Joan Crawford (born Lucille Fay LeSueur; March 23, c. 1904 – May 10, 1977) was an American film and television actress who began her career as a dancer in traveling theatrical companies before debuting as a chorus girl on Broadway. Crawford then signed a motion picture contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1925; her career would span decades, studios and controversies. In 1999 The American Film Institute ranked Crawford tenth on its list of the greatest female stars of Classic Hollywood Cinema.
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Born Lucille Fay LeSueur
c. March 23, 1904, San Antonio, Texas, U.S.
Died May 10, 1977 (aged 73), Manhattan, New York City, New York, U.S.
Resting place Ferncliff Cemetery, Hartsdale, New York, U.S.
Occupation Actress, dancer, business executive
Years active 1925–1972
Spouse(s)
Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.
(m. 1929; div. 1933)
Franchot Tone
(m. 1935; div. 1939)
Phillip Terry
(m. 1942; div. 1946)
Alfred Steele
(m. 1955; died 1959)
Children 4, including Christina Crawford
Relatives Hal LeSueur (brother)
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Joan Crawford (born Lucille Fay LeSueur; March 23, c. 1904 – May 10, 1977) was an American film and television actress who began her career as a dancer in traveling theatrical companies before debuting as a chorus girl on Broadway. Crawford then signed a motion picture contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1925; her career would span decades, studios and controversies. In 1999 The American Film Institute ranked Crawford tenth on its list of the greatest female stars of Classic Hollywood Cinema.
In the 1930s, Crawford's fame rivaled, and later outlasted, that of MGM colleagues Norma Shearer and Greta Garbo. Crawford often played hard-working young women who found romance and success. These characters and stories were well received by Depression-era audiences, and were popular with women. Crawford became one of Hollywood's most prominent movie stars, and one of the highest-paid women in the United States.
In 1945 she won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her work in Mildred Pierce, and would go on to receive Best Actress nominations for Possessed (1947) and Sudden Fear (1952). Crawford continued to act in film and television throughout the 1950s and 1960s; she achieved box office success with the highly successful horror film Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962), in which she starred alongside her long time rival Bette Davis.
In 1955, Crawford became involved with the Pepsi-Cola Company through her marriage to company Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Alfred Steele. In 1970 she retired from the screen, and following a public appearance in 1974 withdrew from public life, becoming increasingly reclusive until her death in 1977.
Crawford married four times. Her first three marriages ended in divorce; the last ended with the death of husband Alfred Steele. She adopted five children, one of whom was reclaimed. Crawford's relationships with her two elder children, Christina and Christopher, were acrimonious. After Crawford's death, Christina released a well-known but controversial "tell-all" memoir, Mommie Dearest (1978).
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Born Lucille Fay LeSueur, of English, French Huguenot, Swedish, and Irish ancestry, in San Antonio, Texas, she was the third and youngest child of Tennessee-born Thomas E. LeSueur (January 2, 1868 – January 1, 1938), a laundry laborer, and Texas-born Anna Bell Johnson (later Mrs. Anna Cassin), whose date of birth is given as November 29, 1884, although, based on census records, she may have been older. She apparently was still under 20 when her first two children were born. She died on August 15, 1958. Crawford's elder siblings were sister Daisy LeSueur, who died before Lucille's birth, and brother Hal LeSueur.
Thomas LeSueur abandoned the family a few months before her birth, eventually resettling in Abilene, Texas, reportedly working as a construction laborer. Following LeSueur's departure from the family home, Crawford's mother remarried Henry J. Cassin. However, the marriage is listed in the census as Crawford's mother's first marriage. Crawford lived with her mother, stepfather, and siblings in Lawton, Oklahoma. There, Cassin ran the Ramsey Opera House; he managed to book diverse and noted performers such as Anna Pavlova and Eva Tanguay. Crawford preferred the nickname "Billie" as a child, and enjoyed watching vaudeville acts perform on the stage of her stepfather's theatre. At that time, Crawford was reportedly unaware that Cassin, whom she called "daddy", was not her biological father until her brother Hal told her the truth. Cassin allegedly began sexually abusing her when she was eleven years old, and the abuse continued until she was sent to St. Agnes Academy, a Catholic girls' school. Her family's instability negatively affected Crawford and her schooling never formally progressed beyond primary education.
Beginning in childhood, Crawford's ambition was to be a dancer. One day in an attempt to escape piano lessons so she could play with friends, she leapt from the front porch of her home and cut her foot severely on a broken milk bottle. As a result, she underwent three surgeries to repair the damage. She was unable to attend elementary school or continue with dancing lessons for 18 months.
While still residing in Lawton, Crawford's stepfather was accused of embezzlement. Although he was acquitted in court, he was blacklisted in Lawton and the family moved to Kansas City, Missouri around 1916. Following their relocation, Cassin, a Catholic, placed Crawford at St. Agnes Academy in Kansas City. When her mother and stepfather separated, she remained at St. Agnes as a work student, where she spent far more time working, primarily cooking and cleaning than studying. She later attended Rockingham Academy, also as a working student. While attending there, she began dating, and had her first serious relationship with a trumpet player named Ray Sterling. Sterling reportedly inspired her to begin challenging herself academically.
In 1922, she registered at Stephens College in Columbia, Missouri, giving her year of birth as 1906. She attended Stephens for only a few months before withdrawing after she realized she was not prepared for college.
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Upper body studio shot of a young Crawford in a sleeveless dress, with accented eye make-up, coiffed hair. She is staring into the camera.
Under the name Lucille LeSueur, Crawford began dancing in the choruses of traveling revues, and was spotted dancing in Detroit by producer Jacob J. Shubert. Shubert put her in the chorus line for his 1924 show, Innocent Eyes, at the Winter Garden Theatre on Broadway in New York City. While appearing in Innocent Eyes, Crawford met a saxophone player named James Welton. The two were allegedly married in 1924, and lived together for several months, although this supposed marriage was never mentioned in later life by Crawford.
Crawford wanted additional work, and approached Loews Theaters publicist Nils Granlund. Granlund secured a position for her with singer Harry Richman's act and arranged for her to do a screen test which he sent to producer Harry Rapf in Hollywood. Rapf notified Granlund on December 24, 1924, that Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) had offered Crawford a contract at $75 a week. Granlund immediately wired LeSueur, who had returned to her mother's home in Kansas City, with the news; she borrowed $400 for travel expenses.
Credited as Lucille LeSueur, her first film was Lady of the Night in 1925, as the body double for MGM's most popular female star, Norma Shearer. She also appeared in The Circle and Pretty Ladies (both 1925), starring comedian ZaSu Pitts. This was soon followed by equally small and unbilled roles in two other 1925 silent films: The Only Thing and The Merry Widow.
MGM publicity head Pete Smith recognized her ability to become a major star, but felt her name sounded fake; he told studio head Louis B. Mayer that her last name, LeSueur, reminded him of a sewer. Smith organized a contest called "Name the Star" in Movie Weekly to allow readers to select her new stage name. The initial choice was "Joan Arden", but after another actress was found to have prior claim to that name, the alternate surname "Crawford" became the choice. She later said that she wanted her first name to be pronounced "Jo-Anne", and that she hated the name Crawford because it sounded like "crawfish", but also admitted she "liked the security" that went with the name.
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4.2 Self-promotion, and early successes :
Growing increasingly frustrated over the size and quality of the parts she was given, Crawford embarked on a campaign of self-promotion. As MGM screenwriter Frederica Sagor Maas recalled, "No one decided to make Joan Crawford a star. Joan Crawford became a star because Joan Crawford decided to become a star." She began attending dances in the afternoons and evenings at hotels around Hollywood and at dance venues on the beach piers, where she often won dance competitions with her performances of the Charleston and the Black Bottom.
Her strategy worked and MGM cast her in the film where she first made an impression on audiences, Edmund Goulding's Sally, Irene and Mary (1925). From the beginning of her career, Crawford considered Norma Shearer – the studio's most-popular actress – her professional nemesis. Shearer was married to MGM Head of Production Irving Thalberg; hence, she had the first choice of scripts, and had more control than other stars in what films she would and would not make. Crawford was quoted to have said: "How can I compete with Norma? She sleeps with the boss!"
In 1926, Crawford was named one of the WAMPAS Baby Stars, along with Mary Astor, Dolores del Río, Janet Gaynor, and Fay Wray, among others. That same year, she starred in Paris, co-starring Charles Ray. Within a few years, she became the romantic female lead to many of MGM's top male stars, including Ramón Novarro, John Gilbert, William Haines, and Tim McCoy.
Crawford appeared in The Unknown (1927), starring Lon Chaney, Sr., who played a carnival knife thrower with no arms. Crawford played his skimpily-clad young carnival assistant whom he hopes to marry. She stated that she learned more about acting from watching Chaney work than from anyone else in her career. "It was then", she said, "I became aware for the first time of the difference between standing in front of a camera, and acting." Also in 1927, she appeared alongside her close friend, William Haines, in Spring Fever, which was the first of three movies the duo made together.
In 1928, Crawford starred opposite Ramón Novarro in Across to Singapore, but it was her role as Diana Medford in Our Dancing Daughters (1928) that catapulted her to stardom. The role established her as a symbol of modern 1920s-style femininity which rivaled Clara Bow, the original It girl, then Hollywood's foremost flapper. A stream of hits followed Our Dancing Daughters, including two more flapper-themed movies, in which Crawford embodied for her legion of fans (many of whom were women) an idealized vision of the free-spirited, all-American girl.
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4.3 F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote of Crawford :
"Joan Crawford is doubtless the best example of the flapper, the girl you see in smart night clubs, gowned to the apex of sophistication, toying iced glasses with a remote, faintly bitter expression, dancing deliciously, laughing a great deal, with wide, hurt eyes. Young things with a talent for living.
Crawford described her glamorous onscreen persona more succinctly, saying "If you want to see the girl next door, go next door."
On June 3, 1929, Crawford married Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., at Saint Malachy's Roman Catholic Church (known as "The Actors' Chapel", owing to its proximity to Broadway theatres) in Manhattan, although neither was Catholic. Fairbanks was the son of Douglas Fairbanks and the stepson of Mary Pickford, who were considered Hollywood royalty. Fairbanks, Sr., and Pickford were opposed to the marriage, and did not invite the couple to their home, Pickfair, for eight months after the marriage.
The relationship between Crawford and Fairbanks, Sr., eventually warmed; she called him "Uncle Doug", and he called her "Billie", her old childhood nickname. She and Pickford, however, continued to despise each other. Following that first invitation, Crawford and Fairbanks, Jr., became more frequent guests. While the Fairbanks men played golf together, however, Crawford was either left with Pickford, who would retire to her quarters, or simply left alone.
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4.4 To rid herself of her Southwestern accent, Crawford tirelessly practiced diction and elocution. She said :
"If I were to speak lines, it would be a good idea, I thought, to read aloud to myself, listen carefully to my voice quality and enunciation, and try to learn in that manner. I would lock myself in my room and read newspapers, magazines and books aloud. At my elbow, I kept a dictionary. When I came to a word I did not know how to pronounce, I looked it up and repeated it correctly fifteen times."
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4.5 Transition to sound, and continued success :
After the release of The Jazz Singer in 1927—the first feature-length film with some audible dialog—sound films, or talkies, as they became nicknamed, were all the rage. The transition from silent to sound panicked many, if not all, involved with the film industry; many silent film stars found themselves unemployable because of their undesirable voices and hard-to-understand accents, or simply because of their refusal to make the transition to talkies.
Many studios and stars avoided making the transition as long as possible, especially MGM, which was the last of the major studios to switch over to sound. The Hollywood Revue of 1929 was one of the studio's first all-talking films, and their first attempt to showcase their stars' ability to make the transition from silent to sound. Crawford was among the dozen or more MGM stars included in the movie; she sang the song "Got a Feeling for You" during the film's first act.
Crawford made a successful transition to talkies. Her first starring role in an all-talking feature-length film was in Untamed (1929), co-starring Robert Montgomery. Despite the success of the film at the box office, it received mixed reviews from critics, who noted that while Crawford seemed nervous at making the transition to sound, she had become one of the most popular actresses in the world. Montana Moon (1930), an uneasy mix of Western clichés and music, teamed her with John Mack Brown and Ricardo Cortez. Although the film had problems with censors, it was a major success at the time of its release. Our Blushing Brides (1930), co-starring Robert Montgomery and Anita Page, was the final installment in the Our Dancing Daughters franchise. Her next movie, Paid (1930), paired her with Robert Armstrong, and was another success. During the early sound era, MGM began to place Crawford in more sophisticated roles, rather than continuing to promote her flapper-inspired persona of the silent era.
