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Month: June 2015

Vintage Canadian Actors and Actresses in Hollywood

Canada Day is right around the corner (July 1st) and as my friend and fellow blogger Jessica from Chronically Vintage eloquently states:

We Canadians, in general, aren’t overly boisterous about our patriotism, but it runs as deep as the great oceans that flank our mighty nation.

I 100% agree and just like Jessica it’s one of my favorite days as well. I just love getting together with friends and family and enjoy some BBQ and some fireworks and celebrating the wonderful land we live in.

I am also proud to share with you today several (but not all) Vintage Actors and Actresses that you might never have been aware were from Canada but were quite successful in the early years of Hollywood (Note: this is not a complete list). So lets take a peak shall we?

Fay Wray – Born on a ranch near Cardston in the province of Alberta, Canada.

Fay Wray classic movie star
Source: Wikipedia

Fay is known as one of the first “Scream Queens” and is most noted for playing the female lead in King Kong. 

Interesting Fact: Two days after her death (at the tender age of 96), the lights of the Empire State Building were extinguished for 15 minutes in her memory (Source).

Jack Carson– Carman, Manitoba

Jack Carson
Source: Wikipedia

Carson was one of the most popular character actors during the “golden age of Hollywood”, with a film career spanning the 1930s, ’40s and ’50s. Though he was primarily used in supporting roles for comic relief, his work in films such as Mildred Pierce (1945) and Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958) displayed his mastery of “straight” dramatic actor roles as well. He worked for RKO and MGM, but most of his memorable work was for Warner Brothers. His trademark character was the wisecracking know-it-all, typically and inevitably undone by his own smug cockiness (Source).

Deanna Durban (see a post I did on Deanna HERE)-Winnipeg, Manitoba.

Deanna Durban
Source: Wikipedia

Ruby Keeler -Dartmouth, Nova Scotia

Ruby Keeler

Ruby was a Canadian-born American actress, dancer and singer most famous for her on-screen coupling with Dick Powell in a string of successful early musicals at Warner Brothers, particularly 42nd Street (1933). From 1928 to 1940, she was married to singer Al Jolson. She retired from show business in the 1940s, but made a widely publicized comeback on Broadway in 1971 (Source).

Glen Ford -Quebec City, Quebec

Glen Ford in Gilda
Source: Wikipedia

Glen was an actor from Hollywood’s Golden Era with a career that lasted over 50 years. Despite his versatility, Ford was best known for playing ordinary men in unusual circumstances.

Ford’s breakthrough role was in 1946, starring alongside Rita Hayworth in the noir classic Gilda.

Mary Pickford (see a post I did on Mary HERE) -Toronto, Ontario

Buddy and Mary pickford 1937
Source: Mary Pickford Org

Barbara Kent -Gadsby, Alberta

Barbara Kent
Source: bellazon.com

After Barbara won the Miss Hollywood Pageant in 1925, she began her Hollywood career in 1925 in a small role for Universal Studios. A brunette who stood less than five feet tall, Kent became popular as a comedienne opposite such stars as Reginald Denny, and also made a strong impression as the heroine, pitted against Greta Garbo’s femme fatale in Flesh and the Devil (1926).

She attracted attention in the 1927 film No Man’s Law by swimming nude; she wore a flesh-colored bathing suit in scenes that were considered very daring at the time (Source).

Over the next few years, she remained popular and received critical praise for her role in the 1933 film version of Oliver Twist.

Walter Pidgeon -Saint John, New Brunswick

Walter Pidgeon
Source: Wikipedia

Walter starred in many films, including Mrs. Miniver, The Bad and the Beautiful, Forbidden Planet, Advise & Consent,Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, Funny Girl and Harry in Your Pocket and was noted for having a wonderful singing voice (which he used in many Technicolour Musicals) (Source).

Lastly I think it’s good to end this post with the woman who is often referred to as “The First Movie Star”…Florence Lawrence from Hamilton, Ontario.

Florence Lawrence
Source: CDRS

Florence was also the first film actor to be named publicly. At the height of her fame in the 1910s, she was known as “The Biograph Girl”, “The Imp Girl”, and “The Girl of a Thousand Faces”. She appeared in almost 300 films for various motion picture companies (Source).

So Friends, have you heard of a few of these actors and actresses? And if so did you know they were from Canada?

Happy Canada Day!

Liz 🙂

Mary Pickford-“Canada’s Sweetheart” of the Silver Screen

Mary Pickford was “America’s Sweetheart” in the early days of the Silver Screen but did you know that she was Canadian and born in my adopted home of Toronto? So technically she would be “Canada’s Sweetheart“.

1920s Vintage Photo of Mary Pickford in “Coquette” 1929
Source: Pretty Clever Films

I also recently discovered thanks to a friend’s post on Instagram that there is a statue and plaque in her honor in downtown Toronto. How exciting!! Here it is:

Mary Pickford Toronto Plaque and Statue
Source: Toronto Plaques

Location in Toronto (if you ever visit): Northeast corner of University Avenue and Elm Street.

