Joan Crawford was an American film and television actress counted amongst the greatest female stars of Classic Hollywood Cinema
@Film & Theater Personalities, Timeline and Life
Joan Crawford was an American film and television actress counted amongst the greatest female stars of Classic Hollywood Cinema
Joan Crawford born at
Joan Crawford was married four times. Her first three marriages, to Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Franchot Tone, and Phillip Terry respectively, ended in divorce. Her fourth marriage, to Alfred Steele, the chairman of the Pepsi-Cola Company, lasted till Steele’s death in 1959.
She had four adopted children. Her relationship with the two eldest ones—Christina and Christopher—were acrimonious. In 1978, her daughter Christina published a memoir ‘Mommie Dearest’ in which she alleged that her mother was emotionally and physically abusive to Christina and her brother Christopher. The book became a bestseller.
Joan Crawford suffered from ill health during her later years and died of a heart attack on May 10, 1977.
She was born as Lucille Fay LeSueur on 23 March, in San Antonio, Texas, to Thomas E. LeSueur, a laundry laborer, and Anna Bell Johnson. The year of her birth is disputed; she is believed to have been born sometime between 1903 and 1908.
Her father abandoned the family either before her birth or soon after. Her mother subsequently married Henry J. Cassin, a minor impresario who ran the Ramsey Opera House. Her childhood was a troubled one and she was unable to focus on her formal education. The break-up of her mother and stepfather further added to the young girl’s miseries.
After attending a Catholic boarding school, St. Agnes, Lucille moved to the Rockingham Academy as a work student. Life at the academy was harsh; she was physically and emotionally abused by her headmistress.
In 1922, she entered Stephens College, a girls' school in Columbia, again as a working student. However, she dropped out after a few months.
She started her show business career as a dancer in the choruses of traveling revues. Soon she got spotted for her beauty and talent which led to her Broadway debut. She ventured into films in the mid-1920s and adopted the screen name “Joan Crawford.”
Initially she was offered only minor roles, but the ambitious young lady tried her best to promote herself and was successful in bagging lead roles for herself. She received her major breakthrough playing Lon Chaney's love interest in the 1927 horror film, ‘The Unknown.’
More popular films followed and she effortlessly made the transition to the talkies with her first sound film, ‘Untamed’ (1929), which was a critical and box office success. Her string of successes continued and she became one of the topmost female stars in the 1930s.
She gained much fame for starring in a number of "rags-to-riches" films that were extremely popular during the Depression-era. Her portrayal of poor but hard-working women who achieve financial success through their determination struck a chord with the female audiences in the Depression-era.
During the 1930s she often shared the screen with some of the leading men in Hollywood and 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).
She played the role of Mildred Pierce in the eponymous film; it was a story about a long-suffering mother and her ungrateful daughter. Her portrayal of a hard-working woman of humble means who desperately yearns for the affection of her daughter was well received by the critics and audience alike.
Crawford co-starred with her bitter rival Bette Davis in the psychological thriller ‘What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?’ a film about an actress who holds her crippled sister captive in an old Hollywood mansion. The film was a critical as well as commercial success and was nominated for five Academy Awards.