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Suzanne Kaaren

 
Actor: Suzanne Kaaren
  • Born: Mar 21, 1912 in Brooklyn, New York
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '30s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Comedy
  • Career Highlights: The Devil Bat, Roar of the Press, Phantom Ranger
  • First Major Screen Credit: Women Must Dress (1935)

Biography

Comely Suzanne Kaaren was attracting offers from producers and impressarios interested in featuring her in their work from her early teens. Born in New York and trained as a dancer, when she was 15 she came to the attention of Florenz Ziegfeld, who offered to put her into his Follies, and would have but for her parents' refusal to allow it. She entered films in 1934 at the age of 18, usually playing dancers or small speaking roles, and even managed to get a part in M-G-M's The Great Ziegfeld, although most of her work took place in less important films. One of Kaaren's most prominent appearances took place in the Three Stooges vehicle Disorder in the Court, in which she acted and had a superb dance number. She later recalled working with the Three Stooges very fondly, remembering that they were always trying out new gags and bits of physical comedy in front of her on and off the set, to see if they were funny or not. Kaaren did two more movies with the comic trio, Yes, We Have No Bonanza and What's the Matador, sandwiched in between appearances in small (often uncredited) roles in major films such as Idiot's Delight, in which she played one of the nurses that Clark Gable kisses in the hospital sequence. Her biggest role (and best-known movie) was as the heroine in the Bela Lugosi chiller The Devil Bat, a low-budget horror film which, thanks to its public domain status (in which it is often distributed under the name Killer Bats), is still widely shown more than six decade later. Kaaren later married actor Sidney Blackmer and retired from acting. In the 1980s, she made headlines again in New York when she was one of the successful plaintiffs in a lawsuit against real estate mogul Donald Trump, and she returned to acting briefly, in a small uncredited role in the movie The Cotton Club, playing the Duchess of Park Avenue. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
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Suzanne Kaaren


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Born March 12, 1912(1912-03-12)
Brooklyn, New York U.S.
Died August 27, 2004 (aged 92)
Englewood, New Jersey, U.S.
Occupation Stage, film actress

Suzanne Kaaren (March 12, 1912 – August 27, 2004) was an American B-movie actress who starred in stock film genres of the 1930s and 1940s: horror, western and romances. She was born in Brooklyn, New York.

Contents

Education and athletics

Kaaren attended Erasmus Hall High School and Hunter College before being signed by 20th Century Fox in September 1933. In 1931 she won a high-jumping contest in a New York City school contest. Her parents refused to let her compete in the Olympic Games. She collected butterflies as a hobby and had several books filled with the insects.

Early career

She acted with stock companies and posed as a model for commercial painters and cigarette advertising. Kaaren appeared in dramatic parts in New York theaters and trained at the Hedgerow Theatre in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. This was the same venue that produced actress Ann Harding.

She was one of the original Rockettes. Kaaren performed on stage on December 27, 1932, the night Radio City Music Hall opened.

Movie actress

Kaaren left for Hollywood in October 1933. Her starting salary was $150 per week, and was eventually cast opposite Tim McCoy in Ridin' Gents, a Monogram Pictures production. She was then signed by Republic Pictures to play a character in From Rags To Riches. Ridin' Gents was filmed without either McCoy or Kaaren.

She joined a troupe assembled by producer Walter Wanger, which also included Gloria Youngblood. The theatrical company was known as Trade Winds. The episodic comedy When's Your Birthday? showcased the zany Joe E. Brown. Kaaren was among the supporting players in an RKO Radio Pictures movie about an astrologer.

Kaaren (seated with hat) watches as Bud Jamison (right) endures The Three Stooges' unorthodox courtroom behavior in Disorder in the Court.

In October 1941, Kaaren was added to the cast of I Married an Angel. She portrayed a maid named Simone, and was uncredited. In October 1943, Pete Smith assigned Kaaren and Harry Barris the leading roles in an MGM motion picture which was to be called Practical Joker. The film was never made.

Kaaren figured prominently in several Three Stooges comedy short films. They are Disorder in the Court, Yes, We Have No Bonanza, and What's the Matador?. In the latter, she depicts Dolores Sanchez, and has the fourth lead after Curly Howard, Larry Fine, and Moe Howard.

I Married an Angel was based on the novel Death From A Tophat by Clayton Rawson. Kaaren plays a woman who is separated into halves and then joined together again suspensefully. The murder mystery has Robert Young and Florence Rice in prominent roles.

