Joan Crawford

Joan Crawford Headshot

Actress

Birth Date: March 23, 1905

Death Date: May 10, 1977

Birth Place: San Antonio, Texas

Spouses: Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Franchot Tone

A major Hollywood star of the 1930s and '40s, Joan Crawford essayed physically strong and emotionally pliable women in such films as "Mildred Pierce" (1945) and "Possessed" (1947) before devolving into a sort of camp self-parody in such potboilers as "What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?" (1962) Born Lucille Fay LeSeuer in San Antonio, Texas on March 23, 1904, Crawford endured an emotionally turbulent childhood: her father, Thomas LaSuer, left the family shortly after her birth, and she believed that her stepfather, theater owner Henry J. Cassin, was her biological father until her brother, Hal, told her the truth. She received little primary education - an accident involving a broken milk bottle required multiple surgeries, which kept her out of elementary school. Cassin was later accused of embezzlement, which required the family to relocate to Kansas City; there, she attended St. Agnes Academy and later, Rockingham Academy, for which she paid through menial labor jobs at the schools. After leaving both schools, she began working as a dancer after winning a Charleston contest, and performed in revues across the country under the stage name Billie Cassin. While appearing in Detroit, Michigan producer Jacob J. Shubert hired her to perform in the chorus line for his 1924 Broadway show "Innocent Eyes." Flush with ambition, she pressed publicist Nils Granlund to arrange a screen test for her with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer; the gambit paid off, and by 1925, Crawford - now billed as Lucille LeSeur - made her screen debut as Norma Shearer's body double in "Lady of the Night." Minor, often unbilled roles soon followed, but Crawford remained determined to achieve stardom, and after rechristening herself Joan Crawford - a name taken from a national magazine campaign organized by MGM publicity chief Pete Smith - began her ascent to screen fame. Her first significant movie role in "Sally, Irene and Mary" (1925) led to turns opposite the likes of John Gilbert ("Twelve Miles Out" 1927), Lon Chaney ("The Unknown," 1927) and Ramon Navarro"("Across to Singapore," 1928). Her star status was confirmed with a pair of pictures - the Oscar-nominated "Our Dancing Daughters" (1928), which cemented her in the minds of viewers as a free-spirited icon of the Jazz Age, and "The Hollywood Revue of 1929," where her performance of the song "Got a Feeling For You" assured that she would make a smooth transition to talking pictures. Crawford soon transitioned from ingénue to more sophisticated roles - she appeared opposite MGM's biggest male star, Clark Gable, in five films, beginning with 1930's "Dance, Fools, Dance" - and held her own opposite a cast that included Greta Garbo and Lionel Barrymore in the Oscar-winning "Grand Hotel" (1932). After leaving a tumultuous marriage to Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. in 1933, Crawford became one of MGM's most bankable players on the strength of such hits as "Dancing Lady" (1933) with Gable, Fred Astaire and Franchot Tone, to whom she would be married between 1935 and 1939. It, along with many of her output during the 1930, was lightweight fare, and Crawford pushed MGM chief Louis B. Mayer to place her in more dramatic projects; she made a successful transition to such films with 1936's "The Gorgeous Hussy" and "The Last of Mrs. Chaney" (1937), but subsequent efforts were met with audience indifference, and a string of expensive failures like "The Bride Wore Red" (1937) and "The Shining Hour" (1938), helped to earn her a spot in a notorious letter penned by Harry Brandt head of the Independent Theatre Owners Association of America, who compiled a list of "box office poison" - stars whose high salaries and appearances in films with limited appeal had a detrimental effect on movie exhibitors. Crawford continued to act for MGM, earning solid reviews for "A Woman's Face," while cultivating her personal life with the adoption of a daughter, Christina, in 1940 and another brief marriage to actor Philip Terry. In 1943, she signed with Warner Bros. for a three-picture deal; by most accounts, her tenure there was marked by open hostility from studio chief Jack L. Warner and director Michael Curtiz, who forced her to test for the title role in "Mildred Pierce." The film - an emotionally potent blend of melodrama and film noir - was a huge success for Warner Bros. and Crawford, who netted an Academy Award for Best Actress. She soon settled into a string of films that drew upon her "Pierce" screen persona - the long-suffering, lovelorn heroine - including "Humoresque" (1946), "Possessed," for which she earned another Oscar nomination, and "Daisy Kenyon" (1947). The tentative relationship between Warner and Crawford began to falter in the early 1950s, and she would cap her career with the studio with another hit, the tense thriller "Sudden Fear" (1952), for which she earned a third Oscar nomination. After marrying Pepsi executive Alfred Steele - who tapped Crawford to promote the beverage - in 1955, Crawford returned to MGM, where she continued to suffer -and inflict suffering - onscreen in such films as Nicholas Ray's "Johnny Guitar" (1954) and "Autumn Leaves" (1956). But the MGM output retained a patina of camp - fueled in part by Crawford's ripening screen image of the middle-aged but still lusty female - that would come to haunt her subsequent work. By the end of the decade, Crawford was investing a significant portion of her time to Pepsi - she assumed Steele's position on the company's board of directors following his death in 1959 - but wished to continue acting in an industry that was gradually turning her back on her. She was lured back to Warner Bros. with the offer of a lead in a psychological thriller, "What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?" Seeing that no other significant parts were coming her way, Crawford accepted the role of faded star Jane Hudson, even with the knowledge that Bette Davis - with whom she had been locked in a rivalry with since the 1940s - would play the showier role of Jane's psychotic sister, former child star "Baby" Jane. According to some accounts - including the 2018 TV miniseries "Feud: Bette and Joan" (FX, 2017) - the actresses waged open war on the set, but knew that the film's success might provide their careers with a second life. Their gambit proved correct: though Davis earned the lion's share of the critical praise, as well as an Oscar nomination, both actresses continued to work for the better part of the next decade. However, Crawford's roles largely echoed her "Baby Jane" work: emotionally damaged harridans in films like "Strait Jacket" (1964) for horror producer William Castle. She reunited with Aldrich and Davis for another horror title "Hush Hush, Sweet Charlotte" (1964), but fled the picture under allegations of abuse from Davis, and was eventually replaced by Olivia de Havilland. Her remaining years were marked by bouts of alcoholism and illness, as well as a slew of professional embarrassments, most notably the absurd horror film "Trog" (1970), in which she played a scientist trying to civilize a revived Neanderthal, though her turn in a Steven Spielberg-directed segment for the 1969 pilot for "Night Gallery" (1970-1973) as an avaricious blind woman received solid reviews. She spent her final years in isolation before succumbing to a myocardial infarction on May 13, 1977. She bequeathed $77,000 each to her two youngest children, a pair of adoptees named Cindy and Cathy, and money to numerous charities, but nothing to Christina and her adopted brother, Christopher. That animosity between mother and daughter appeared to be repaid with the publication of Christina's autobiography, "Mommie Dearest" (1978), which alleged that Crawford was physically and emotionally abusive to her and her brother. It would later be adapted into a feature film, with Faye Dunaway as Crawford; the book and film would soon become part and parcel of the pop culture/camp veil that enveloped the whole of Crawford's career.