In 1931, MGM cast Crawford in five films. Three of them teamed her opposite the studio's soon to be biggest male star and "King of Hollywood", Clark Gable. Dance, Fools, Dance, released in February 1931, was the first pairing of Crawford and Gable. Their second movie together, Laughing Sinners, released in May 1931, was directed by Harry Beaumont, and also co-starred Neil Hamilton. Possessed, their third film together, released in October, was directed by Clarence Brown. These films were immensely popular with audiences and were generally well received by critics, stapling Crawford's position as one of MGM's top female stars of the decade along with Norma Shearer, Greta Garbo and Jean Harlow. Her only other notable film of 1931, This Modern Age, was released in August and despite unfavorable reviews was a moderate success.
MGM next cast her in the film Grand Hotel, directed by Edmund Goulding. As the studio's first all-star production, Crawford co-starred opposite Greta Garbo, John and Lionel Barrymore, and Wallace Beery, among others. Receiving third billing, she played the middle-class stenographer to Beery's controlling general director. Crawford later admitted to being nervous during the filming of the movie because she was working with "very big stars", and that she was disappointed that she had no scenes with the "divine Garbo". Grand Hotel was released in April 1932 to critical and commercial success. It was one of the highest-grossing movies of the year, and won the Academy Award for Best Picture.
Crawford achieved continued success in Letty Lynton (1932). Soon after this movie's release, a plagiarism suit forced MGM's withdrawal and it's therefore considered the "lost" Crawford film. Designed by Adrian, the gown with large ruffled sleeves which Crawford wore in the movie became a popular style that same year, and was even copied by Macy's.
On loan to United Artists, she played prostitute Sadie Thompson in Rain (1932), a film version of John Colton's 1923 play. Actress Jeanne Eagels played the role on stage, and Gloria Swanson had originated the part on screen in the 1928 film version. Crawford's performance was panned, and the film was not a success. Despite the failure of Rain, in 1932, the publishing of the first "Top Ten Money-Making Stars Poll" placed Crawford third in popularity at the box office, behind only Marie Dressler and Janet Gaynor. She remained on the list for the next several years, last appearing on it in 1936. In May 1933, Crawford divorced Fairbanks. Crawford cited "grievous mental cruelty", claiming Fairbanks had "a jealous and suspicious attitude" toward her friends, and that they had "loud arguments about the most trivial subjects" lasting "far into the night".
Following her divorce, she was again teamed with Clark Gable, along with Franchot Tone and Fred Astaire, in the hit Dancing Lady (1933), in which she received top billing. She next played the title role in Sadie McKee (1934), opposite Tone and Gene Raymond. She was paired with Gable for the fifth time in Chained (1934), and for the sixth time in Forsaking All Others (1934). Crawford's films of this era were some of the most-popular and highest-grossing films of the mid-1930s.
In 1935, Crawford married Franchot Tone, a stage actor from New York who planned to use his film earnings to finance his theatre group. The couple built a small theatre at Crawford's Brentwood home, and put on productions of classic plays for select groups of friends that lived in the popular Brentwood area like Clark Gable and Charley Chase.Tone and Crawford had first appeared together in Today We Live (1933), but Crawford was hesitant about entering into another romance so soon after her split from Fairbanks.
Before and during their marriage, Crawford worked to promote Tone's Hollywood career, but Tone was ultimately not interested in being a movie star. He just wanted to be an actor, and Crawford eventually wearied of the effort. During their marriage they tried on two separate occasions for children, both ending in miscarriage. Then Tone allegedly began drinking and became physically abusive. She filed for divorce, which was granted in 1939. Crawford and Tone much later rekindled their friendship, and Tone even proposed in 1964 that they remarry. When he died in 1968, Crawford arranged for him to be cremated and his ashes scattered at Muskoka Lakes, Canada.
Crawford continued her reign as a popular movie actress well into the mid-1930s. No More Ladies (1935) co-starred Robert Montgomery and then-husband Franchot Tone, and was a success. Crawford had long pleaded with MGM's head Louis B. Mayer to cast her in more dramatic roles, and although he was reluctant, he cast her in the sophisticated comedy-drama I Live My Life (1935), directed by W.S. Van Dyke, and it was well received by critics.
She next starred in The Gorgeous Hussy (1936), opposite Robert Taylor and Lionel Barrymore, as well as Tone. It was a critical and box office success, and became one of Crawford's biggest hits of the decade. Love on the Run (1936), a romantic comedy directed by W.S. Van Dyke, was her seventh film co-starring Clark Gable. It was called "a lot of happy nonsense" by critics, but was a financial success nonetheless.
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4.6 "Box Office Poison" :
Even though Crawford remained a respected MGM actress, and her films still earned profits, her popularity declined in the late 1930s. In 1937, Crawford was proclaimed the first "Queen of the Movies" by Life magazine. She unexpectedly slipped from seventh to sixteenth place at the box office that year, and her public popularity also began to wane. Richard Boleslawski's comedy-drama The Last of Mrs. Cheyney (1937) teamed her opposite William Powell in their sole screen pairing. The film was also Crawford's last box-office success before the onset of her "Box Office Poison" period.
She co-starred opposite Franchot Tone for the seventh—and final—time in The Bride Wore Red (1937). The film was generally unfavorably reviewed by the majority of critics. It also ran a financial loss, becoming one of MGM's biggest failures of the year. Mannequin, costarring Spencer Tracy, also released in 1937 did, as the New York Times stated, "restore Crawford to her throne as queen of the working girls".
On May 3, 1938, Crawford—along with Greta Garbo, Norma Shearer, Luise Rainer, John Barrymore, Katharine Hepburn, Fred Astaire, Dolores del Río, and others—was dubbed "Box Office Poison" in an open letter in the Independent Film Journal. The list was submitted by Harry Brandt, president of the Independent Theatre Owners Association of America. Brandt stated that while these stars had "unquestioned" dramatic abilities, their high salaries did not reflect in their ticket sales, thus hurting the movie exhibitors involved. Crawford's follow-up movie, The Shining Hour (1938), co-starring Margaret Sullavan and Melvyn Douglas, was well received by critics, but it was a box office flop.
She made a comeback in 1939 with her role as home-wrecker Crystal Allen in The Women, opposite her professional nemesis, Norma Shearer. A year later, she played against type in the unglamorous role of Julie in Strange Cargo (1940), her eighth—and final—film with Clark Gable. She later starred as a facially disfigured blackmailer in A Woman's Face (1941), a remake of the Swedish film En kvinnas ansikte which had starred Ingrid Bergman in the lead role three years earlier. While the film was only a moderate box office success, Crawford's performance was hailed by many critics.
Crawford adopted her first child, a daughter, in 1940. Because she was single, California law prevented her from adopting within the state; so, she arranged the adoption through an agency in Las Vegas. The child was temporarily called Joan, until Crawford changed her name to Christina. Crawford married actor Phillip Terry on July 21, 1942, after a six-month courtship. Together, the couple adopted a son whom they named Christopher, but his birth mother reclaimed the child. The couple adopted another boy, whom they named Phillip Terry, Jr. After the marriage ended in 1946, Crawford changed that child's name to Christopher Crawford.
After eighteen years, Crawford's contract with MGM was terminated by mutual consent on June 29, 1943. In lieu of the last film remaining under her contract, MGM bought her out for $100,000.
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4.7 Move to Warner Bros :
For $500,000, Crawford signed with Warner Bros. for a three-movie deal, and was placed on the payroll on July 1, 1943. Her first film for the studio was Hollywood Canteen (1944), an all-star morale-booster film that teamed her with several other top movie stars at the time. Crawford said one of the main reasons she signed with Warner Bros. was because she wanted to play the character "Mattie" in a proposed 1944 film version of Edith Wharton's novel Ethan Frome (1911).
She wanted to play the title role in Mildred Pierce (1945), but Bette Davis was the studio's first choice. However, Davis turned the role down. Director Michael Curtiz did not want Crawford to play the part, and he instead lobbied for the casting of Barbara Stanwyck. Warner Bros. defied Curtiz and cast Crawford in the film. Throughout the entire production of the movie, Curtiz criticized Crawford. "She comes over here with her high-hat airs and her goddamn shoulder pads... Why should I waste my time directing a has-been?" Curtiz demanded Crawford prove her suitability by taking a screen test; she agreed. After the test, Curtiz agreed to Crawford's casting. Costume fittings started filming off roughly when Curtiz suspected Crawford of wearing shoulderpads and he proceeded to tear the top of her dress. She said, "Thankfully I was wearing a bra." Mildred Pierce was a resounding critical and commercial success. It epitomized the lush visual style and the hard-boiled film noir sensibility that defined Warner Bros. movies of the late forties. Crawford earned the Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role.
The success of Mildred Pierce revived Crawford's movie career. For several years, she starred in what were called "a series of first-rate melodramas". Her next film was Humoresque (1946), co-starring John Garfield, a romantic drama about a love affair between an older woman and a younger man. She starred alongside Van Heflin in Possessed (1947), for which she received a second Academy Award nomination. In Daisy Kenyon (1947), she appeared opposite Dana Andrews and Henry Fonda, and in Flamingo Road (1949), her character has an ultimately deadly feud with a corrupt southern sheriff played by Sydney Greenstreet. She made a cameo appearance in It's a Great Feeling (1949), poking fun at her own screen image. In 1950, she starred in the film noir The Damned Don't Cry and in the melodrama Harriet Craig.
In 1947, Crawford adopted two more children, whom she named Cindy and Cathy. The children were adopted from Tennessee Children's Home Society, an orphanage/child-trafficking unit operated by Georgia Tann, a source used by many childless Hollywood stars to adopt until Tann's discovery and death erupted in infamy in 1952.
After the completion of This Woman Is Dangerous (1952), a film Crawford called her "worst", she asked to be released from her Warner Bros. contract. By this time, she felt Warners was losing interest in her due to "feeble scripts, poor leading men and inept cameramen", so she decided it was time to move on. Later that same year, she received her third—and final—Academy Award nomination for Sudden Fear for RKO Radio Pictures.
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4.8 Radio and television :
Crawford worked in the radio series, The Screen Guild Theater, on January 8, 1939; Good News; Baby, broadcast March 2, 1940, on Arch Oboler's Lights Out; The Word on Everyman's Theater (1941); Chained on the Lux Radio Theater, and Norman Corwin's Document A/777 (1948). She appeared in episodes of anthology television series in the 1950s, and, in 1959, made a pilot for The Joan Crawford Show.
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4.9 Al Steele and Pepsi-Cola Company :
Crawford married her fourth—and final—husband, Alfred Steele, at the Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas on May 10, 1955. Crawford and Steele met at a party in 1950, when Steele was an executive at PepsiCo. They renewed their acquaintance at a New Year's Eve party in 1954. By that time, Steele had become President of Pepsi-Cola. He would later be named Chairman of the Board and CEO of Pepsi-Cola. Crawford traveled extensively on behalf of Pepsi following the marriage. She estimated that she traveled over 100,000 miles for the company.
Steele died of a heart attack in April 1959. Crawford was initially advised that her services were no longer required. After she told the story to Louella Parsons, Pepsi reversed its position, and Crawford was elected to fill the vacant seat on the board of directors.
Crawford received the sixth annual "Pally Award", which was in the shape of a bronze Pepsi bottle. It was awarded to the employee making the most significant contribution to company sales. In 1973, Crawford was forced to retire from the company at the behest of company executive Don Kendall, whom Crawford had referred to for years as "Fang".
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4.10 Later career :
"To me, L.B. Mayer was my father, my father confessor, the best friend I ever had", Crawford was quoted as saying.