Mary Pickford Toronto Plaque and Statue
Source: Toronto Plaques

Miss Pickford herself in statue format.

Mary Pickford Toronto Plaque and Statue
Source: Toronto Plaques

Mary Pickford-“Canada’s Sweetheart” of the Silver Screen

About Mary Pickford-The Highlights

Note: for a more detailed description please visit her official website HERE

Vintage Photo of Mary Pickford as a Child in 1902
Mary as a child in 1902. Source: Mary Pickford org

Mary was aborn as Glady’s Marie Smith on April 8, 1892 in Toronto, Canada to John and Charlotte Smith. Her father died when she was young and her mother after being encouraged by a boarder of their home (who was a stage manager for a theatre company), put Glady’s (age 5) and her sister onto the stage.

Soon though the producers only wanted Glady’s and she quickly found herself traveling alone throughout Canada and to New York for work.

By the time Gladys was twelve,” writes Pickford biographer Booton Herndon, “she knew how to travel better than most adults, certainly better than most women of 1905. She knew how to get around in a town she had never seen before, how to get a room at a reasonable price, how to eat cheaply, when to walk rather that spend a nickel for a streetcar.” She was not above sleeping in an overstuffed chair and paying “rent” by doing the shopping and cleaning, saving every penny she could to proudly send home to her mother at the end of each week (Source).

Marty Pickford early work - The Warrens of Virginia 1907-1908 play.
Source: Wikipedia

Glady’s Becomes Mary:

In 1907 Mary was cast in the Broadway Play “The Warrens of Virginia“, written by William de Mille and co-starring his younger brother Cecil (image above) where her name was then to be changed forever.

Glady’s name was not “Marquee Worthy” so she adopted the family name Pickford from her maternal grandfather’s name, John Pickford Hennessey and took her middle name, Marie, to become Mary (source). A stars name is born!

Pickford's star on Canada's Walk of Fame in Toronto, Ontario
Mary Pickford Star on the Canadian Walk of Fame – Source: Wikipedia

Silver Screen Career:

Vintage Photo of Mary Pickford in 1916
Source: Wikipedia

Mary Pickford made the move to the movies in 1909 where between the years of 1909 and 1912 she appeared in over 150 short films working with 3 different Movie Companies.

By 1916 Pickford’s popularity had climbed to the point that she was awarded a contract that made her a partner with Zukor (Zukor’s Famous Players Film Company, a studio which eventually became part of Paramount Pictures and who she had been working with since 1913) and they even allowed her to produce her own films (Source).

From 1913-to 1933 she appeared in around 80 more films (give or take a movie or 2 I missed).

In 1919 Pickford teamed with D.W. Griffith, Charlie Chaplin, and Douglas Fairbanks to create United Artists, an organization designed to distribute their own films.

Vintage Photo of  D.W. Griffith, Charlie Chaplin, and Douglas Fairbanks to create United Artists
Source: Wikipedia

Her First Talkie was the movie “Coquette” in 1929 where she ended winning the Academy award for Best Actress for her performance and it launched Pickford as a competent talkie star.

Vintage Movie Poster for Mary Pickford first talkie, Coquette
Source: Wikipedia

Her last movie was in 1933 in the Movie “Secrets”, however, she remained active as a producer for several years afterwards (Source).

Some of Her Movie Roles:

Vintage Photo Collage of Mary Pickford in the Movies

Interesting Mary Pickford Facts:

1. Mary was married 3 times:

  • Owen Moore (1911-1920)
Vintage Photo of Mary Pickford and Owen Moore her first husband acting together.
Source: Mary Pickford Org
  • Douglas Fairbanks (1920-1936)
Vintage Photo of Douglas Fairbanks and Mary PIckford sitting on a beach.
  • Buddy Rogers (1937-1979)
Vintage Photo of Buddy and Mary pickford 1937 on their wedding day.
Source: Mary Pickford Org

2. The Public preferred to see Pickford as a young girl; as a result, she was often pressured to choose childlike parts to appeal to audiences (Source).

I’m sick of Cinderella parts, of wearing rags and tatters. I want to wear smart clothes and play the lover -Mary Pickford-

3. Pickford was a founding member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Source).

4. She had intended to have all of her films destroyed after her death, fearing that no one would care about them. She was convinced not to do this (Source).

5. Became a United States citizen on her marriage to Douglas Fairbanks, but later reclaimed her Canadian citizenship and died an American and Canadian citizen (Source).

6. The house in which she lived in Hollywood for most of her life was nicknamed “Pickfair” (Source).

Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks home called pickfair as seen in a vintage postcard
Source: Playle

Mary died in 1979 at the age of 87.

mary pickford

“The best known woman who has ever lived, the woman who was known to more people and loved by more people than any other woman that has been in all history.”

Adela Rogers St. Johns, 1981

And there is a little bit of Canadian Movie Star History for all of you. I hope you enjoyed and learned a little more about OUR Canadian Sweetheart.  

FURTHER READING: Vintage Women’s History (Archived Blog Posts)

Liz 🙂