Matzen 1988, p. 6; Ott 1972, p. 19.
  20. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 48–50.
  21. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 49.
  22. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 53–54.
  23. Jump up^ Ott 1972, pp. 55–60.
  24. Jump up^ Ott 1972, p. 20; Gehring 2003, p. 53.
  25. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 57–58; Ott 1972, p. 20.
  26. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 59.
  27. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 61.
  28. Jump up^ Ott 1972, pp. 65–66.
  29. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 65.
  30. Jump up^ “Carole Gets Her Own Way”. Silver Screen. May–October 1934. Retrieved November 26, 2014.
  31. Jump up^ Ott 1972, p. 22.
  32. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 65; Ott 1972, p. 22.
  33. Jump up^ Ott 1972, p. 72.
  34. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 68–69.
  35. Jump up^ Ott 1972, p. 23.
  36. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 77.
  37. ^ Jump up to:a b c Gehring 2003, pp. 78–79.
  38. Jump up^ Kanin 1974, p. 59.
  39. Jump up^ Ott 1972, p. 46.
  40. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, p. 205.
  41. ^ Jump up to:a b Gehring 2003, p. 83.
  42. ^ Jump up to:a b Gehring 2003, p. 85.
  43. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 83; Matzen 1988, p. 11.
  44. ^ Jump up to:a b Gehring 2003, p. 87.
  45. ^ Jump up to:a b Ott 1972, p. 24.
  46. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 90–91.
  47. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 91.
  48. ^ Jump up to:a b Ott 1972, p. 25.
  49. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, p. 197; Gehring 2003, p. 98.
  50. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 97–100; 102 (for quote).
  51. ^ Jump up to:a b Kanin 1974, p. 61.
  52. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 101.
  53. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 92–93.
  54. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 102; 105.
  55. ^ Jump up to:a b Gehring 2003, p. 110.
  56. Jump up^ Ott 1972, p. 26.
  57. Jump up^ MacBride 2000, p. 303.
  58. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 103.
  59. Jump up^ Hawks 2005, p. 147.
  60. Jump up^ Ott 1972, p. 26; Gehring 2003, p. 111.
  61. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 121, 123; Ott 1972, p. 28.
  62. Jump up^ Bogdanovich 2012, p. 466.
  63. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 118.
  64. ^ Jump up to:a b Ott 1972, p. 27.
  65. Jump up^ Ott 1972, pp. 120–121.
  66. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 117.
  67. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 122–123.
  68. ^ Jump up to:a b Ott 1972, p. 28.
  69. Jump up^ Ott 1972, p. 133; Gehring 2003, p. 127.
  70. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 127.
  71. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 135.
  72. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 136–137.
  73. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 132, 93–95.
  74. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 133, 137, 139.
  75. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 140.
  76. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 168.
  77. Jump up^ Ott 1972, p. 29; Gehring 2003, pp. 140–142.
  78. Jump up^ Haver 1980, p. 214; Swindell 1975, p. 220.
  79. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, p. 201.
  80. Jump up^ Ott 1972, p. 9.
  81. Jump up^ Haver 1980, p. 214.
  82. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, p. 232.
  83. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 153.
  84. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 154–156.
  85. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 158.
  86. Jump up^ Haver 1980, pp. 214–215.
  87. Jump up^ Ott 1972, pp. 30, 148–149.