After her Academy Award nominated performance in 1952's Sudden Fear, Crawford continued to work steadily throughout the rest of the decade. After a ten-year absence from MGM, she returned to that studio to star in Torch Song (1953), a musical drama centering on the life of a demanding stage star who falls in love with a blind pianist, played by Michael Wilding. Although the film was highly publicized as Crawford's major comeback, it was ultimately a critical and financial failure, known today for its camp appeal. In 1954, she starred in a cult classic, directed by Nicholas Ray, a western film, Johnny Guitar, co-starring Sterling Hayden and Mercedes McCambridge. She also starred in Female on the Beach (1955) with Jeff Chandler, and in Queen Bee (1955), alongside John Ireland. The following year, she starred opposite a young Cliff Robertson in Autumn Leaves (1956), and filmed a leading role in The Story of Esther Costello (1957), co-starring Rossano Brazzi. Crawford, who had been left near-penniless following Alfred Steele's death, accepted a small role in The Best of Everything (1959). Although she was not the star of the film, she received positive reviews. Crawford would later name the role as being one of her personal favorites. By 1961 Joan Crawford was once again her own publicity machine with a new script, "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?", sent by Robert Aldrich.
Facial shot of a disheveled Crawford on the telephone.
Crawford starred as Blanche Hudson, an elderly, disabled former A-list movie star who lives in fear of her psychotic sister Jane, in the highly successful psychological thriller What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962). Despite the actresses' earlier tensions, Crawford reportedly suggested Bette Davis for the role of Jane. The two stars maintained publicly that there was no feud between them. The director, Robert Aldrich, fueling publicity rumors, explained that Davis and Crawford were each aware of how important the film was to their respective careers, and commented, "It's proper to say that they really detested each other, but they behaved absolutely perfectly."
After filming was completed, their public comments against each other propelled their animosity into a lifelong feud. The film was a huge success, recouping its costs within eleven days of its nationwide release reviving Davis and Crawford's careers. Davis was nominated for an Academy Award for her performance as Jane Hudson. Crawford contacted each of the other Oscar nominees in the category (Katharine Hepburn, Lee Remick, Geraldine Page, and Anne Bancroft, all East Coast-based actresses), to let them know that if they could not attend the ceremony, she would be happy to accept the Oscar on their behalf; all agreed. Both Davis and Crawford were backstage - Crawford having presented best director - when the absent Anne Bancroft was announced as the winner and Crawford accepted the award on her behalf. Davis claimed for the rest of her life that Crawford had campaigned against her, a charge Crawford denied.
That same year, Crawford starred as Lucy Harbin in William Castle's horror mystery Strait-Jacket (1964). Robert Aldrich cast Crawford and Davis in Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1964). After a purported campaign of harassment by Davis on location in Louisiana, Crawford returned to Hollywood entering a hospital. After a prolonged absence, during which Crawford was accused of feigning illness, Aldrich was forced to replace her with Olivia de Havilland. Crawford, who was devastated, said, "I heard the news of my replacement over the radio, lying in my hospital bed ... I cried for nine hours." Crawford nursed grudges against Davis and Aldrich for the rest of her life, saying of Aldrich, "He is a man who loves evil, horrendous, vile things", to which Aldrich replied, "If the shoe fits, wear it, and I am very fond of Miss Crawford". Despite being replaced, brief footage of Crawford made it into the film, when she is seen sitting in a taxi in a wide shot.
In 1965, she played Amy Nelson in I Saw What You Did, another William Castle vehicle. She starred as Monica Rivers in Herman Cohen's horror thriller film Berserk! (1967). After the film's release, Crawford guest-starred as herself on The Lucy Show. The episode, "Lucy and the Lost Star", first aired on February 26, 1968. Crawford struggled during rehearsals, and drank heavily on-set, leading series star Lucille Ball to suggest replacing her with Gloria Swanson. However, Crawford was letter-perfect the day of the show, which included dancing the Charleston, and received two standing ovations from the studio audience.
In October 1968, Crawford's 29-year-old daughter, Christina (who was then acting in New York on the CBS soap opera The Secret Storm), needed immediate medical attention for a ruptured ovarian tumor. Despite the fact that Christina's character was a 28-year-old, and Crawford was in her sixties, Crawford offered to play her role until Christina was well enough to return, to which producer Gloria Monty readily agreed.
Crawford's appearance in the 1969 television film Night Gallery (which served as pilot to the series that followed) marked one of Steven Spielberg's earliest directing jobs. Crawford made a cameo appearance as herself in the first episode of the situation comedy The Tim Conway Show, which aired on January 30, 1970. She starred on the big screen one final time, playing Dr. Brockton in Herman Cohen's science fiction horror film Trog (1970), rounding out a career spanning 45 years and more than 80 motion pictures. Crawford made three more television appearances, including one as Stephanie White in a 1970 episode ("The Nightmare") of The Virginian and as Joan Fairchild (her final performance) in a 1972 episode ("Dear Joan: We're Going to Scare You to Death") of The Sixth Sense.
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4.11 Final years :
In 1970, Crawford was presented with the Cecil B. DeMille Award by John Wayne at the Golden Globes, which was telecast from the Coconut Grove at The Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. She also spoke at Stephens College, where she had been a student for two months in 1922.
Crawford published her autobiography, A Portrait of Joan, co-written with Jane Kesner Ardmore, in 1962 through Doubleday. Crawford's next book, My Way of Life, was published in 1971 by Simon & Schuster. Those expecting a racy tell-all were disappointed, although Crawford's meticulous ways were revealed in her advice on grooming, wardrobe, exercise, and even food storage. Upon her death, there were photographs of John F. Kennedy (for whom she had voted in the 1960 presidential election) found in her apartment.
In September 1973, Crawford moved from apartment 22-G to a smaller apartment next door, 22-H, at the Imperial House, 150 East 69th Street. Her last public appearance was made on September 23, 1974, at a book party cohosted with her old friend Rosalind Russell at New York's Rainbow Room. Russell was suffering from breast cancer and arthritis at the time. When Crawford saw the unflattering photos that appeared in the papers the next day, she said, "If that's how I look, then they won't see me anymore." Crawford cancelled all public appearances, began declining interviews, and left her apartment less and less. Dental-related issues, including surgery which left her needing round-the-clock nursing care, plagued her from 1972 until mid-1975. While on antibiotics for this problem in October 1974, her drinking caused her to pass out, slip, and strike her face. Whether it was this incident or her return to religion, Christian Science, she quit drinking in 1974.
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5. Death and legacy :
On May 8, 1977, Crawford gave away her beloved Shih Tzu, "Princess Lotus Blossom", being too weak to care for her. Crawford died two days later at her New York apartment of a myocardial infarction. A funeral was held at Campbell Funeral Home, New York, on May 13, 1977. In her will, which was signed on October 28, 1976, Crawford bequeathed to her two youngest children, Cindy and Cathy, $77,500 each from her $2 million estate.
She explicitly disinherited the two eldest, Christina and Christopher: "It is my intention to make no provision herein for my son, Christopher, or my daughter, Christina, for reasons which are well known to them." Both of them challenged the will and received a $55,000 settlement. She also bequeathed nothing to her niece, Joan Lowe (1933–1999; born Joan Crawford LeSueur, the only child of her estranged brother, Hal). Crawford left money to her favorite charities: the USO of New York, the Motion Picture Home, the American Cancer Society, the Muscular Dystrophy Association, the American Heart Association, and the Wiltwyck School for Boys. During World War II, she was a member of American Women's Voluntary Services.
A memorial service was held for Crawford at All Souls' Unitarian Church on Lexington Avenue in New York on May 16, 1977, and was attended by, among others, her long-time Hollywood friend Myrna Loy. Also attending were Joan's costars Geraldine Brooks and Cliff Robertson who gave eulogies while Pearl Bailey sang "He'll Understand." Another memorial service, organized by George Cukor, was held on June 24 in the Samuel Goldwyn Theater at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Beverly Hills. Crawford was cremated, and her ashes were placed in a crypt with her fourth — and final — husband, Alfred Steele, in Ferncliff Cemetery, Hartsdale, New York.
Joan Crawford's handprints and footprints are immortalized in the forecourt of Grauman's Chinese Theater in Hollywood. She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, at 1752 Vine Street, for her contributions to the motion picture industry. Playboy listed Crawford as #84 of the "100 Sexiest Women of the 20th century". In 1999 Crawford was also voted the tenth greatest female star of the classic American cinema by the American Film Institute.
Crawford has also attracted a following in the gay community. In Joan Crawford: The Essential Biography, the author explains that Crawford appeals to many gay men because they sympathize with her struggle for success in both the entertainment industry and her personal life.
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6. Mommie Dearest :
In November 1978, Christina Crawford published Mommie Dearest, which contained allegations that her late adoptive mother was emotionally and physically abusive to Christina and her brother Christopher because she chose fame and her career over parenthood. Many of Crawford's friends and co-workers, including Van Johnson, Ann Blyth, Myrna Loy, Katharine Hepburn, Cesar Romero, Gary Gray, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. (Crawford's first husband), and Crawford's two other younger daughters, Cathy and Cindy, denounced the book, categorically denying any abuse. Betty Hutton, Helen Hayes, James MacArthur (Hayes' son), June Allyson, Liz Smith, Rex Reed, and Vincent Sherman, stated they had witnessed some form of abusive behavior. Mommie Dearest became a best-seller, and was made into the 1981 film Mommie Dearest, starring Faye Dunaway as Crawford.
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7. In popular culture :
Pictures of Crawford were used in the album artwork of The Rolling Stones album Exile on Main St. (1972).
The alleged feud between Crawford and Bette Davis is depicted in the 1989 book, Bette and Joan: The Divine Feud. It was fueled by competition over film roles, Academy Awards, and Franchot Tone (Joan Crawford's second husband), and Davis's co-star in 1935's Dangerous.
The Crawford-Davis rivalry is the subject of the 2017 first season of the FX anthology television series Feud, subtitled Bette and Joan. Crawford is played by Jessica Lange, and Davis is played by Susan Sarandon. As of 2018, any streaming/airing of this series was stopped by restraint order from lower California courts until Olivia de Havilland could be heard by the United States Supreme Court on whether producers had the right to use her likeness without permission despite her being a public figure. In January 2019, the Supreme Court refused to hear the case. Restraint is no longer in place. de Havilland is played by Catherine Zeta-Jones.
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8. Filmography and awards :
8.1 Joan Crawford filmography :
The Joan Crawford filmography lists the film appearances of American actress Joan Crawford, who starred in numerous motion pictures throughout a lengthy career that spanned nearly five decades.
She made her film debut in Lady of the Night (1925), as a body double for film star Norma Shearer. She appeared in several other films before she made her major breakthrough playing Lon Chaney's love interest in the 1927 horror film, The Unknown. Her major success in Our Dancing Daughters (1928) made her a popular flapper of the late 1920s. Her first sound film, Untamed (1929), was a critical and box office success.
Crawford would become a highly popular actress throughout the 1930s, as a leading lady for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. She starred in a series of "rags-to-riches" films that were extremely popular during the Depression-era, most especially with women. Her popularity rivaled fellow MGM actresses, including Greta Garbo, Norma Shearer, and Jean Harlow. She appeared in eight movies with Clark Gable, including romantic drama Possessed (1931), musical film Dancing Lady (1933), romantic comedy Love on the Run (1936), and romantic drama Strange Cargo (1940), among others. In 1937, she was proclaimed the first "Queen of the Movies" by Life magazine, but her popularity soon waned. After her films The Bride Wore Red (1937) and Mannequin (1938) proved to be expensive failures, in May 1938 Crawford – along with Greta Garbo, Katharine Hepburn, Fred Astaire, Kay Francis, and many others – was labeled box office poison; an actor whose "box office draw is nil".
Crawford managed to make a comeback in the comedy The Women (1939), opposite an all-star female only cast. On July 1, 1943, Crawford left MGM and signed an exclusive contract with Warner Brothers, where she became a rival of Bette Davis. After a slow start with the studio, she received critical and commercial acclaim for her performance in drama Mildred Pierce (1945). The film earned her an Academy Award for Best Actress. From 1946 to 1952, Crawford appeared in a series of critical and box office successes, including the musical drama Humoresque (1946); film noirs Possessed (1947, for which she received a second Academy Award nomination) and Flamingo Road (1949); drama The Damned Don't Cry (1950); and romantic comedy Goodbye, My Fancy (1951), among others. She received a third – and final – Academy Award nomination for her performance in the thriller Sudden Fear (1952).
