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Glenda Farrell

 
Actor: Glenda Farrell
  • Born: Jun 30, 1904 in Enid, Oklahoma
  • Died: May 01, 1971 in New York City, New York
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '30s-'40s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Drama
  • Career Highlights: I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang, Little Caesar, The Talk of the Town
  • First Major Screen Credit: Little Caesar (1930)

Biography

American actress Glenda Farrell, like so many other performers born around the turn of the century, made her stage debut in a production of Uncle Tom's Cabin. Her first adult professional job was with Virginia Brissac's stock company in San Diego, after which she worked up and down the California coast until leaving for Broadway in the late 1920s. Farrell's performance in the stage play Skidding established her reputation, and in 1929 she was wooed to Hollywood along with many other stage actors in the wake of the "talkie" revolution. Uncharacteristically cast as the ingenue in Little Caesar (1930), Farrell would thereafter be cast in the fast-talking, "hard-boiled dame" roles that suited her best.

Though her characters had a tough veneer, Farrell was sensitive enough to insist upon script changes if the lines and bits of business became too rough and unsympathetic; still, she seemed to revel in the occasional villainess, notably her acid performance as Paul Muni's mercenary paramour in I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang(1932). In 1937, Farrell was assigned by Warner Bros. to portray dauntless news reporter Torchy Blaine in a series of brisk "B" pictures. She was gratified by the positive fan mail she received for Torchy, and justifiably proud of her ability to spout out 390 words per minute in the role, but Farrell decided to leave Warners and free-lance after five "Torchy Blaines." The actress's character roles in the 1940s and 1950s may have been smaller than before, but she always gave 100 percent to her craft. Farrell moved into television with ease, appearing on virtually every major dramatic weekly series and ultimately winning an Emmy for her work on the two-part Ben Casey episode of 1963, "A Cardinal Act of Mercy." Farrell's exit from movies was the 1964 Jerry Lewis farce The Disorderly Orderly, an assignment she plunged into with all the enthusiasm and sheer professionalism that she'd brought to the rest of her screen career. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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Glenda Farrell

in the trailer for the film Havana Widows (1933)
Born June 30, 1904(1904-06-30)
Enid, Oklahoma, U.S.
Died May 1, 1971 (aged 66)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Years active 19281969
Spouse(s) Thomas Richards (1921–1929)
Dr. Henry Ross (1941–1971)

Glenda Farrell (June 30, 1904 – May 1, 1971) was an American film actress.

Contents

Career

Farrell came to Hollywood towards the end of the silent era. Farrell began her career with a theatrical company at the age of 7. She played Little Eva in Uncle Tom's Cabin. She paused at times to continue her education but appeared with a number of theatrical companies and in several Broadway productions.

She was in the cast of Cobra and The Best People with actress Charlotte Treadway, at the Morosco Theater in Los Angeles, California in 1925.

Farrell was first signed to a long-term contract by First National Pictures in July 1930. She was given the feminine lead in Little Caesar directed by Mervyn Leroy.

Warner Brothers signed her to re-create on film the role she played in Life Begins on Broadway. Farrell worked on parts in twenty movies in her first year with the studio. She came to personify the wise-cracking, hard-boiled, and somewhat dizzy blonde of the early talkies, along with fellow Warner Brothers brassy blonde, Joan Blondell, with whom she would be frequently paired.

in Mary Stevens, M.D. (1933)

Her brassy persona was used to great effect in Little Caesar (1931) opposite Edward G. Robinson, I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang (1932) opposite Paul Muni, Havana Widows (1933) with Blondell, Bureau of Missing Persons (1933) opposite Pat O'Brien, Mystery of the Wax Museum (1933) opposite Lionel Atwill and Fay Wray, and The Big Shakedown (1934) with Charles Farrell and Bette Davis.

She became one of Warner Brothers most prolific actresses of the 1930s, solidifying her success with her own film film series, as Torchy Blane, "Girl Reporter". In this role Farrell was promoted as being able to speak 400 words in 40 seconds. Farrell would portray the character Torchy Blane in approximately eight films, from 1937 to 1939 when the role was taken over by Jane Wyman.

in the first of the Torchy Blane series, Smart Blonde (1937)

In 1937 she starred opposite Dick Powell and Joan Blondell in the Academy Award nominated Lloyd Bacon and Busby Berkeley directed musical comedy Gold Diggers of 1937.

When her Warner Brothers contact expired in 1939 she opted to focus on her stage career once again. She said that working in plays gave her more of a sense of individuality whereas in films you get frustrated because you feel you have no power over what you're doing.

Farrell went out of vogue in the 1940s but made a comeback later in life, winning an Emmy Award in 1963, for her work in the television series Ben Casey. She was appearing on Broadway in Forty Carats in 1969 when she was diagnosed with lung cancer. She remained with the show until ill health forced her departure in November 1970.

Glenda Farrell has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her contribution to Motion Pictures, at 6524 Hollywood Boulevard.