  88. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 154, 161–162.
  89. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, p. 226.
  90. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 163–166; Swindell 1975, pp. 225, 228.
  91. Jump up^ Ott 1972, p. 30.
  92. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, p. 237; Gehring 2003, pp. 174–175.
  93. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, pp. 236–237; Gehring 2003, pp. 173.
  94. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, pp. 191–194.
  95. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, pp. 200, 205; Gehring 2003, pp. 168.
  96. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, pp. 199, 213.
  97. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, p. 238.
  98. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 180.
  99. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, p. 184.
  100. Jump up^ Ott 1972, pp. 31–32.
  101. Jump up^ E. J. Manning: The Fixers – Eddie Mannix, Howard Strickling and the MGM Publicity Machine, p. 200. Retrieved November 8, 2014.
  102. Jump up^ Matzen, Robert. “The Weaver”. Retrieved September 6, 2015.
  103. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 175, 181.
  104. Jump up^ Ott 1972, pp. 158–159.
  105. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, p. 246; Gehring 2003, pp. 181–183; 189; Ott 1972, p. 160.
  106. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, pp. 252–253.
  107. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 188–189; Swindell 1975.
  108. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, pp. 258, 260.
  109. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, p. 261.
  110. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 190, 200; Swindell 1975, p. 261, 271.
  111. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, p. 272.
  112. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, p. 274.
  113. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, p. 279.
  114. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, p. 280.
  115. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, p. 283.
  116. Jump up^ Swindell 1975, pp. 284–287.
  117. ^ Jump up to:a b Swindell 1975, pp. 290–291.
  118. Jump up^ Gehring 2003, pp. 215–216.
  119. Jump up^ Kulzer, Dina-Marie. “Carole Lombard: Lovable Madcap.” Classic Hollywood Bios.
  120. Jump up^ “Sleeping Car of the Air Has Sixteen Sleeping Berths”. Popular Mechanics, January 1936.
  121. Jump up^ Cohen 1991, p. 347.
  122. Jump up^ “Clark Gable joins search for plane wreckage holding fate of Carole Lombard and 21 others”. Spokane Daily Chronicle. (Washington). United Press. January 17, 1942. p. 1.
  123. ^ Jump up to:a b “Carole Lombard”. findagrave.com, December 30, 2012.
  124. Jump up^ Brooks Brooks 2006, p. 104.
  125. Jump up^ Ford 2011, p. 41.
  126. Jump up^ “Tribute to Carole Lombard” (December 29, 1943).The Stars and Stripes, p. 4.
  127. Jump up^ “WIDOW GETS ZERO”. Variety 226.10 (May 2, 1962): 5.
  128. Jump up^ “Woman Suing Gable Estate For $100,000”. The Hartford Courant. August 18, 1961.
  129. Jump up^ Matzen 1988.
  130. Jump up^ Sochen 1999, p. 95.
  131. Jump up^ Yablonsky 2000, p. 95.
  132. Jump up^ Balio 1995, p. 276; Mitchell 2001, p. 16.
  133. ^ Jump up to:a b Gordon, Jim (May 1, 2005). “Fort Wayne home to ‘Profane Angel'”. The Post-Tribune, accessed via HighBeam Research (subscription required). Retrieved April 4, 2014.
  134. Jump up^ LIFE. Time Inc. October 17, 1938. p. 50. ISSN 0024-3019.
  135. Jump up^ Koenig, Rhoda (June 24, 2005). “The Queen of Comedy”. The Independent. Retrieved December 28, 2013.
  136. Jump up^ “America’s greatest legends” (PDF). American Film Institute. Retrieved April 4,2014.
  137. Jump up^ Shearer 2006, p. 533.
  138. Jump up^ Erens 1988, p. 361.
  139. Jump up^ Gallo, Phil (May 1, 2003). “Review:’Lucy'”. Variety. Retrieved April 4, 2014.