In 1953, Crawford starred in the musical Torch Song, her final film role for MGM. Her next film Johnny Guitar (1954), although not a major hit, is one of Crawford's most popular films among her fans. During the latter half of the 1950s, Crawford starred in a series of B-movies, including romantic dramas Female on the Beach (1955) and Autumn Leaves (1956). In 1962, Crawford was teamed with Bette Davis in a film adaptation of What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? The thriller film was a box office hit, and briefly revived Crawford's career. Her final film performance was in the British science fiction film, Trog (1970).
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8.2 Filmography :
8.3 Feature films :
8.4 Silent films
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Year Title Role Director Studio
1925 Lady of the Night Double for Norma Shearer Monta Bell Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 Proud Flesh Party Guest King Vidor Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 A Slave of Fashion‡ Mannequin Hobart Henley Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 The Merry Widow Ballroom Dancer Erich von Stroheim Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 Pretty Ladies Bobby, a Showgirl Monta Bell Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 The Circle Young Lady Catherine Frank Borzage Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 The Midshipman Extra Christy Cabanne Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 The Exquisite Sinner‡ Extra Josef von Sternberg Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 The Big Parade Extra King Vidor Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ Chariot Race Spectator Fred Niblo Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 Old Clothes Mary Riley Edward F. Cline Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 The Only Thing Party Guest Jack Conway Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 Sally, Irene and Mary Irene Edmund Goulding Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1926 Tramp, Tramp, Tramp Betty Burton Harry Edwards First National Pictures
1926 The Boob Jane William A. Wellman Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1926 Paris The Girl Edmund Goulding Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1927 Winners of the Wilderness René Contrecoeur W. S. Van Dyke Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1927 The Taxi Dancer Joslyn Poe Harry F. Millarde Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1927 The Understanding Heart Monica Dale Jack Conway Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1927 The Unknown Estrellita or Nanon Tod Browning Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1927 Twelve Miles Out Jane Jack Conway Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1927 Spring Fever Allie Monte Edward Sedgwick Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1928 West Point Betty Channing Edward Sedgwick Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1928 The Law of the Range Betty Dallas William Nigh Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1928 Rose-Marie‡ Rose-Marie Lucien Hubbard Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1928 Across to Singapore Priscilla Crowninshield William Nigh Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1928 Four Walls Frieda William Nigh Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1928 Our Dancing Daughters Diana Medford Harry Beaumont Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1928 Dream of Love‡ Adrienne Lecouvreur Fred Niblo Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1929 The Duke Steps Out‡ Susie James Cruze Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1929 Our Modern Maidens Billie Brown Jack Conway Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
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8.5 Sound films :
1929 The Hollywood Revue of 1929 Herself (performer) Charles Reisner Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1929 Untamed Alice "Bingo" Dowling Jack Conway Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1930 Montana Moon Joan 'Montana' Prescott Malcolm St. Clair Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1930 Our Blushing Brides Gerry Marsh Harry Beaumont Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1930 Paid Mary Turner Sam Wood Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1931 Dance, Fools, Dance Bonnie Jordan Harry Beaumont Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1931 Laughing Sinners Ivy Stevens Harry Beaumont Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1931 This Modern Age Val Winters Nick Grinde Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1931 Possessed Marian Martin Clarence Brown Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1932 Grand Hotel Flaemmchen Edmund Goulding Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1932 Letty Lynton Letty Lynton Clarence Brown Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1932 Rain Sadie Thompson Lewis Milestone United Artists
1933 Today We Live Diana "Ann" Boyce-Smith Howard Hawks Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1933 Dancing Lady Janie "Duchess" Barlow Robert Z. Leonard Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1934 Sadie McKee Sadie McKee Brennan Clarence Brown Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1934 Chained Diane "Dinah" Lovering Clarence Brown Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1934 Forsaking All Others Mary Clay W. S. Van Dyke Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1935 No More Ladies Marcia Townsend Edward H. Griffith Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1935 I Live My Life Kay Bentley W. S. Van Dyke Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1936 The Gorgeous Hussy Margaret "Peggy" O'Neal Clarence Brown Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1936 Love on the Run Sally Parker W. S. Van Dyke Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1937 The Last of Mrs. Cheyney Fay Cheyney Richard Boleslawski Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1937 The Bride Wore Red Anni Pavlovitch Dorothy Arzner Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1937 Mannequin Jessica Cassidy Frank Borzage Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1938 The Shining Hour Olivia Riley Frank Borzage Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1939 The Ice Follies of 1939 Mary McKay Reinhold Schünzel Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1939 The Women Crystal Allen George Cukor Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1940 Strange Cargo Julie Frank Borzage Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1940 Susan and God Susan Trexel George Cukor Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1941 A Woman's Face Anna Holm George Cukor Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1941 When Ladies Meet Mary Howard Robert Z. Leonard Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1942 They All Kissed the Bride Margaret Drew Alexander Hall Columbia Pictures
1942 Reunion in France Michele de la Becque Jules Dassin Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1943 Above Suspicion Frances Myles Richard Thorpe Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1944 Hollywood Canteen Herself (cameo) Delmer Daves Warner Bros.
1945 Mildred Pierce Mildred Pierce Michael Curtiz Warner Bros.
1946 Humoresque Helen Wright Jean Negulesco Warner Bros.
1947 Possessed Louise Howell Curtis Bernhardt Warner Bros.
1947 Daisy Kenyon Daisy Kenyon Otto Preminger 20th Century Fox
1949 Flamingo Road Lane Bellamy Michael Curtiz Warner Bros.
1949 It's a Great Feeling Herself (cameo) David Butler Warner Bros.
1950 The Damned Don't Cry Ethel Whitehead Vincent Sherman Warner Bros.
1950 Harriet Craig Harriet Craig Vincent Sherman Columbia Pictures
1951 Goodbye, My Fancy Agatha Reed Vincent Sherman Warner Bros.
1952 This Woman Is Dangerous Beth Austin Felix E. Feist Warner Bros.
1952 Sudden Fear Myra Hudson David Miller RKO Pictures
1953 Torch Song Jenny Stewart Charles Walters Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1954 Johnny Guitar Vienna Nicholas Ray Republic Pictures
1955 Female on the Beach Lynn Markham Joseph Pevney Universal Pictures
1955 Queen Bee Eva Phillips Ranald MacDougall Columbia Pictures
1956 Autumn Leaves Millicent "Milly" Wetherby Robert Aldrich Columbia Pictures
1957 The Story of Esther Costello Margaret Landi David Miller Columbia Pictures
1959 The Best of Everything Amanda Farrow Jean Negulesco 20th Century Fox
1962 What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? Blanche Hudson Robert Aldrich Warner Bros.
1963 The Caretakers Lucretia Terry Hall Bartlett United Artists
1964 Strait-Jacket Lucy Harbin William Castle Columbia Pictures
1964 Della[4] Della Chappell Robert Gist Four Star Productions
1965 I Saw What You Did Amy Nelson William Castle Universal Pictures
1967 The Karate Killers Amanda True Barry Shear Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1967 Berserk! Monica Rivers Jim O'Connolly Columbia Pictures
1970 Trog Dr. Brockton Freddie Francis Warner Bros.
‡ denotes lost film
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8.6 Short subjects :
Year Title Role Director Studio
1925 MGM Studio Tour Herself – Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 Miss MGM Miss MGM – Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1930 Hollywood Snapshots #11 Herself Ralph Staub Columbia Pictures
1931 The Slippery Pearls Herself William C. McGann Paramount Pictures
1932 Screen Snapshots Herself Ralph Staub Columbia Pictures
1947 The Jimmy Fund Herself – –
1958 Hollywood Mothers and Fathers Herself – Columbia Pictures
1972 A Very Special Child Narrator – American Cancer Society
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8.7 Archival footage :
Year Title Role Director Studio
1964 Four Days in November Herself Mel Stuart United Artists
1964 MGM's Big Parade of Comedy Herself Robert Youngson Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1974 That's Entertainment! Janie Barlow (Dancing Lady) Jack Haley Jr. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1984 Terror in the Aisles Blanche Hudson (What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?) Andrew J. Kuehn Universal Pictures
1985 That's Dancing! Herself Jack Haley Jr. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1994 That's Entertainment! III Jenny Stewart (Torch Song Bud Friedgen, Michael J. Sheridan Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
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8.8 Uncompleted films :
Year Title Role Director Studio
1929 Tide of Empire Josephita (replaced by Renée Adorée) Allan Dwan Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1930 Great Day Susie Totheridge Harry Beaumont Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1930 The March of Time Herself Charles Reisner Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1964 Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte Miriam Deering (replaced by Olivia de Havilland due to illness) Robert Aldrich 20th Century Fox
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8.9 Box-office ranking :
For a number of years, Crawford was regularly voted as one of the top money making stars in the country in the annual Quigley Poll :
1930 – 1st
1931 – 3rd
1932 – 3rd
1933 – 10th
1934 – 6th
1935 – 5th
1936 – 7th
1937 – 16th
1947 – 21st
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8.10 Television :
Year Title Role Episode Director Network
1953 The Revlon Mirror Theater Margaret Hughes "Because I Love Him" Rod Amateau CBS
1954 General Electric Theater Mary Andrews "The Road to Edinburgh" Rod Amateau CBS
1958 General Electric Theater Ruth Marshall "Strange Witness" Herschel Daugherty CBS
1959 General Electric Theater Ann Howard "And One Was Loyal" Herschel Daugherty CBS
1959 The Joseph Cotten Show Ruth Marshall "Strange Witness" Herschel Daugherty CBS
1959 Zane Grey Theatre Stella Faring "Rebel Range" Don Medford CBS
1961 Zane Grey Theatre Sarah and Melanie Hobbes "One Must Die" Lewis Allen CBS
1961 The DuPont Show of the Week Hostess "The Ziegfeld Touch" James Elson NBC
1963 Route 66 Morgan Matheson Harper "Same Picture, Different Frame" Philip Leacock CBS
1967 The Man from U.N.C.L.E. Amanda True "The Five Daughters Affair: Part 1"[9] Barry Shear NBC
1968 The Lucy Show Herself (guest star) "Lucy and the Lost Star" Jack Donohue CBS
1968 The Secret Storm Joan Borman Kane #2[10] [daytime soap opera] Gloria Monty CBS
1969 Garbo Hostess/Narrator [made-for-TV documentary] Fred Burnley PBS
1969 Night Gallery Claudia Menlo [made-for-TV movie] Steven Spielberg NBC
1970 The Virginian Stephanie White "Nightmare" Robert Gist NBC
1970 The Tim Conway Show Herself (cameo) "To Cuba with Love" Alan Rafkin CBS
1970 Journey to the Unknown Hostess [made-for-TV movie] Michael Lindsay-Hogg, Don Chaffey Syndication
1970 The Tim Conway Comedy Hour Herself (guest star) "Episode #1.3" Bill Hobin CBS
1971 Journey to Murder Hostess [made-for-TV movie] Gerry O'Hara, John Gibson Syndication
1972 The Sixth Sense Joan Fairchild "Dear Joan: We're Going to Scare You to Death" John Newland ABC
1975 Easter Island Narrator (voice) [made-for-TV documentary] José Gómez-Sicre PBS
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9. Awards and nominations :
Year Award Category Title / Honor Result
1945 National Board of Review Best Actress Mildred Pierce Won
1946 Academy Award Best Actress in a Leading Role Mildred Pierce Won
1946 New York Film Critics Circle Best Actress Mildred Pierce Nominated
1948 Academy Award Best Actress in a Leading Role Possessed Nominated
1953 Academy Award Best Actress in a Leading Role Sudden Fear Nominated
1953 Golden Globe Award Best Actress – Drama Sudden Fear Nominated
1953 Laurel Award Best Dramatic Performance, Female Sudden Fear Won
1954 Laurel Award Top Female Musical Performance Torch Song Won
1960 Hollywood Walk of Fame Star of Motion Picture Star at 1752 Vine Street Honored
1963 BAFTA Film Award Best Foreign Actress What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? Nominated
1970 Golden Globe Award Cecil B. DeMille Award Outstanding contributions to the world of entertainment Honored
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9. Autobiographies
— (1962). A Portrait of Joan: The Autobiography of Joan Crawford. Doubleday. ISBN 978-1-258-17238-1.
— (1971). My Way of Life. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-78568-0.
THE END.
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06/08/2019
Joan Crawford - American film and television actress
========================================================================1. Profile :
*Joan Crawford 1946
Born Lucille Fay LeSueur
c. March 23, 1904, San Antonio, Texas, U.S.
Died May 10, 1977 (aged 73), Manhattan, New York City, New York, U.S.
Resting place Ferncliff Cemetery, Hartsdale, New York, U.S.