Personal life

Farrell was born to Charles and Wilhelmina "Minnie" Farrell of Irish and German descent in Enid, Oklahoma, and she had two brothers named Richard and Gene. Her son with her first husband Thomas Richards was B-Western "sidekick" actor Tommy Farrell. She dated Hollywood film writer Robert Riskin in the early 1930s and married Jack Durant of the Mitchell and Durant vaudeville team in June 1931. In 1941 Farrell became the wife of Dr. Henry Ross, a West Point graduate and Army physician who served on General Eisenhower's staff.[1] She died from lung cancer, aged 66, at her home in New York City and was interred by in the West Point Cemetery, West Point, New York. When Dr. Ross died in 1991, he was buried with her.[1]

Filmography

Year Film Role Notes
1928 Lucky Boy Bit Part uncredited
1931 Little Caesar Olga Stassoff
1932 Scandal for Sale Stella
Life Begins Florette Darien
Three on a Match Mrs. Black, Prisoner at Checkers Table uncredited
I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang Marie
The Match King Babe
1933 Mystery of the Wax Museum Florence Dempsey
Grand Slam Blondie
Girl Missing Kay Curtis
The Keyhole Dot
How to Break 90 #2: Position and Back Swing Golfer's Wife uncredited
Gambling Ship Jeanne Sands
Mary Stevens, M.D. Glenda Carroll
Lady for a Day Missouri Martin
Bureau of Missing Persons Belle Howard Saunders
Man's Castle Fay La Rue
Havana Widows Sadie Appleby
1934 The Big Shakedown Lily 'Lil' Duran
Hi, Nellie! Gerry Krale
I've Got Your Number Bonnie, aka Madame Francis
Dark Hazard Valerie 'Val' Wilson
Heat Lightning Mrs. 'Feathers' Tifton
Merry Wives of Reno Bunny Fitch
The Personality Kid Joan McCarty
Kansas City Princess Marie Callahan
The Secret Bride Hazel Normandie
1935 Gold Diggers of 1935 Betty Hawes
Traveling Saleslady Claudette Ruggles
Go Into Your Dance Molly Howard, aka Lucille Thompson
In Caliente Mis Clara Thorne
We're in the Money Dixie Tilton
Little Big Shot Jean
Miss Pacific Fleet Mae O'Brien
1936 Snowed Under Daisy Lowell, Wife #2
The Law in Her Hands Dorothy 'Dot' Davis
Nobody's Fool Ruby Miller
High Tension Edith McNeil
Here Comes Carter Verna Kennedy
Gold Diggers of 1937 Genevieve 'Gen' Larkin
1937 Smart Blonde Torchy Blane
Fly Away Baby Torchy Blane
Dance Charlie Dance Fanny Morgan
You Live and Learn Mamie Wallis
Breakfast for Two Carol Wallace
The Adventurous Blonde Torchy Blane
Hollywood Hotel Jonesie
1938 Blondes at Work Torchy Blane
Stolen Heaven Rita
Prison Break Jean Fenderson
The Road to Reno Sylvia Shane
Exposed 'Click' Stewart
Torchy Gets Her Man Torchy Blane
1939 Torchy Blane in Chinatown Torchy Blane
Torchy Runs for Mayor Torchy Blane
1942 Johnny Eager Mae Blythe Agridowski
Twin Beds Sonya Cherupin
The Talk of the Town Regina Bush
1943 City Without Men Billy LaRue
A Night for Crime Susan
Klondike Kate Molly
1944 Ever Since Venus Babs Cartwright
1947 Heading for Heaven Nora Elkins
1948 I Love Trouble Hazel Bixby
Mary Lou Winnie Winford
Lulu Belle Molly Benson
1952 Apache War Smoke Fanny Webson
1953 Girls in the Night Alice Haynes
1954 Secret of the Incas Mrs. Winston
Susan Slept Here Maude Snodgrass
1955 The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing Mrs. Nesbit
1959 Middle of the Night Mrs. Mueller
1964 Kissin' Cousins Ma Tatum
The Disorderly Orderly Dr. Jean Howard
1968 Tiger by the Tail Sarah Harvey

References

  • Burlington, North Carolina Daily Times-News, Hollywood Gossip, March 29, 1934, Page 8.
  • European Stars and Stripes, Actress Glenda Farrell Dies in N.Y. at Age 67, May 3, 1971, Page 6.
  • Long Beach, California Press-Telegram, Film and Drama, June 22, 1952, Page 31.
  • Los Angeles Times, Studio and Stage, May 29, 1925, Page A7.
  • Los Angeles Times, Glenda Farrell Praised for Art in Best People, October 4, 1925, Page 23.
  • Los Angeles Times, Stage Star To Play In Films, July 9, 1930, Page A12.
  • Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Actress To Wed In June, March 11, 1931, Page 11.
  • Valparaiso, Indiana Vidette-Messenger, Glenda To Wed, February 6, 1941, Page 5.
  • Van Neste, Dan. Glenda Farrell, Diamond in the Rough Classic Images May, 1998. [1].
  • 1930 United States Federal Census, April 15, 1930, Enumeration District 19-30, Sheet 15-A.

External links


 
 
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