Carole Lombard 28

Bibliography

Adam, Beverly Two Lovers: the love story of Carole Lombard and Russ Columbo. Createspace, November, 2016. ISBN 9781532756719

Carole Lombard 26

Other links

Sin Of Nora Moran, The (1933)


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The Sin Of Nora Moran (1933) AKA Voice From The Grave

Director: Phil Goldstone

Cast: Zita Johann, John Miljan, Alan Dinehart, Paul Cavanagh, Claire Du Brey, Sarah Padden, Henry B Walthall, Otis Harlan, Aggie Herring, Cora Sue Collins, Ann Brody

65 min

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Sin of Nora Moran 8

The Sin of Nora Moran is a 1933 American film directed by Phil Goldstone. The film is also known as Voice from the Grave (American reissue title).

The painting for the movie poster was by Peruvian Alberto Vargas, who was working in the United States and later became known for his images of the “Vargas Girls.” This poster is frequently named as one of the greatest movie posters ever made.[1]

Plot summary

Nora Moran, a young woman with a difficult and tragic past, is sentenced to die for a murder that she did not commit. She could easily reveal the truth and save her own life, if only it would not damage the lives, careers and reputations of those whom she loves.

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Sin of Nora Moran 3

Cast

Sin of Nora Moran 4

References

 1. The 25 Best Movie Posters Ever, Premier Magazine
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Sin of Nora Moran 7
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Klondike (1932)


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Klondike (1932) AKA The Doctor’s Sacrifice 

Klondike 1

Klondike is a 1932 American Pre-Code film directed by Phil Rosen. The film is also known as The Doctor’s Sacrifice in the United Kingdom. It was silent film star Priscilla Dean‘s final film.

Klondike 2

Plot summary

A doctor, Lyle Talbot as Dr. Robert Cromwell, is charged with murder, when a patient dies, after an experimental operation to remove a brain tumor.

His pilot friend, Frank Hawks as Donald Evans, convinces him to start a new life; and, they plot their course, across the Bering Strait. The weather blows them off course; and, they end up in Alaska.

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There the doctor is faced with a new dilemma. Mark, Henry B. Walthall as Mark Armstrong, the Father of Jim, Jason Robards Sr. as Jim Armstrong, a man crippled by a similar brain tumor, begs the doctor to attempt the operation. When the doctor refuses, he accuses him of wanting his son to die, because he’s in love with Jim’s fiancée, Thelma Todd as Klondike.

“Doc” acquiesces, at Klondike’s insistence. Although, having none of the facilities of a hospital. He believes that the operation is less likely to succeed, the longer it is delayed.

The operation seems to be a partial success. But, now, Jim will do anything to keep “Doc” from taking Klondike back to the States with him, even using his genius, with electricity, to electrocute him.[1]

Klondike 4

Cast

Klondike 5

Production

The film was remade as Klondike Fury (1942).[2]

References

  1. Jump up^ “The Doctor’s Sacrifice (1932) : Plot Summary”. IMDb.com. Retrieved 2015-11-05.
  2. Jump up^ “Klondike Fury (1942)”. IMDb.com. Retrieved 2015-11-05.

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Racketeer, The (1929)


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Racketeer, The (1929)

Racketeer The 1

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Director: Howard Higgin

Cast: Robert Armstrong, Carole Lombard, Roland Drew, Paul Hurst, Kit Guard, Al Hill, Hedda Hopper, John Loder, Jeanette Loff, Winter Hall, Winifred Harris, Robert Parrish

68 min

Racketeer The 6

The Racketeer is a 1929 American Pre-Code drama film. Directed by Howard Higgin, the film is also known as Love’s Conquest in the United Kingdom.

It tells the tale of some members of the criminal class in 1920s America, and in particular one man and one woman’s attempts to help him. Gossip columnist Hedda Hopper appears in a minor role. The film is one of the early talkies, and as a result, dialogue is very sparse.

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Plot

New York City gangster Mahlon Keene (Robert Armstrong) melts when he meets down-on-her-luck beauty Rhoda (Carole Lombard), a society gal who’s in desperate need of dough to support herself and her boyfriend, Tony (Roland Drew), a brilliant violinist with a serious drinking problem.

Mahlon pulls some strings to help Tony get back on top; in return, Rhoda is to dump the musician and marry the mobster.

The already heated situation is further complicated when the cops decide to crack down on Mahlon.

Racketeer The 9

Cast

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Fashions of 1934 (1934)


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Fashions of 1934 (1934)

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Director: William Dieterle

Cast: William Powell, Bette Davis, Frank McHugh, Hugh Herbert, Verree Teasdale, Reginald Owen, Henry O Neill, Phillip Reed, Gordon Westcott, Dorothy Burgess, Nella Walker

78 min

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Fashions of 1934 is a 1934 American pre-Code musical comedy film directed by William Dieterle with musical numbers created and directed by Busby Berkeley.

The screenplay by F. Hugh Herbert and Carl Erickson was based on the story The Fashion Plate by Harry Collins and Warren Duff.