Occupation Actress, dancer, business executive
Years active 1925–1972
Spouse(s)
Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.
(m. 1929; div. 1933)
Franchot Tone
(m. 1935; div. 1939)
Phillip Terry
(m. 1942; div. 1946)
Alfred Steele
(m. 1955; died 1959)
Children 4, including Christina Crawford
Relatives Hal LeSueur (brother)
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2. Introduction :
Joan Crawford (born Lucille Fay LeSueur; March 23, c. 1904 – May 10, 1977) was an American film and television actress who began her career as a dancer in traveling theatrical companies before debuting as a chorus girl on Broadway. Crawford then signed a motion picture contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1925; her career would span decades, studios and controversies. In 1999 The American Film Institute ranked Crawford tenth on its list of the greatest female stars of Classic Hollywood Cinema.
In the 1930s, Crawford's fame rivaled, and later outlasted, that of MGM colleagues Norma Shearer and Greta Garbo. Crawford often played hard-working young women who found romance and success. These characters and stories were well received by Depression-era audiences, and were popular with women. Crawford became one of Hollywood's most prominent movie stars, and one of the highest-paid women in the United States.
In 1945 she won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her work in Mildred Pierce, and would go on to receive Best Actress nominations for Possessed (1947) and Sudden Fear (1952). Crawford continued to act in film and television throughout the 1950s and 1960s; she achieved box office success with the highly successful horror film Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962), in which she starred alongside her long time rival Bette Davis.
In 1955, Crawford became involved with the Pepsi-Cola Company through her marriage to company Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Alfred Steele. In 1970 she retired from the screen, and following a public appearance in 1974 withdrew from public life, becoming increasingly reclusive until her death in 1977.
Crawford married four times. Her first three marriages ended in divorce; the last ended with the death of husband Alfred Steele. She adopted five children, one of whom was reclaimed. Crawford's relationships with her two elder children, Christina and Christopher, were acrimonious. After Crawford's death, Christina released a well-known but controversial "tell-all" memoir, Mommie Dearest (1978).
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3. Early life :
Born Lucille Fay LeSueur, of English, French Huguenot, Swedish, and Irish ancestry, in San Antonio, Texas, she was the third and youngest child of Tennessee-born Thomas E. LeSueur (January 2, 1868 – January 1, 1938), a laundry laborer, and Texas-born Anna Bell Johnson (later Mrs. Anna Cassin), whose date of birth is given as November 29, 1884, although, based on census records, she may have been older. She apparently was still under 20 when her first two children were born. She died on August 15, 1958. Crawford's elder siblings were sister Daisy LeSueur, who died before Lucille's birth, and brother Hal LeSueur.
Thomas LeSueur abandoned the family a few months before her birth, eventually resettling in Abilene, Texas, reportedly working as a construction laborer. Following LeSueur's departure from the family home, Crawford's mother remarried Henry J. Cassin. However, the marriage is listed in the census as Crawford's mother's first marriage. Crawford lived with her mother, stepfather, and siblings in Lawton, Oklahoma. There, Cassin ran the Ramsey Opera House; he managed to book diverse and noted performers such as Anna Pavlova and Eva Tanguay. Crawford preferred the nickname "Billie" as a child, and enjoyed watching vaudeville acts perform on the stage of her stepfather's theatre. At that time, Crawford was reportedly unaware that Cassin, whom she called "daddy", was not her biological father until her brother Hal told her the truth. Cassin allegedly began sexually abusing her when she was eleven years old, and the abuse continued until she was sent to St. Agnes Academy, a Catholic girls' school. Her family's instability negatively affected Crawford and her schooling never formally progressed beyond primary education.
Beginning in childhood, Crawford's ambition was to be a dancer. One day in an attempt to escape piano lessons so she could play with friends, she leapt from the front porch of her home and cut her foot severely on a broken milk bottle. As a result, she underwent three surgeries to repair the damage. She was unable to attend elementary school or continue with dancing lessons for 18 months.
While still residing in Lawton, Crawford's stepfather was accused of embezzlement. Although he was acquitted in court, he was blacklisted in Lawton and the family moved to Kansas City, Missouri around 1916. Following their relocation, Cassin, a Catholic, placed Crawford at St. Agnes Academy in Kansas City. When her mother and stepfather separated, she remained at St. Agnes as a work student, where she spent far more time working, primarily cooking and cleaning than studying. She later attended Rockingham Academy, also as a working student. While attending there, she began dating, and had her first serious relationship with a trumpet player named Ray Sterling. Sterling reportedly inspired her to begin challenging herself academically.
In 1922, she registered at Stephens College in Columbia, Missouri, giving her year of birth as 1906. She attended Stephens for only a few months before withdrawing after she realized she was not prepared for college.
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4. Career :
4.1 Early career :
Upper body studio shot of a young Crawford in a sleeveless dress, with accented eye make-up, coiffed hair. She is staring into the camera.
*Joan Crawford in 1928
Under the name Lucille LeSueur, Crawford began dancing in the choruses of traveling revues, and was spotted dancing in Detroit by producer Jacob J. Shubert. Shubert put her in the chorus line for his 1924 show, Innocent Eyes, at the Winter Garden Theatre on Broadway in New York City. While appearing in Innocent Eyes, Crawford met a saxophone player named James Welton. The two were allegedly married in 1924, and lived together for several months, although this supposed marriage was never mentioned in later life by Crawford.
Crawford wanted additional work, and approached Loews Theaters publicist Nils Granlund. Granlund secured a position for her with singer Harry Richman's act and arranged for her to do a screen test which he sent to producer Harry Rapf in Hollywood. Rapf notified Granlund on December 24, 1924, that Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) had offered Crawford a contract at $75 a week. Granlund immediately wired LeSueur, who had returned to her mother's home in Kansas City, with the news; she borrowed $400 for travel expenses.
Credited as Lucille LeSueur, her first film was Lady of the Night in 1925, as the body double for MGM's most popular female star, Norma Shearer. She also appeared in The Circle and Pretty Ladies (both 1925), starring comedian ZaSu Pitts. This was soon followed by equally small and unbilled roles in two other 1925 silent films: The Only Thing and The Merry Widow.
MGM publicity head Pete Smith recognized her ability to become a major star, but felt her name sounded fake; he told studio head Louis B. Mayer that her last name, LeSueur, reminded him of a sewer. Smith organized a contest called "Name the Star" in Movie Weekly to allow readers to select her new stage name. The initial choice was "Joan Arden", but after another actress was found to have prior claim to that name, the alternate surname "Crawford" became the choice. She later said that she wanted her first name to be pronounced "Jo-Anne", and that she hated the name Crawford because it sounded like "crawfish", but also admitted she "liked the security" that went with the name.
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4.2 Self-promotion, and early successes :
Growing increasingly frustrated over the size and quality of the parts she was given, Crawford embarked on a campaign of self-promotion. As MGM screenwriter Frederica Sagor Maas recalled, "No one decided to make Joan Crawford a star. Joan Crawford became a star because Joan Crawford decided to become a star." She began attending dances in the afternoons and evenings at hotels around Hollywood and at dance venues on the beach piers, where she often won dance competitions with her performances of the Charleston and the Black Bottom.
*With John Gilbert in the film Four Walls (1928)
Her strategy worked and MGM cast her in the film where she first made an impression on audiences, Edmund Goulding's Sally, Irene and Mary (1925). From the beginning of her career, Crawford considered Norma Shearer – the studio's most-popular actress – her professional nemesis. Shearer was married to MGM Head of Production Irving Thalberg; hence, she had the first choice of scripts, and had more control than other stars in what films she would and would not make. Crawford was quoted to have said: "How can I compete with Norma? She sleeps with the boss!"
In 1926, Crawford was named one of the WAMPAS Baby Stars, along with Mary Astor, Dolores del Río, Janet Gaynor, and Fay Wray, among others. That same year, she starred in Paris, co-starring Charles Ray. Within a few years, she became the romantic female lead to many of MGM's top male stars, including Ramón Novarro, John Gilbert, William Haines, and Tim McCoy.
Crawford appeared in The Unknown (1927), starring Lon Chaney, Sr., who played a carnival knife thrower with no arms. Crawford played his skimpily-clad young carnival assistant whom he hopes to marry. She stated that she learned more about acting from watching Chaney work than from anyone else in her career. "It was then", she said, "I became aware for the first time of the difference between standing in front of a camera, and acting." Also in 1927, she appeared alongside her close friend, William Haines, in Spring Fever, which was the first of three movies the duo made together.
In 1928, Crawford starred opposite Ramón Novarro in Across to Singapore, but it was her role as Diana Medford in Our Dancing Daughters (1928) that catapulted her to stardom. The role established her as a symbol of modern 1920s-style femininity which rivaled Clara Bow, the original It girl, then Hollywood's foremost flapper. A stream of hits followed Our Dancing Daughters, including two more flapper-themed movies, in which Crawford embodied for her legion of fans (many of whom were women) an idealized vision of the free-spirited, all-American girl.
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4.3 F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote of Crawford :
"Joan Crawford is doubtless the best example of the flapper, the girl you see in smart night clubs, gowned to the apex of sophistication, toying iced glasses with a remote, faintly bitter expression, dancing deliciously, laughing a great deal, with wide, hurt eyes. Young things with a talent for living.
Crawford described her glamorous onscreen persona more succinctly, saying "If you want to see the girl next door, go next door."
On June 3, 1929, Crawford married Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., at Saint Malachy's Roman Catholic Church (known as "The Actors' Chapel", owing to its proximity to Broadway theatres) in Manhattan, although neither was Catholic. Fairbanks was the son of Douglas Fairbanks and the stepson of Mary Pickford, who were considered Hollywood royalty. Fairbanks, Sr., and Pickford were opposed to the marriage, and did not invite the couple to their home, Pickfair, for eight months after the marriage.
The relationship between Crawford and Fairbanks, Sr., eventually warmed; she called him "Uncle Doug", and he called her "Billie", her old childhood nickname. She and Pickford, however, continued to despise each other. Following that first invitation, Crawford and Fairbanks, Jr., became more frequent guests. While the Fairbanks men played golf together, however, Crawford was either left with Pickford, who would retire to her quarters, or simply left alone.
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4.4 To rid herself of her Southwestern accent, Crawford tirelessly practiced diction and elocution. She said :
"If I were to speak lines, it would be a good idea, I thought, to read aloud to myself, listen carefully to my voice quality and enunciation, and try to learn in that manner. I would lock myself in my room and read newspapers, magazines and books aloud. At my elbow, I kept a dictionary. When I came to a word I did not know how to pronounce, I looked it up and repeated it correctly fifteen times."
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4.5 Transition to sound, and continued success :
*Crawford in 1932
After the release of The Jazz Singer in 1927—the first feature-length film with some audible dialog—sound films, or talkies, as they became nicknamed, were all the rage. The transition from silent to sound panicked many, if not all, involved with the film industry; many silent film stars found themselves unemployable because of their undesirable voices and hard-to-understand accents, or simply because of their refusal to make the transition to talkies.
Many studios and stars avoided making the transition as long as possible, especially MGM, which was the last of the major studios to switch over to sound. The Hollywood Revue of 1929 was one of the studio's first all-talking films, and their first attempt to showcase their stars' ability to make the transition from silent to sound. Crawford was among the dozen or more MGM stars included in the movie; she sang the song "Got a Feeling for You" during the film's first act.
Crawford made a successful transition to talkies. Her first starring role in an all-talking feature-length film was in Untamed (1929), co-starring Robert Montgomery. Despite the success of the film at the box office, it received mixed reviews from critics, who noted that while Crawford seemed nervous at making the transition to sound, she had become one of the most popular actresses in the world. Montana Moon (1930), an uneasy mix of Western clichés and music, teamed her with John Mack Brown and Ricardo Cortez. Although the film had problems with censors, it was a major success at the time of its release. Our Blushing Brides (1930), co-starring Robert Montgomery and Anita Page, was the final installment in the Our Dancing Daughters franchise. Her next movie, Paid (1930), paired her with Robert Armstrong, and was another success. During the early sound era, MGM began to place Crawford in more sophisticated roles, rather than continuing to promote her flapper-inspired persona of the silent era.
