08-01-2018, 05:43 PM
One of the last actresses from the silent film era, and probably one of the very last living teenage actresses from the end of the silent film era:
Mary Carlisle (February 3, 1914[1] – August 1, 2018) was an American actress, singer, and dancer.
She starred in several Hollywood films in the 1930s, having been one of 15 girls selected as WAMPAS Baby Stars in 1932. Her first major role was in the 1933 film College Humor with Bing Crosby. The two went on to perform together in two additional films, Double or Nothing (1937) and Doctor Rhythm (1938).[1] Carlisle retired from her acting career shortly after her marriage in 1942, with Dead Men Walk (1943) being her final film credit.[1]
Carlisle's uncle, who lived in California, gave her the opportunity to appear in the Jackie Coogan silent movie Long Live the King in 1923. She was uncredited.[2]
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Carlisle in a 1933 publicity photo
Carlisle was discovered by studio executive Carl Laemmle, Jr., at the age of 14 while she was eating lunch with her mother at the Universal Studios commissionary.[6] Carlisle was praised for her angelic looks, and Laemmle offered her a screen test.[5][7] Though she passed the test and started doing extra work at Universal, she was stopped by a welfare officer who noticed that she was underaged and had to finish school first.[5]
After completing her education two years later, she headed to the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio for work in movies.[6] Carlisle, who had lied about her good dancing abilities, took a one-day basic tap dancing lesson, won the part along with future star Ann Dvorak and appeared briefly in one film.[4] She signed a one-year contract with MGM[3] in 1930 and was used as a back-up dancer.[5]
In the beginning of her movie career, she had small parts in movies such as [url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madam_Satan]Madam Satan and Passion Flower.[8][9] She also had a role in Grand Hotel in 1932, where she played a bride named Mrs. Hoffman.[3] She gained recognition when she was selected as one of the WAMPAS Baby Stars (young actresses believed to be on their way to stardom) in 1932.[10]
Her major acting break came when Paramount Studios loaned her to star in the 1933 musical comedy College Humor alongside Bing Crosby.[5] The performance was critically acclaimed and catapulted her into a leading actress.[11] She went on to make two more movies with Crosby: Double or Nothing[5] and Doctor Rhythm.[2] She continued working for different studios, mainly in B-movies as a leading lady. Being an actress whose beauty was considered a favorable trait among the studios, she often dieted to keep her figure.[3]
She acted in more than 60 movies in a career that spanned about a dozen years.[6] She retired in 1943 with her final film being Dead Men Walk.[8]
More at Wikipedia
Mary Carlisle (February 3, 1914[1] – August 1, 2018) was an American actress, singer, and dancer.
She starred in several Hollywood films in the 1930s, having been one of 15 girls selected as WAMPAS Baby Stars in 1932. Her first major role was in the 1933 film College Humor with Bing Crosby. The two went on to perform together in two additional films, Double or Nothing (1937) and Doctor Rhythm (1938).[1] Carlisle retired from her acting career shortly after her marriage in 1942, with Dead Men Walk (1943) being her final film credit.[1]
Carlisle's uncle, who lived in California, gave her the opportunity to appear in the Jackie Coogan silent movie Long Live the King in 1923. She was uncredited.[2]
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Carlisle in a 1933 publicity photo
Carlisle was discovered by studio executive Carl Laemmle, Jr., at the age of 14 while she was eating lunch with her mother at the Universal Studios commissionary.[6] Carlisle was praised for her angelic looks, and Laemmle offered her a screen test.[5][7] Though she passed the test and started doing extra work at Universal, she was stopped by a welfare officer who noticed that she was underaged and had to finish school first.[5]
After completing her education two years later, she headed to the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio for work in movies.[6] Carlisle, who had lied about her good dancing abilities, took a one-day basic tap dancing lesson, won the part along with future star Ann Dvorak and appeared briefly in one film.[4] She signed a one-year contract with MGM[3] in 1930 and was used as a back-up dancer.[5]
In the beginning of her movie career, she had small parts in movies such as [url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madam_Satan]Madam Satan and Passion Flower.[8][9] She also had a role in Grand Hotel in 1932, where she played a bride named Mrs. Hoffman.[3] She gained recognition when she was selected as one of the WAMPAS Baby Stars (young actresses believed to be on their way to stardom) in 1932.[10]
Her major acting break came when Paramount Studios loaned her to star in the 1933 musical comedy College Humor alongside Bing Crosby.[5] The performance was critically acclaimed and catapulted her into a leading actress.[11] She went on to make two more movies with Crosby: Double or Nothing[5] and Doctor Rhythm.[2] She continued working for different studios, mainly in B-movies as a leading lady. Being an actress whose beauty was considered a favorable trait among the studios, she often dieted to keep her figure.[3]
She acted in more than 60 movies in a career that spanned about a dozen years.[6] She retired in 1943 with her final film being Dead Men Walk.[8]
More at Wikipedia
The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated Communist but instead the people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction, true and false, no longer exists -- Hannah Arendt.