The film stars William Powell, Bette Davis, Hugh Herbert and Frank McHugh, and has songs by Sammy Fain (music) and Irving Kahal (lyrics). (Sometime after the initial release, the title “Fashions of 1934” was changed to “Fashions”, replacing the original title with an insert card stating William Powell in “Fashions”).

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Plot

When the Manhattan investment firm of Sherwood Nash (William Powell) goes broke, he joins forces with his partner Snap (Frank McHugh) and fashion designer Lynn Mason (Bette Davis) to provide discount shops with cheap copies of Paris couture dresses. Lynn discovers that top designer Oscar Baroque (Reginald Owen) gets his inspiration from old costume books, and she begins to create designs the same way, signing each one with the name of an established designer.

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Sherwood realizes Baroque’s companion, the alleged Grand Duchess Alix (Verree Teasdale), is really Mabel McGuire, his old friend from Hoboken, New Jersey, and threatens to reveal her identity unless she convinces Baroque to design the costumes of a musical revue in which she will star. Baroque buys a supply of ostrich feathers from Sherwood’s crony Joe Ward (Hugh Herbert) and starts a fashion rage.

Sherwood then opens Maison Elegance, a new Paris fashion house that’s a great success until Baroque discovers Lynn is forging his sketches. He has him arrested, but Sherwood convinces the police to give him time to straighten out the situation. He crashes Baroque and Alix’s wedding and promises to humiliate the designer by publicly revealing who his bride really is unless Baroque withdraws the charges. The designer agrees and purchases Maison Elegance from Sherwood, who assures Lynn he’ll never get involved in another illegal activity if she returns to America with him.

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Cast

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Cast notes:

  • Arthur Treacher, appearing in his fourth Hollywood film, played his first part as a butler, a role he was to play many times in his long career.[1]

Production

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With this film, Warner Bros. chief Jack L. Warner tried to change Bette Davis‘ screen persona by putting her in a platinum blonde wig and false eyelashes and dressing her in glamorous costumes.

The actress, who had been trying to convince the studio head to loan her to RKO so she could portray slatternly waitress Mildred Rogers in Of Human Bondage, was appalled at the transformation, complaining they were trying to turn her into Greta Garbo.[2] In an interview with Photoplay editor Kathryn Dougherty, she complained, “I can’t get out of these awful ruts. They just won’t take me seriously.

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Look at me in this picture – all done up like a third-rate imitation of the MGM glamour queens. That isn’t me. I’ll never be a clothes horse or romantic symbol.”[3] To Gerald Clarke of Time she lamented, “I looked like somebody dressed up in mother’s clothes. But it was a great break because I learned from the experience. I never let them do that to me again. Ever!”[4]

Working titles for the film, which was filmed at Warner Bros. Burbank studios in 1933, were King of Fashion and Fashion Follies of 1934. Warners listed writers Gene Markey and Katherine Scola as having adapted the original story that was the basis of the film, but according to the Screen Writers Guild they had nothing to do with the film.[5]

Songs

The film’s musical numbers included “Spin a Little Web of Dreams” and “Broken Melody” by Sammy Fain and Irving Kahal and “Mon Homme (My Man)” by Maurice Yvain, Albert Willemetz, and Jacques Charles. Harry Warren wrote the untitled theme that accompanies the fashion show.

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Critical reception

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The New York Times described it as “a brisk show” and added, “The story is lively, the gowns are interesting and the Busby Berkeley spectacles with Hollywood dancing girls are impressive . . . William Dieterle, that expert director who has been responsible for several imaginative pictures, does well by this particular production.”[6]

Variety called it “a bit far-fetched and inconsistent . . . but it has color, flash, dash, class, girls and plenty of clothes . . . Just why and how Bette Davis enters the picture never quite rings true.”[7]

Fashions of 1934 15

References[edit]

Interference (1928)


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Interference (1928)

Interference 1

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Director: Lothar Mendes (silent version), Roy Pomeroy ( sound version)

Cast: Evelyn Brent, Clive Brook, William Powell, Doris Kenyon, Brandon Hurst, Tom Ricketts, Louis Payne, Wilfred Noy, Donald Stuart, Raymond Lawrence, Clyde Cook

84 min

Interference 10

Interference is an early sound film drama released in 1928 and starring William Powell and Evelyn Brent.