In 1931, MGM cast Crawford in five films. Three of them teamed her opposite the studio's soon to be biggest male star and "King of Hollywood", Clark Gable. Dance, Fools, Dance, released in February 1931, was the first pairing of Crawford and Gable. Their second movie together, Laughing Sinners, released in May 1931, was directed by Harry Beaumont, and also co-starred Neil Hamilton. Possessed, their third film together, released in October, was directed by Clarence Brown. These films were immensely popular with audiences and were generally well received by critics, stapling Crawford's position as one of MGM's top female stars of the decade along with Norma Shearer, Greta Garbo and Jean Harlow. Her only other notable film of 1931, This Modern Age, was released in August and despite unfavorable reviews was a moderate success.
*With Wallace Beery in Film Grand Hotel (1932)
MGM next cast her in the film Grand Hotel, directed by Edmund Goulding. As the studio's first all-star production, Crawford co-starred opposite Greta Garbo, John and Lionel Barrymore, and Wallace Beery, among others. Receiving third billing, she played the middle-class stenographer to Beery's controlling general director. Crawford later admitted to being nervous during the filming of the movie because she was working with "very big stars", and that she was disappointed that she had no scenes with the "divine Garbo". Grand Hotel was released in April 1932 to critical and commercial success. It was one of the highest-grossing movies of the year, and won the Academy Award for Best Picture.
Crawford achieved continued success in Letty Lynton (1932). Soon after this movie's release, a plagiarism suit forced MGM's withdrawal and it's therefore considered the "lost" Crawford film. Designed by Adrian, the gown with large ruffled sleeves which Crawford wore in the movie became a popular style that same year, and was even copied by Macy's.
On loan to United Artists, she played prostitute Sadie Thompson in Rain (1932), a film version of John Colton's 1923 play. Actress Jeanne Eagels played the role on stage, and Gloria Swanson had originated the part on screen in the 1928 film version. Crawford's performance was panned, and the film was not a success. Despite the failure of Rain, in 1932, the publishing of the first "Top Ten Money-Making Stars Poll" placed Crawford third in popularity at the box office, behind only Marie Dressler and Janet Gaynor. She remained on the list for the next several years, last appearing on it in 1936. In May 1933, Crawford divorced Fairbanks. Crawford cited "grievous mental cruelty", claiming Fairbanks had "a jealous and suspicious attitude" toward her friends, and that they had "loud arguments about the most trivial subjects" lasting "far into the night".
*With Wallace Beery in Film Grand Hotel (1932)
Following her divorce, she was again teamed with Clark Gable, along with Franchot Tone and Fred Astaire, in the hit Dancing Lady (1933), in which she received top billing. She next played the title role in Sadie McKee (1934), opposite Tone and Gene Raymond. She was paired with Gable for the fifth time in Chained (1934), and for the sixth time in Forsaking All Others (1934). Crawford's films of this era were some of the most-popular and highest-grossing films of the mid-1930s.
In 1935, Crawford married Franchot Tone, a stage actor from New York who planned to use his film earnings to finance his theatre group. The couple built a small theatre at Crawford's Brentwood home, and put on productions of classic plays for select groups of friends that lived in the popular Brentwood area like Clark Gable and Charley Chase.Tone and Crawford had first appeared together in Today We Live (1933), but Crawford was hesitant about entering into another romance so soon after her split from Fairbanks.
Before and during their marriage, Crawford worked to promote Tone's Hollywood career, but Tone was ultimately not interested in being a movie star. He just wanted to be an actor, and Crawford eventually wearied of the effort. During their marriage they tried on two separate occasions for children, both ending in miscarriage. Then Tone allegedly began drinking and became physically abusive. She filed for divorce, which was granted in 1939. Crawford and Tone much later rekindled their friendship, and Tone even proposed in 1964 that they remarry. When he died in 1968, Crawford arranged for him to be cremated and his ashes scattered at Muskoka Lakes, Canada.
Crawford continued her reign as a popular movie actress well into the mid-1930s. No More Ladies (1935) co-starred Robert Montgomery and then-husband Franchot Tone, and was a success. Crawford had long pleaded with MGM's head Louis B. Mayer to cast her in more dramatic roles, and although he was reluctant, he cast her in the sophisticated comedy-drama I Live My Life (1935), directed by W.S. Van Dyke, and it was well received by critics.
She next starred in The Gorgeous Hussy (1936), opposite Robert Taylor and Lionel Barrymore, as well as Tone. It was a critical and box office success, and became one of Crawford's biggest hits of the decade. Love on the Run (1936), a romantic comedy directed by W.S. Van Dyke, was her seventh film co-starring Clark Gable. It was called "a lot of happy nonsense" by critics, but was a financial success nonetheless.
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4.6 "Box Office Poison" :
*Crawford as Mrs. Fay Cheyney for Movie The Last of Mrs. Cheyney (1937)
Even though Crawford remained a respected MGM actress, and her films still earned profits, her popularity declined in the late 1930s. In 1937, Crawford was proclaimed the first "Queen of the Movies" by Life magazine. She unexpectedly slipped from seventh to sixteenth place at the box office that year, and her public popularity also began to wane. Richard Boleslawski's comedy-drama The Last of Mrs. Cheyney (1937) teamed her opposite William Powell in their sole screen pairing. The film was also Crawford's last box-office success before the onset of her "Box Office Poison" period.
She co-starred opposite Franchot Tone for the seventh—and final—time in The Bride Wore Red (1937). The film was generally unfavorably reviewed by the majority of critics. It also ran a financial loss, becoming one of MGM's biggest failures of the year. Mannequin, costarring Spencer Tracy, also released in 1937 did, as the New York Times stated, "restore Crawford to her throne as queen of the working girls".
*Joan Crawford and her second husband, actor Franchot Tone, 1936.
On May 3, 1938, Crawford—along with Greta Garbo, Norma Shearer, Luise Rainer, John Barrymore, Katharine Hepburn, Fred Astaire, Dolores del Río, and others—was dubbed "Box Office Poison" in an open letter in the Independent Film Journal. The list was submitted by Harry Brandt, president of the Independent Theatre Owners Association of America. Brandt stated that while these stars had "unquestioned" dramatic abilities, their high salaries did not reflect in their ticket sales, thus hurting the movie exhibitors involved. Crawford's follow-up movie, The Shining Hour (1938), co-starring Margaret Sullavan and Melvyn Douglas, was well received by critics, but it was a box office flop.
She made a comeback in 1939 with her role as home-wrecker Crystal Allen in The Women, opposite her professional nemesis, Norma Shearer. A year later, she played against type in the unglamorous role of Julie in Strange Cargo (1940), her eighth—and final—film with Clark Gable. She later starred as a facially disfigured blackmailer in A Woman's Face (1941), a remake of the Swedish film En kvinnas ansikte which had starred Ingrid Bergman in the lead role three years earlier. While the film was only a moderate box office success, Crawford's performance was hailed by many critics.
Crawford adopted her first child, a daughter, in 1940. Because she was single, California law prevented her from adopting within the state; so, she arranged the adoption through an agency in Las Vegas. The child was temporarily called Joan, until Crawford changed her name to Christina. Crawford married actor Phillip Terry on July 21, 1942, after a six-month courtship. Together, the couple adopted a son whom they named Christopher, but his birth mother reclaimed the child. The couple adopted another boy, whom they named Phillip Terry, Jr. After the marriage ended in 1946, Crawford changed that child's name to Christopher Crawford.
After eighteen years, Crawford's contract with MGM was terminated by mutual consent on June 29, 1943. In lieu of the last film remaining under her contract, MGM bought her out for $100,000.
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4.7 Move to Warner Bros :
For $500,000, Crawford signed with Warner Bros. for a three-movie deal, and was placed on the payroll on July 1, 1943. Her first film for the studio was Hollywood Canteen (1944), an all-star morale-booster film that teamed her with several other top movie stars at the time. Crawford said one of the main reasons she signed with Warner Bros. was because she wanted to play the character "Mattie" in a proposed 1944 film version of Edith Wharton's novel Ethan Frome (1911).
*Crawford in the trailer for Movie Mildred Pierce (1945)
She wanted to play the title role in Mildred Pierce (1945), but Bette Davis was the studio's first choice. However, Davis turned the role down. Director Michael Curtiz did not want Crawford to play the part, and he instead lobbied for the casting of Barbara Stanwyck. Warner Bros. defied Curtiz and cast Crawford in the film. Throughout the entire production of the movie, Curtiz criticized Crawford. "She comes over here with her high-hat airs and her goddamn shoulder pads... Why should I waste my time directing a has-been?" Curtiz demanded Crawford prove her suitability by taking a screen test; she agreed. After the test, Curtiz agreed to Crawford's casting. Costume fittings started filming off roughly when Curtiz suspected Crawford of wearing shoulderpads and he proceeded to tear the top of her dress. She said, "Thankfully I was wearing a bra." Mildred Pierce was a resounding critical and commercial success. It epitomized the lush visual style and the hard-boiled film noir sensibility that defined Warner Bros. movies of the late forties. Crawford earned the Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role.
The success of Mildred Pierce revived Crawford's movie career. For several years, she starred in what were called "a series of first-rate melodramas". Her next film was Humoresque (1946), co-starring John Garfield, a romantic drama about a love affair between an older woman and a younger man. She starred alongside Van Heflin in Possessed (1947), for which she received a second Academy Award nomination. In Daisy Kenyon (1947), she appeared opposite Dana Andrews and Henry Fonda, and in Flamingo Road (1949), her character has an ultimately deadly feud with a corrupt southern sheriff played by Sydney Greenstreet. She made a cameo appearance in It's a Great Feeling (1949), poking fun at her own screen image. In 1950, she starred in the film noir The Damned Don't Cry and in the melodrama Harriet Craig.
In 1947, Crawford adopted two more children, whom she named Cindy and Cathy. The children were adopted from Tennessee Children's Home Society, an orphanage/child-trafficking unit operated by Georgia Tann, a source used by many childless Hollywood stars to adopt until Tann's discovery and death erupted in infamy in 1952.
After the completion of This Woman Is Dangerous (1952), a film Crawford called her "worst", she asked to be released from her Warner Bros. contract. By this time, she felt Warners was losing interest in her due to "feeble scripts, poor leading men and inept cameramen", so she decided it was time to move on. Later that same year, she received her third—and final—Academy Award nomination for Sudden Fear for RKO Radio Pictures.
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4.8 Radio and television :
Crawford worked in the radio series, The Screen Guild Theater, on January 8, 1939; Good News; Baby, broadcast March 2, 1940, on Arch Oboler's Lights Out; The Word on Everyman's Theater (1941); Chained on the Lux Radio Theater, and Norman Corwin's Document A/777 (1948). She appeared in episodes of anthology television series in the 1950s, and, in 1959, made a pilot for The Joan Crawford Show.
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4.9 Al Steele and Pepsi-Cola Company :
Crawford married her fourth—and final—husband, Alfred Steele, at the Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas on May 10, 1955. Crawford and Steele met at a party in 1950, when Steele was an executive at PepsiCo. They renewed their acquaintance at a New Year's Eve party in 1954. By that time, Steele had become President of Pepsi-Cola. He would later be named Chairman of the Board and CEO of Pepsi-Cola. Crawford traveled extensively on behalf of Pepsi following the marriage. She estimated that she traveled over 100,000 miles for the company.
Steele died of a heart attack in April 1959. Crawford was initially advised that her services were no longer required. After she told the story to Louella Parsons, Pepsi reversed its position, and Crawford was elected to fill the vacant seat on the board of directors.
Crawford received the sixth annual "Pally Award", which was in the shape of a bronze Pepsi bottle. It was awarded to the employee making the most significant contribution to company sales. In 1973, Crawford was forced to retire from the company at the behest of company executive Don Kendall, whom Crawford had referred to for years as "Fang".
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4.10 Later career :
*Crawford with Louis B. Mayer at the Movie premiere of Torch Song (1953).
"To me, L.B. Mayer was my father, my father confessor, the best friend I ever had", Crawford was quoted as saying.
