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INTRODUCTION |
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HER
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QUOTES |
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TRIVIA |
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NICKNAME |
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GALLERY |
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CURIOS |
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LINKS |
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VOX
POPULI |
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SHOP |
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Joan
Crawford was not an actress; she was a movie
star. The distinction is a crucial one - she infrequently
appeared in superior films, and her work was rarely distinguished
regardless of the material, yet she enjoyed one of the most successful and
longest-lived careers in cinema history. Glamorous and over-the-top, stardom
was seemingly Crawford's birthright - everything about her,
from her rags-to-riches story to her constant struggles to remain in the
spotlight, made her ideal fodder for the Hollywood myth factory. Even in
death she remained a high-profile figure thanks to the publication of her
daughter's infamous tell-all
book, an outrageous film biography and
numerous revelations of a sordid private life. Ultimately, Crawford
was melodrama incarnate, a wide-eyed, delirious prima donna
whose story endures as a definitive portrait of motion-picture fame,
determination and relentless ambition.
Born Lucille
Fay LeSueur on March 23, 1908 in San Antonio, Texas, she
first earned notice by winning a Charleston contest. She then worked as a
professional dancer in Chicago, later graduating to a position in the
chorus line of a Detroit-area club and finally to the Broadway revue Innocent
Eyes. While in the chorus of The
Passing Show of 1924, she was discovered by MGM-executive
Harry Rapf, and made her movie debut in 1925's Lady
of the Night. A series of small roles followed before the
studio sponsored a magazine contest to find a name better than LeSueur,
and after a winner was chosen, she was rechristened Joan Crawford. Her
first major role, in 1925's Sally, Irene and
Mary, swiftly followed, and over the next few years she
co-starred opposite some of the silent era's most popular stars, including
Harry Langdon (1926's Tramp Tramp Tramp),
Lon Chaney (1927's The Unknown),
John Gilbert (1927's Twelve Miles Out)
and Ramon Navarro (1928's Across to Singapore).
Crawford
shot to stardom on the strength of 1928's Our
Dancing Daughters, starring in a jazz-baby role originally
slated for Clara Bow. The film
was hugely successful, and MGM soon doubled her salary and began featuring
her name on marquees. Unlike so many stars of the period, she successfully
made the transformation from the silents to the sound era. In fact, the
1929 silent Our Modern Maidens,
in which she teamed with real-life fiancé Douglas
Fairbanks Jr., was so popular - even with audiences pining
for more talkies - that the studio did not push her into speaking parts.
Finally, with Hollywood Revue of 1929
Crawford began regularly singing and dancing onscreen and scored at the
box office as another flapper in 1930's Our
Blushing Brides. However, she yearned to play the kinds of
substantial roles associated with Greta
Garbo and Norma
Shearer and actively pursued the lead in the Tod
Browning crime drama Paid. The
picture was another hit, and soon similar projects were lined up.
Dance
Fools Dance (1931) paired Crawford with Clark
Gable. They were to reunite many more times over in the
years to come, including the hit Possessed.
She was now among Hollywood's top-grossing performers, and while not all
of her pictures from the early 1930s found success, those that did - like
1933's Dancing Lady - were
blockbusters. With new husband Franchot Tone,
Crawford starred in several features beginning with 1934's Sadie
McKee. She continued appearing opposite some of the
industry's biggest male stars, but by 1937 her popularity was beginning to
wane. After the failure of films including The
Bride Wore Red and 1938's Mannequin,
her name appeared on an infamous full-page Hollywood
Reporter advertisement which listed actors deemed "glamour
stars detested by the public." After the failure of The
Shining Hour, even MGM — which had just signed Crawford
to a long-term contract - was clearly worried.
However,
a turn as the spiteful Crystal in
George
Cukor's 1939 smash The
Women restored some of Crawford's lustre, as did another pairing with
Gable
in 1940's Strange Cargo. Again directed by
Cukor,
1941's A
Woman's Face was another major step in Crawford's comeback, but then
MGM began saddling her with such poor material that she ultimately refused
to continue working, resulting in a lengthy suspension. She finally left
the studio, signing on with Warners at about a third of her former salary.
There Crawford only appeared briefly in 1944's Hollywood
Canteen before the rumor mill was abuzz with claims that they too
planned to drop her. As a result, she fought for the lead role in director
Michael
Curtiz's 1945 adaptation of the James M. Cain novel Mildred
Pierce, delivering a bravura performance which won a "Best
Actress" Oscar. Warners, of course, quickly had a change of heart,
and after the 1946 hit Humoresque
the studio signed her to a new seven-year contract.
At
Warner Bros., Crawford began appearing in the kinds of pictures once
offered to the studio's brightest star, Bette
Davis. She next appeared in 1947's Possessed,
followed by Daisy Kenyon, which cast her opposite
Henry
Fonda. For 1949's Flamingo Road, meanwhile, she was reunited with director
Curtiz.
However, by the early 1950s Crawford was again appearing in primarily
"B"-grade pictures, and finally she bought herself out of her
contract. In 1952, she produced and starred in Sudden
Fear, an excellent thriller which she offered to RKO. The studio
accepted, and the film emerged as a sleeper hit. Once again, Crawford was
a hot property, and she triumphantly returned to MGM to star in 1953's
Torch Song, her first color feature. For
Republic, she next starred in Nicholas
Ray's 1954 cult classic Johnny Guitar, perceived by many as a thank-you to her
large lesbian fanbase.
However, despite her career resurgence, reports from the film's set
suggested everything was far from well.
The
roller-coaster ride continued apace: between 1955 and 1957, Crawford
appeared in four films - Female
on the Beach, Queen Bee,
Autumn Leaves and The
Story of Esther Costello - each less successful than the one which
preceded it, and eventually the offers stopped coming in. Over the next
five years, she appeared in only one picture, 1959's The
Best of Everything. Then, in 1962, against all odds Crawford made yet
another comeback when director Robert
Aldrich teamed her with Bette
Davis in Whatever
Happened to Baby Jane?, in which the actresses appeared as aging movie
queens living together in exile. The film was a major hit, and thanks to
its horror overtones Crawford was offered a number of similar roles, later
appearing in the William
Castle productions Strait-Jacket
(as an axe murderer, no less) and I
Saw What You Did. Aldrich
also planned a follow-up, Hush
Hush Sweet Charlotte, but Crawford became ill and was finally replaced
by Olivia de
Havilland.
The
final years of Crawford's screen career were among her most
undistinguished. She co-starred in 1967's The
Karate Killers, a spin-off of the hit television espionage series
The
Man from U.N.C.L.E., and she subsequently headlined the slasher film
Berserk!
The 1970 sci-fi programmer Trog
was her last feature-film appearance, and she settled into retirement,
penning a 1971 memoir My
Way of Life. A few years later, she made one final public appearance
on a daytime soap opera, taking over the role played by her adopted
daughter Christina when the girl fell ill. After spending her final years
in seclusion, Crawford died in New York City on May 10, 1977, but she made
headlines a year later when Christina published Mommie
Dearest, among the first and most famous in what became a cottage
industry of tell-all books published by the children of celebrities. In
it, Christina depicted her mother as vicious and unfeeling, motivated only
by her desire for wealth and fame. In 1981, Faye
Dunaway starred as Crawford in a feature adaptation of the book which
has gone on to become a camp classic.
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E-CARDS |
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ST. JOAN |
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GREAT
DAY |
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MADAME
REQUIRES |


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