This was Paramount Pictures‘ first ever full talking movie. It was also simultaneously filmed as a silent.

The film was based on the play Interference, a Play in Three Acts by Roland Pertwee and Howard Dearden. When a first husband turns out not to be dead, blackmail leads to murder.[1]

Interference 4

Cast

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Interference 5

References

  1. Jump up^ Interference at silentera.com database (released in silent and sound versions)

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24 Hours (1931)


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24 Hours (1931)

24 Hours 1

24 Hours 2

24 Hours 3

24 Hours 4

Director: Marion Gering

Cast: Clive Brook, Kay Francis, Miriam Hopkins, Regis Toomey, George Barbier, Adrienne Ames, Minor Watson, Charlotte Granville, Lucille La Verne, Wade Boteler

66 min

24 Hours 16

24 Hours is a 1931 American pre-Code romantic drama film starring Clive Brook, Kay Francis, Miriam Hopkins and Regis Toomey. It was based on the novel Twenty-Four Hours by Louis Bromfield and the play Shattered Glass by Will D. Lengle and Lew Levenson. An alcoholic married man is accused of murdering the woman with whom he has been carrying on an affair. The title comes from the fact that the film takes place from 11 pm one night to the same time the following night.

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Plot

At an evening party in New York City, the Towners mourn their failing marriage, then leave separately. The somewhat drunk Jim walks to a bar for some more liquor. Before he arrives, a man is shot to death outside the establishment; those inside hastily carry the body inside and surmise that someone named Tony is responsible. Meanwhile, Fanny is driven home by her lover, David Melbourn. On the way, she breaks up with him, telling him she realizes now that she still loves Jim. However, she plans to leave her husband, thinking she is not good enough for him.

Jim next heads to a nightclub to see his lover, star singer Rosie Duggan. He asks her if it is possible for a man to love two women, then remarks that the snow was red outside the bar. After he leaves, her ex-con husband Tony Bruzzi shows up. He wants her to take him back, but she has him thrown out, though she keeps his gun; she guesses from the red snow that Tony killed someone.

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Later, she takes Jim home. He falls asleep on her chaise longue. Then Tony shows up, jealous and determined to kill Jim. She tells him that Jim is not there, but he does not believe her. When she refuses to open a locked door, they struggle and he accidentally kills her.

The next morning, Jim wakes up and finds Rosie’s body. Meanwhile, Tony hides out at Mrs. Dacklehorst’s place, but he is tracked down by Dave the Slapper and his gang; the man Tony shot was part of Dave’s mob. Tony demands Mrs. Dacklehorst deliver or mail a letter to his gang, but she betrays him instead, and he is shot dead.

Jim is charged with Rosie’s murder. When Fanny shows up at the police station, Jim tells her to divorce him so she will not get entangled in his troubles, but she refuses to do so. Fortunately, fingerprints on a liquor bottle at Rosie’s place match Tony’s, and Jim is released. The couple reconcile, and Jim promises to stop drinking.

24 Hours 17

Cast

24 Hours 13

See also[edit]

24 Hours 6

24 Hours 8

24 Hours 10

24 Hours 9

24 Hours 12

24 Hours 15

24 Hours 19

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Pride of the Clan, The (1917)


Mary Pickford Season: FD Cinematheque

Pride of the Clan, The (1917)

Dir: Maurice Tourneur

Cast: Mary Pickford, Matt Moore, Warren Cook, Kathryn Browne-Decker, Edward Roseman, Joel Day, Leatrice Joy

86 min

 

The Pride of the Clan is a 1917 American silent romantic drama film directed by Maurice Tourneur, and starring Mary Pickford and Matt Moore.[1]

The film was shot in Fort Lee, New Jersey when many early film studios in America’s first motion picture industry were based there at the beginning of the 20th century

CastEdit

Cinderella (1914)


Mary Pickford 1

Mary Pickford Season: FD Cinematheque

Cinderella (1914)