After her Academy Award nominated performance in 1952's Sudden Fear, Crawford continued to work steadily throughout the rest of the decade. After a ten-year absence from MGM, she returned to that studio to star in Torch Song (1953), a musical drama centering on the life of a demanding stage star who falls in love with a blind pianist, played by Michael Wilding. Although the film was highly publicized as Crawford's major comeback, it was ultimately a critical and financial failure, known today for its camp appeal. In 1954, she starred in a cult classic, directed by Nicholas Ray, a western film, Johnny Guitar, co-starring Sterling Hayden and Mercedes McCambridge. She also starred in Female on the Beach (1955) with Jeff Chandler, and in Queen Bee (1955), alongside John Ireland. The following year, she starred opposite a young Cliff Robertson in Autumn Leaves (1956), and filmed a leading role in The Story of Esther Costello (1957), co-starring Rossano Brazzi. Crawford, who had been left near-penniless following Alfred Steele's death, accepted a small role in The Best of Everything (1959). Although she was not the star of the film, she received positive reviews. Crawford would later name the role as being one of her personal favorites. By 1961 Joan Crawford was once again her own publicity machine with a new script, "Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?", sent by Robert Aldrich.
Facial shot of a disheveled Crawford on the telephone.
*Crawford as Blanche Hudson in Movie What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962)
Crawford starred as Blanche Hudson, an elderly, disabled former A-list movie star who lives in fear of her psychotic sister Jane, in the highly successful psychological thriller What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962). Despite the actresses' earlier tensions, Crawford reportedly suggested Bette Davis for the role of Jane. The two stars maintained publicly that there was no feud between them. The director, Robert Aldrich, fueling publicity rumors, explained that Davis and Crawford were each aware of how important the film was to their respective careers, and commented, "It's proper to say that they really detested each other, but they behaved absolutely perfectly."
After filming was completed, their public comments against each other propelled their animosity into a lifelong feud. The film was a huge success, recouping its costs within eleven days of its nationwide release reviving Davis and Crawford's careers. Davis was nominated for an Academy Award for her performance as Jane Hudson. Crawford contacted each of the other Oscar nominees in the category (Katharine Hepburn, Lee Remick, Geraldine Page, and Anne Bancroft, all East Coast-based actresses), to let them know that if they could not attend the ceremony, she would be happy to accept the Oscar on their behalf; all agreed. Both Davis and Crawford were backstage - Crawford having presented best director - when the absent Anne Bancroft was announced as the winner and Crawford accepted the award on her behalf. Davis claimed for the rest of her life that Crawford had campaigned against her, a charge Crawford denied.
That same year, Crawford starred as Lucy Harbin in William Castle's horror mystery Strait-Jacket (1964). Robert Aldrich cast Crawford and Davis in Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1964). After a purported campaign of harassment by Davis on location in Louisiana, Crawford returned to Hollywood entering a hospital. After a prolonged absence, during which Crawford was accused of feigning illness, Aldrich was forced to replace her with Olivia de Havilland. Crawford, who was devastated, said, "I heard the news of my replacement over the radio, lying in my hospital bed ... I cried for nine hours." Crawford nursed grudges against Davis and Aldrich for the rest of her life, saying of Aldrich, "He is a man who loves evil, horrendous, vile things", to which Aldrich replied, "If the shoe fits, wear it, and I am very fond of Miss Crawford". Despite being replaced, brief footage of Crawford made it into the film, when she is seen sitting in a taxi in a wide shot.
*Crawford in Movie Night Gallery (1969)
In 1965, she played Amy Nelson in I Saw What You Did, another William Castle vehicle. She starred as Monica Rivers in Herman Cohen's horror thriller film Berserk! (1967). After the film's release, Crawford guest-starred as herself on The Lucy Show. The episode, "Lucy and the Lost Star", first aired on February 26, 1968. Crawford struggled during rehearsals, and drank heavily on-set, leading series star Lucille Ball to suggest replacing her with Gloria Swanson. However, Crawford was letter-perfect the day of the show, which included dancing the Charleston, and received two standing ovations from the studio audience.
In October 1968, Crawford's 29-year-old daughter, Christina (who was then acting in New York on the CBS soap opera The Secret Storm), needed immediate medical attention for a ruptured ovarian tumor. Despite the fact that Christina's character was a 28-year-old, and Crawford was in her sixties, Crawford offered to play her role until Christina was well enough to return, to which producer Gloria Monty readily agreed.
Crawford's appearance in the 1969 television film Night Gallery (which served as pilot to the series that followed) marked one of Steven Spielberg's earliest directing jobs. Crawford made a cameo appearance as herself in the first episode of the situation comedy The Tim Conway Show, which aired on January 30, 1970. She starred on the big screen one final time, playing Dr. Brockton in Herman Cohen's science fiction horror film Trog (1970), rounding out a career spanning 45 years and more than 80 motion pictures. Crawford made three more television appearances, including one as Stephanie White in a 1970 episode ("The Nightmare") of The Virginian and as Joan Fairchild (her final performance) in a 1972 episode ("Dear Joan: We're Going to Scare You to Death") of The Sixth Sense.
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4.11 Final years :
In 1970, Crawford was presented with the Cecil B. DeMille Award by John Wayne at the Golden Globes, which was telecast from the Coconut Grove at The Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. She also spoke at Stephens College, where she had been a student for two months in 1922.
Crawford published her autobiography, A Portrait of Joan, co-written with Jane Kesner Ardmore, in 1962 through Doubleday. Crawford's next book, My Way of Life, was published in 1971 by Simon & Schuster. Those expecting a racy tell-all were disappointed, although Crawford's meticulous ways were revealed in her advice on grooming, wardrobe, exercise, and even food storage. Upon her death, there were photographs of John F. Kennedy (for whom she had voted in the 1960 presidential election) found in her apartment.
In September 1973, Crawford moved from apartment 22-G to a smaller apartment next door, 22-H, at the Imperial House, 150 East 69th Street. Her last public appearance was made on September 23, 1974, at a book party cohosted with her old friend Rosalind Russell at New York's Rainbow Room. Russell was suffering from breast cancer and arthritis at the time. When Crawford saw the unflattering photos that appeared in the papers the next day, she said, "If that's how I look, then they won't see me anymore." Crawford cancelled all public appearances, began declining interviews, and left her apartment less and less. Dental-related issues, including surgery which left her needing round-the-clock nursing care, plagued her from 1972 until mid-1975. While on antibiotics for this problem in October 1974, her drinking caused her to pass out, slip, and strike her face. Whether it was this incident or her return to religion, Christian Science, she quit drinking in 1974.
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5. Death and legacy :
On May 8, 1977, Crawford gave away her beloved Shih Tzu, "Princess Lotus Blossom", being too weak to care for her. Crawford died two days later at her New York apartment of a myocardial infarction. A funeral was held at Campbell Funeral Home, New York, on May 13, 1977. In her will, which was signed on October 28, 1976, Crawford bequeathed to her two youngest children, Cindy and Cathy, $77,500 each from her $2 million estate.
She explicitly disinherited the two eldest, Christina and Christopher: "It is my intention to make no provision herein for my son, Christopher, or my daughter, Christina, for reasons which are well known to them." Both of them challenged the will and received a $55,000 settlement. She also bequeathed nothing to her niece, Joan Lowe (1933–1999; born Joan Crawford LeSueur, the only child of her estranged brother, Hal). Crawford left money to her favorite charities: the USO of New York, the Motion Picture Home, the American Cancer Society, the Muscular Dystrophy Association, the American Heart Association, and the Wiltwyck School for Boys. During World War II, she was a member of American Women's Voluntary Services.
A memorial service was held for Crawford at All Souls' Unitarian Church on Lexington Avenue in New York on May 16, 1977, and was attended by, among others, her long-time Hollywood friend Myrna Loy. Also attending were Joan's costars Geraldine Brooks and Cliff Robertson who gave eulogies while Pearl Bailey sang "He'll Understand." Another memorial service, organized by George Cukor, was held on June 24 in the Samuel Goldwyn Theater at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Beverly Hills. Crawford was cremated, and her ashes were placed in a crypt with her fourth — and final — husband, Alfred Steele, in Ferncliff Cemetery, Hartsdale, New York.
*Joan Crawford's grave at Ferncliff Cemetery and Mausoleum
Joan Crawford's handprints and footprints are immortalized in the forecourt of Grauman's Chinese Theater in Hollywood. She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, at 1752 Vine Street, for her contributions to the motion picture industry. Playboy listed Crawford as #84 of the "100 Sexiest Women of the 20th century". In 1999 Crawford was also voted the tenth greatest female star of the classic American cinema by the American Film Institute.
Crawford has also attracted a following in the gay community. In Joan Crawford: The Essential Biography, the author explains that Crawford appeals to many gay men because they sympathize with her struggle for success in both the entertainment industry and her personal life.
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6. Mommie Dearest :
In November 1978, Christina Crawford published Mommie Dearest, which contained allegations that her late adoptive mother was emotionally and physically abusive to Christina and her brother Christopher because she chose fame and her career over parenthood. Many of Crawford's friends and co-workers, including Van Johnson, Ann Blyth, Myrna Loy, Katharine Hepburn, Cesar Romero, Gary Gray, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. (Crawford's first husband), and Crawford's two other younger daughters, Cathy and Cindy, denounced the book, categorically denying any abuse. Betty Hutton, Helen Hayes, James MacArthur (Hayes' son), June Allyson, Liz Smith, Rex Reed, and Vincent Sherman, stated they had witnessed some form of abusive behavior. Mommie Dearest became a best-seller, and was made into the 1981 film Mommie Dearest, starring Faye Dunaway as Crawford.
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7. In popular culture :
Pictures of Crawford were used in the album artwork of The Rolling Stones album Exile on Main St. (1972).
The alleged feud between Crawford and Bette Davis is depicted in the 1989 book, Bette and Joan: The Divine Feud. It was fueled by competition over film roles, Academy Awards, and Franchot Tone (Joan Crawford's second husband), and Davis's co-star in 1935's Dangerous.
The Crawford-Davis rivalry is the subject of the 2017 first season of the FX anthology television series Feud, subtitled Bette and Joan. Crawford is played by Jessica Lange, and Davis is played by Susan Sarandon. As of 2018, any streaming/airing of this series was stopped by restraint order from lower California courts until Olivia de Havilland could be heard by the United States Supreme Court on whether producers had the right to use her likeness without permission despite her being a public figure. In January 2019, the Supreme Court refused to hear the case. Restraint is no longer in place. de Havilland is played by Catherine Zeta-Jones.
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8. Filmography and awards :
8.1 Joan Crawford filmography :
*Crawford in the trailer for Mildred Pierce (1945), the film which earned her the Academy Award for Best Actress
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------*Crawford, Steve Cochran, Richard Egan, and David Brian in publicity still for The Damned Don't Cry (1950)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------*Crawford (right) and Bette Davis in What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962)
The Joan Crawford filmography lists the film appearances of American actress Joan Crawford, who starred in numerous motion pictures throughout a lengthy career that spanned nearly five decades.
She made her film debut in Lady of the Night (1925), as a body double for film star Norma Shearer. She appeared in several other films before she made her major breakthrough playing Lon Chaney's love interest in the 1927 horror film, The Unknown. Her major success in Our Dancing Daughters (1928) made her a popular flapper of the late 1920s. Her first sound film, Untamed (1929), was a critical and box office success.
Crawford would become a highly popular actress throughout the 1930s, as a leading lady for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. She starred in a series of "rags-to-riches" films that were extremely popular during the Depression-era, most especially with women. Her popularity rivaled fellow MGM actresses, including Greta Garbo, Norma Shearer, and Jean Harlow. She appeared in eight movies with Clark Gable, including romantic drama Possessed (1931), musical film Dancing Lady (1933), romantic comedy Love on the Run (1936), and romantic drama Strange Cargo (1940), among others. In 1937, she was proclaimed the first "Queen of the Movies" by Life magazine, but her popularity soon waned. After her films The Bride Wore Red (1937) and Mannequin (1938) proved to be expensive failures, in May 1938 Crawford – along with Greta Garbo, Katharine Hepburn, Fred Astaire, Kay Francis, and many others – was labeled box office poison; an actor whose "box office draw is nil".
Crawford managed to make a comeback in the comedy The Women (1939), opposite an all-star female only cast. On July 1, 1943, Crawford left MGM and signed an exclusive contract with Warner Brothers, where she became a rival of Bette Davis. After a slow start with the studio, she received critical and commercial acclaim for her performance in drama Mildred Pierce (1945). The film earned her an Academy Award for Best Actress. From 1946 to 1952, Crawford appeared in a series of critical and box office successes, including the musical drama Humoresque (1946); film noirs Possessed (1947, for which she received a second Academy Award nomination) and Flamingo Road (1949); drama The Damned Don't Cry (1950); and romantic comedy Goodbye, My Fancy (1951), among others. She received a third – and final – Academy Award nomination for her performance in the thriller Sudden Fear (1952).