She starred opposite Bela Lugosi in The Devil Bat. The cult film of the horror film genre is a Poverty Row production released by Producers Releasing Corporation. In the movie Lugosi breeds giant bats to attack people.

Her final appearance on film is uncredited role as the Duchess of Park Avenue (Manhattan) in 1984's The Cotton Club.

Marriage

She married stage and screen actor, Sidney Blackmer, on June 13, 1943, in a civil ceremony in Santa Ana, California. Raquel Torres was a witness at the wedding. Blackmer was married previously to Lenore Ulric.

By this time, Kaaren was under contract to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The marriage was a turbulent one from the outset. The couple separated in September 1943 and Blackmer instructed his attorney to file for divorce in October, but they couple would remain together until Blackmer's death in 1973. The marriage produced two sons, Brewster and Jonathen.

Theater

Kaaren stepped into the character usually played by Ann Thomas in a Broadway presentation of Chicken Every Sunday. Staged in September 1944, Thomas left the production to go to Hollywood. In July 1946, Kaaren's elder son, Brewster, was in the play with her as an eight-month-old. She was also joined by her husband on stage at the Bucks County Playhouse in New Hope, Pennsylvania. In addition to Brewster, the Blackmers had another son, Jonathen. In April 1953 the Blackmers starred in Glad Tidings in Atlantic City, New Jersey. A month later the show moved to the Quarterback Theatre, also in Atlantic City.

In 1959, Kaaren appeared in The Royal Family at the Hinsdale Summer Theater in Chicago, Illinois. Linda Darnell starred; Karyn Kupcinet and Stuart Brent were also in the cast. The theme was a famous family of the American stage.

Sidney Blackmer died in October 1973. The Blackmers had lived in his family home in Salisbury, North Carolina until it was destroyed by fire in 1984. Afterward, she resided in a rent-controlled Manhattan apartment at 100 Central Park South. According to her obituary, real estate developer Donald Trump bought the building and threatened to tear it down to build something more lucrative. Blackmer refused to budge, and, in 1998, a court ruled that Trump had to allow the rent-controlled tenants to remain.[1]

Death

Suzanne Kaaren died from pneumonia in Englewood, New Jersey in 2004, aged 92.

References

  • Bismarck Tribune, New Browning Mystery Stars Suzanne Kaaren, September 9, 1939, Page 8.
  • Fitchburg Sentinel, News and Comment Of Stage and Screen, October 2, 1937, Page 5.
  • Long Beach Independent, Sidney Blackmer To Sue For Divorce, October 26, 1943, Page 2.
  • New York Times, Screen Notes, September 27, 1933, Page 24.
  • New York Times, Girl Athlete Gets Movie Job, November 11, 1933, Page 11.
  • New York Times, News Of The Screen, March 22, 1938, Page 18.
  • New York Times, Screen News Here And In Hollywood, August 29, 1938, Page 10.
  • New York Times, Screen News Here And In Hollywood, June 26, 1941, Page 27.
  • New York Times, Screen News Here And In Hollywood, October 24, 1941, Page 27.
  • New York Times, Sidney Blackmer Marries, August 9, 1943, Page 10.
  • New York Times, Three Plays Delay Broadway Debuts, September 15, 1944, Page 17.
  • New York Times, Vera Allen Named By Theatre Wing, July 4, 1946, Page 23.
  • New York Times, Atlantic City Bills Listed, April 17, 1953, Page 30.
  • New York Times, Early-Season Attractions In Jersey, May 3, 1953, Page X17.
  • Ogden Standard-Examiner, Photo Collector, February 4, 1934, Page 11.
  • Olean Times-Evening Herald, All Ready? Then Get Your Eyes Ready For A New Screen Beauty!, November 11, 1933, Page 3.
  • Suburbanite Economist, Linda Darnell Plays Hinsdale, August 5, 1959, Page 16.
  • Syracuse Herald Journal. In Step With:The Rockettes, December 27, 1992, Page 182.
  • Washington Post, Astrology, Boxing Bouts Mix In Latest Joe E. Brown Picture, March 4, 1937, Page 12.
  • Washington Post, Sidney Blackmer, Noted Actor, Dies, October 7, 1973, Page B6.

References

  1. ^ Obit in re Donald Trump

External links


 
 
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