Dir: James Kirkwood

Cast: Mary Pickford, Owen Moore, Isabel Vernon, Georgia Wilson, Lucille Carney, W N Cone, Inez Ranous, Hayward Mack

52 min

 

 

Cinderella is a 1914 silent film starring Mary Pickford, directed by James Kirkwood, Sr., produced by Daniel Frohman, and released by Famous Players Film Company. The film is based upon the fairy tale Cinderella. The film was released on Blu-ray & DVD as a bonus feature from the DVD of Through the Back Door (1921).[1]

Contents

PlotEdit

Cinderella is a kind young woman who lives with her wicked stepmother and ugly stepsisters plus her evil father. They abuse her and use her as the house maid. Cinderella thinks she’s all alone in the world, but doesn’t know a fairy godmother is constantly helping her. One day, she is collecting wood from the forest and meets Prince Charming. They immediately fall in love with each other, but lose contact. Soon, a ball is arranged by the prince to look for his future wife. The stepsisters think they make a great chance in being chosen by the prince. Cinderella wants to go as well, but isn’t allowed to by her cruel family.

The sisters go to a fortune teller, who announces a member of the family will be chosen by the prince. The sisters are delighted and think it will be one of the two of them. When they leave for the ball, Cinderella is left behind. The fairy godmother appears and asks if she wants to go to the ball as well. When Cinderella responds positively, the fairy godmother orders her to bring her the biggest pumpkin she can find. Cinderella does so and the fairy godmother changes it into a luxurious stage coach. She next asks for the smallest mice she can find. Cinderella brings her some mice from the house and the fairy godmother changes them into horses.

The fairy godmother next orders her to bring her the biggest rats there are. After Cinderella collected them, the fairy godmother changes them into servants. She finally changes Cinderella’s poor maiden costume into a dress fit for a princess, and glass slippers, of course. She reminds Cinderella she will have to be back at home before the clock strikes midnight. Otherwise, her fine dress will turn into rags and the coach and servants will become what they were before.

As Cinderella arrives at the party, Prince Charming is already busy looking for his future wife. It is soon announced an unknown lady has arrived in a coach. Prince Charming immediately chooses her and they go to a private place where they learn to know each other. As they flirt, Cinderella notices it is almost twelve o’clock and storms out. She loses her glass slipper, before she turns into her old poor self again.

The next day, the royal heralds announce the Prince’s wish to marry the woman whose foot fits the lost glass slipper. The sisters go to the palace to try fit their feet into the slippers, while Cinderella is yet again forced to stay home. It becomes clear the royal heralds every woman of the town has tried but failed to wear the slippers, except for Cinderella. Prince Charming immediately goes to visit her and is shocked when he finds out she is a poor maid. He doesn’t turn his back against her, though, and he invites her to try on the slipper. When she does, she is announced as the future princess. The royal heralds give her the opportunity to behead her sisters, but she refuses to.

In the final scene, the fairy godmother appears and blesses her. Cinderella and Prince Charming live happily ever after.

CastEdi

 

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Tess of the Storm Country (1922)


Mary Pickford 1

Mary Pickford Season: FD Cinematheque

Tess of the Storm Country (1922)

Dir: John S Robertson

Cast: Mary Pickford, Lloyd Hughes, Gloria Hope, David Torrence, Forrest Robinson, Jean Hersholt, Danny Hoy, Robert Russell, Gus Saville, Milton Berle

 

 

 

Tess of the Storm Country is a 1922 melodrama starring Mary Pickford, directed by John S. Robertson, and based upon a Grace Miller White novel. It is a remake of Pickford’s film from eight years prior and was subsequently remade a decade later as asound version starring Janet Gaynor.