In 1953, Crawford starred in the musical Torch Song, her final film role for MGM. Her next film Johnny Guitar (1954), although not a major hit, is one of Crawford's most popular films among her fans. During the latter half of the 1950s, Crawford starred in a series of B-movies, including romantic dramas Female on the Beach (1955) and Autumn Leaves (1956). In 1962, Crawford was teamed with Bette Davis in a film adaptation of What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? The thriller film was a box office hit, and briefly revived Crawford's career. Her final film performance was in the British science fiction film, Trog (1970).
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8.2 Filmography :
8.3 Feature films :
8.4 Silent films
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Year Title Role Director Studio
1925 Lady of the Night Double for Norma Shearer Monta Bell Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 Proud Flesh Party Guest King Vidor Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 A Slave of Fashion‡ Mannequin Hobart Henley Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 The Merry Widow Ballroom Dancer Erich von Stroheim Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 Pretty Ladies Bobby, a Showgirl Monta Bell Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 The Circle Young Lady Catherine Frank Borzage Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 The Midshipman Extra Christy Cabanne Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 The Exquisite Sinner‡ Extra Josef von Sternberg Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 The Big Parade Extra King Vidor Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ Chariot Race Spectator Fred Niblo Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 Old Clothes Mary Riley Edward F. Cline Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 The Only Thing Party Guest Jack Conway Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 Sally, Irene and Mary Irene Edmund Goulding Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1926 Tramp, Tramp, Tramp Betty Burton Harry Edwards First National Pictures
1926 The Boob Jane William A. Wellman Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1926 Paris The Girl Edmund Goulding Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1927 Winners of the Wilderness René Contrecoeur W. S. Van Dyke Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1927 The Taxi Dancer Joslyn Poe Harry F. Millarde Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1927 The Understanding Heart Monica Dale Jack Conway Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1927 The Unknown Estrellita or Nanon Tod Browning Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1927 Twelve Miles Out Jane Jack Conway Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1927 Spring Fever Allie Monte Edward Sedgwick Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1928 West Point Betty Channing Edward Sedgwick Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1928 The Law of the Range Betty Dallas William Nigh Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1928 Rose-Marie‡ Rose-Marie Lucien Hubbard Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1928 Across to Singapore Priscilla Crowninshield William Nigh Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1928 Four Walls Frieda William Nigh Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1928 Our Dancing Daughters Diana Medford Harry Beaumont Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1928 Dream of Love‡ Adrienne Lecouvreur Fred Niblo Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1929 The Duke Steps Out‡ Susie James Cruze Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1929 Our Modern Maidens Billie Brown Jack Conway Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
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8.5 Sound films :
1929 The Hollywood Revue of 1929 Herself (performer) Charles Reisner Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1929 Untamed Alice "Bingo" Dowling Jack Conway Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1930 Montana Moon Joan 'Montana' Prescott Malcolm St. Clair Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1930 Our Blushing Brides Gerry Marsh Harry Beaumont Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1930 Paid Mary Turner Sam Wood Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1931 Dance, Fools, Dance Bonnie Jordan Harry Beaumont Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1931 Laughing Sinners Ivy Stevens Harry Beaumont Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1931 This Modern Age Val Winters Nick Grinde Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1931 Possessed Marian Martin Clarence Brown Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1932 Grand Hotel Flaemmchen Edmund Goulding Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1932 Letty Lynton Letty Lynton Clarence Brown Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1932 Rain Sadie Thompson Lewis Milestone United Artists
1933 Today We Live Diana "Ann" Boyce-Smith Howard Hawks Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1933 Dancing Lady Janie "Duchess" Barlow Robert Z. Leonard Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1934 Sadie McKee Sadie McKee Brennan Clarence Brown Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1934 Chained Diane "Dinah" Lovering Clarence Brown Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1934 Forsaking All Others Mary Clay W. S. Van Dyke Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1935 No More Ladies Marcia Townsend Edward H. Griffith Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1935 I Live My Life Kay Bentley W. S. Van Dyke Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1936 The Gorgeous Hussy Margaret "Peggy" O'Neal Clarence Brown Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1936 Love on the Run Sally Parker W. S. Van Dyke Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1937 The Last of Mrs. Cheyney Fay Cheyney Richard Boleslawski Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1937 The Bride Wore Red Anni Pavlovitch Dorothy Arzner Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1937 Mannequin Jessica Cassidy Frank Borzage Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1938 The Shining Hour Olivia Riley Frank Borzage Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1939 The Ice Follies of 1939 Mary McKay Reinhold Schünzel Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1939 The Women Crystal Allen George Cukor Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1940 Strange Cargo Julie Frank Borzage Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1940 Susan and God Susan Trexel George Cukor Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1941 A Woman's Face Anna Holm George Cukor Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1941 When Ladies Meet Mary Howard Robert Z. Leonard Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1942 They All Kissed the Bride Margaret Drew Alexander Hall Columbia Pictures
1942 Reunion in France Michele de la Becque Jules Dassin Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1943 Above Suspicion Frances Myles Richard Thorpe Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1944 Hollywood Canteen Herself (cameo) Delmer Daves Warner Bros.
1945 Mildred Pierce Mildred Pierce Michael Curtiz Warner Bros.
1946 Humoresque Helen Wright Jean Negulesco Warner Bros.
1947 Possessed Louise Howell Curtis Bernhardt Warner Bros.
1947 Daisy Kenyon Daisy Kenyon Otto Preminger 20th Century Fox
1949 Flamingo Road Lane Bellamy Michael Curtiz Warner Bros.
1949 It's a Great Feeling Herself (cameo) David Butler Warner Bros.
1950 The Damned Don't Cry Ethel Whitehead Vincent Sherman Warner Bros.
1950 Harriet Craig Harriet Craig Vincent Sherman Columbia Pictures
1951 Goodbye, My Fancy Agatha Reed Vincent Sherman Warner Bros.
1952 This Woman Is Dangerous Beth Austin Felix E. Feist Warner Bros.
1952 Sudden Fear Myra Hudson David Miller RKO Pictures
1953 Torch Song Jenny Stewart Charles Walters Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1954 Johnny Guitar Vienna Nicholas Ray Republic Pictures
1955 Female on the Beach Lynn Markham Joseph Pevney Universal Pictures
1955 Queen Bee Eva Phillips Ranald MacDougall Columbia Pictures
1956 Autumn Leaves Millicent "Milly" Wetherby Robert Aldrich Columbia Pictures
1957 The Story of Esther Costello Margaret Landi David Miller Columbia Pictures
1959 The Best of Everything Amanda Farrow Jean Negulesco 20th Century Fox
1962 What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? Blanche Hudson Robert Aldrich Warner Bros.
1963 The Caretakers Lucretia Terry Hall Bartlett United Artists
1964 Strait-Jacket Lucy Harbin William Castle Columbia Pictures
1964 Della[4] Della Chappell Robert Gist Four Star Productions
1965 I Saw What You Did Amy Nelson William Castle Universal Pictures
1967 The Karate Killers Amanda True Barry Shear Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1967 Berserk! Monica Rivers Jim O'Connolly Columbia Pictures
1970 Trog Dr. Brockton Freddie Francis Warner Bros.
‡ denotes lost film
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8.6 Short subjects :
Year Title Role Director Studio
1925 MGM Studio Tour Herself – Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1925 Miss MGM Miss MGM – Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1930 Hollywood Snapshots #11 Herself Ralph Staub Columbia Pictures
1931 The Slippery Pearls Herself William C. McGann Paramount Pictures
1932 Screen Snapshots Herself Ralph Staub Columbia Pictures
1947 The Jimmy Fund Herself – –
1958 Hollywood Mothers and Fathers Herself – Columbia Pictures
1972 A Very Special Child Narrator – American Cancer Society
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8.7 Archival footage :
Year Title Role Director Studio
1964 Four Days in November Herself Mel Stuart United Artists
1964 MGM's Big Parade of Comedy Herself Robert Youngson Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1974 That's Entertainment! Janie Barlow (Dancing Lady) Jack Haley Jr. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1984 Terror in the Aisles Blanche Hudson (What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?) Andrew J. Kuehn Universal Pictures
1985 That's Dancing! Herself Jack Haley Jr. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1994 That's Entertainment! III Jenny Stewart (Torch Song Bud Friedgen, Michael J. Sheridan Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
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8.8 Uncompleted films :
Year Title Role Director Studio
1929 Tide of Empire Josephita (replaced by Renée Adorée) Allan Dwan Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1930 Great Day Susie Totheridge Harry Beaumont Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1930 The March of Time Herself Charles Reisner Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
1964 Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte Miriam Deering (replaced by Olivia de Havilland due to illness) Robert Aldrich 20th Century Fox
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8.9 Box-office ranking :
For a number of years, Crawford was regularly voted as one of the top money making stars in the country in the annual Quigley Poll :
1930 – 1st
1931 – 3rd
1932 – 3rd
1933 – 10th
1934 – 6th
1935 – 5th
1936 – 7th
1937 – 16th
1947 – 21st
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8.10 Television :
Year Title Role Episode Director Network
1953 The Revlon Mirror Theater Margaret Hughes "Because I Love Him" Rod Amateau CBS
1954 General Electric Theater Mary Andrews "The Road to Edinburgh" Rod Amateau CBS
1958 General Electric Theater Ruth Marshall "Strange Witness" Herschel Daugherty CBS
1959 General Electric Theater Ann Howard "And One Was Loyal" Herschel Daugherty CBS
1959 The Joseph Cotten Show Ruth Marshall "Strange Witness" Herschel Daugherty CBS
1959 Zane Grey Theatre Stella Faring "Rebel Range" Don Medford CBS
1961 Zane Grey Theatre Sarah and Melanie Hobbes "One Must Die" Lewis Allen CBS
1961 The DuPont Show of the Week Hostess "The Ziegfeld Touch" James Elson NBC
1963 Route 66 Morgan Matheson Harper "Same Picture, Different Frame" Philip Leacock CBS
1967 The Man from U.N.C.L.E. Amanda True "The Five Daughters Affair: Part 1"[9] Barry Shear NBC
1968 The Lucy Show Herself (guest star) "Lucy and the Lost Star" Jack Donohue CBS
1968 The Secret Storm Joan Borman Kane #2[10] [daytime soap opera] Gloria Monty CBS
1969 Garbo Hostess/Narrator [made-for-TV documentary] Fred Burnley PBS
1969 Night Gallery Claudia Menlo [made-for-TV movie] Steven Spielberg NBC
1970 The Virginian Stephanie White "Nightmare" Robert Gist NBC
1970 The Tim Conway Show Herself (cameo) "To Cuba with Love" Alan Rafkin CBS
1970 Journey to the Unknown Hostess [made-for-TV movie] Michael Lindsay-Hogg, Don Chaffey Syndication
1970 The Tim Conway Comedy Hour Herself (guest star) "Episode #1.3" Bill Hobin CBS
1971 Journey to Murder Hostess [made-for-TV movie] Gerry O'Hara, John Gibson Syndication
1972 The Sixth Sense Joan Fairchild "Dear Joan: We're Going to Scare You to Death" John Newland ABC
1975 Easter Island Narrator (voice) [made-for-TV documentary] José Gómez-Sicre PBS
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9. Awards and nominations :
Year Award Category Title / Honor Result
1945 National Board of Review Best Actress Mildred Pierce Won
1946 Academy Award Best Actress in a Leading Role Mildred Pierce Won
1946 New York Film Critics Circle Best Actress Mildred Pierce Nominated
1948 Academy Award Best Actress in a Leading Role Possessed Nominated
1953 Academy Award Best Actress in a Leading Role Sudden Fear Nominated
1953 Golden Globe Award Best Actress – Drama Sudden Fear Nominated
1953 Laurel Award Best Dramatic Performance, Female Sudden Fear Won
1954 Laurel Award Top Female Musical Performance Torch Song Won
1960 Hollywood Walk of Fame Star of Motion Picture Star at 1752 Vine Street Honored
1963 BAFTA Film Award Best Foreign Actress What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? Nominated
1970 Golden Globe Award Cecil B. DeMille Award Outstanding contributions to the world of entertainment Honored
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9. Autobiographies
— (1962). A Portrait of Joan: The Autobiography of Joan Crawford. Doubleday. ISBN 978-1-258-17238-1.
— (1971). My Way of Life. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-78568-0.
THE END.
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