Contents

ProductionEdit

Leading actress Pickford’s previous film Little Lord Fauntleroy flopped critically. Pickford realized she had to make a movie the audience loved to see her in.[1] She wanted to play the role again, because she loved the character and stated the crew had more abilities with a bigger budget and better technology.[2]

PlotEdit

17-year-old Tess Skinner is the daughter of a squatter, and wealthy man Elias Graves, who owns the land, is trying to get rid of them and the other squatter families. Tess is just as determined to make sure they all stay. Elias, however, grows more stubborn with failure. His determination to disperse the squatters has become an obsession. He is determined to kick them out of his land, not caring they don’t have another place to go to. Graves’ son, Frederick, is on her side and doesn’t think about squatters the way his father does. Frederick’s sister Teola fears her father, who thinks obedience is more important than love. She has fallen in love with law student Dan Jordan, but he hasn’t been able to impress Elias.

Dan tries to win over Teola’s father’s trust in him by suggesting he can throw the squatters off his land, because they are catching fish illegally. Frederick, meanwhile, is charmed by Tess and admits he could really fall for her if she would get cleaned up. When men come to the Skinner residence to find proof they’re netting, Tess hides the evidence her father is a fisherman. Later, they become hungry and Tess’ father decides to start fishing again. He is caught and when Dan Jordan is shot to death, Tess’ dad is blamed for it and taken under arrest. Tess is crushed and takes it out on Elias when he announces he will do anything for her dad to pay the penalty. When the trial starts, Tess is crushed she isn’t allowed to visit her father. The evil Ben Letts forces himself up to her as her future husband, despite the fact Tess is unwilling to marry him. She chases him away, but Ben vows vengeance.

Now that Tess is all alone, Frederick keeps her company and they fall in love. Elias finds out and tells Fred he doesn’t want to have anything to do with him anymore. Frederick announces he is planning on marrying Tess as soon as he finishes college. Meanwhile, Teola finds out she is pregnant and already started planning to marry Dan, but now that he’s dead, the child will be born out of wedlock. She plans on killing herself, but doesn’t have the nerve to. Tess protects her by claiming the child as her own. After the baby is born, Teola keeps on supporting her financially. One night, Teola isn’t allowed to leave the house, so Tess breaks in to get milk for the baby. She is caught by Elias, who is outraged. Meanwhile, Fred has just returned from college. Ben’s mate threatens him to tell the truth about Ben having killed Dan Jordan. Ben becomes mad and strangles him. He next hides the body.

Fred pays Tess a visit and finds his sister there as well. When he notices the baby, Tess tells him she found it. Fred doesn’t believe her and thinks the baby is hers. He is shocked and ashamed and leaves immediately. Meanwhile, Ben fears of getting caught and plans on leaving town. He is determined to take Tess with him. He sneaks into her cottage and notices the baby. When Tess comes in, he forces her to marry him. She refuses to, but Fred comes in to rescue her. They together hit Ben unconscious, but Fred leaves bitterly as he is still shocked about Tess having a baby. Ben’s strangled mate meanwhile survived and announces Ben Letts is responsible for the killing of Dan.

Tess is ostracized and the dying infant is refused baptism, so Tess sneaks into the church and does her own ritual. Teola and Elias are both in presence. Elias demands for her to be thrown out of church, but Teola becomes too emotional and admits the baby is hers. Elias is shocked but forgives her, but Teola soon dies. Fred realizes he has made an awful mistake, but Tess isn’t able to forgive his horrible treatment towards her. She goes back home and reunites with her father, who has just been released from jail. Elias and Fred later stop by to apologize. Both Elias and Fred are forgiven and the film ends with Tess and Fred kissing.

CastEdit

 

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Pickford in “Tess of the Storm Country” (1922). Photo coutesy of Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

Tess of the Storm Country (1914)


Mary Pickford 1

Mary Pickford Season: FD Cinematheque

Tess of the Storm Country (1914)

 

Dir: Edwin S Porter

Cast: Mary Pickford, Harold Lockwood, Olive Carey, David Hartford, Louise Dunlap, William Walters, Richard Garrick, Eugene Walter, Jack Henry

 80 min

 

 

Tess of the Storm Country is a 1914 silent drama, based on the 1909 novelof the same name by Grace Miller White. It starred Mary Pickford, in a role she would reprise eight years later for the 1922 adaptation by John S. Robertson.[1][2]

In 2006, the film was named to the National Film Registry by the Librarian of Congress, for its “cultural, aesthetic, or historical significance”.[3]

CastEdit