Credits

Most Shocking Celebrity Fallouts

Self
Show
2020

The 50 Worst Movies Ever Made

Actor
Show
2015

That's Action!

Actor
Movie
1977

The Sixth Sense

Guest Star
Show
1972

Night Gallery

Guest Star
Series
1970

TrogStream

Actor
Dr. Brockton
Movie
1970
13%

L'envers du tableau

Actor
Movie
1969

Night Gallery

Actor
Miss Menlo
Movie
1969

Berserk

Actor
Monica Rivers
Movie
1967

I Saw What You Did

Actor
Amy Nelson
Movie
1965

Tuer n'est pas jouer

Actor
Movie
1965

Della

Actor
Della Chappell
Movie
1964

Strait-Jacket

Actor
Lucy Harbin
Movie
1964

Almas en Tinieblas

Actor
Movie
1963

The Caretakers

Actor
Lucretia Terry
Movie
1963

The Lucy ShowStream

Guest Star
Series
1962

What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?Stream

Actor
Miss Blanche Hudson
Movie
1962
92%

Talent Search

Guest
Show
1960

Ford Startime

Actor
Show
1959

The Best of EverythingStream

Actor
Amanda Farrow
Movie
1959
57%

The Story of Esther Costello

Actor
Margaret Landi
Movie
1957

Zane Grey TheaterStream

Actor
Series
1956

Autumn LeavesStream

Actor
Millicent Wetherby
Movie
1956
91%

Female on the Beach

Actor
Lynn Markham
Movie
1955

Queen Bee

Actor
Eva Phillips
Movie
1955

Johnny GuitarStream

Actor
Vienna
Movie
1954
94%

General Electric Theater

Actor
Mary Andrews
Show
1953

Cuerpo sin Alma

Actor
Movie
1953

Torch Song

Actor
Jenny Stewart
Movie
1953

I've Got a SecretStream

Guest
Game Show
1952

Sudden FearStream

Actor
Myra Hudson
Movie
1952
92%

This Woman Is DangerousStream

Actor
Elizabeth `'Beth'` Austin
Movie
1952

Goodbye, My Fancy

Actor
Agatha Reed
Movie
1951

What's My Line?Stream

Guest
Game Show
1950

The Damned Don't Cry

Actor
Ethel Whitehead/Loran Hansen Forbes
Movie
1950

Harriet Craig

Actor
Harriet Craig
Movie
1950

Calle Flamingo

Actor
Movie
1949

Flamingo RoadStream

Actor
Lane Bellamy
Movie
1949
83%

It's a Great Feeling

Self
Movie
1949

PossessedStream

Actor
Louise Howell Graham
Movie
1947
83%

Daisy KenyonStream

Actor
Daisy Kenyon
Movie
1947
86%

Humoresque

Actor
Helen Wright
Movie
1946

Mildred PierceStream

Actor
Mildred Pierce Beragon
Movie
1945

Almas en Suplicio

Actor
Movie
1945

Hollywood Canteen

Self
Movie
1944

Above Suspicion

Actor
Frances Myles
Movie
1943

They All Kissed the Bride

Actor
Margaret "M.J." Drew
Movie
1942

Reunion in France

Actor
Michele de la Becque
Movie
1942

When Ladies Meet

Actor
Mary Howard
Movie
1941

Strange Skirts

Actor
Mary "Minnie" Howard
Movie
1941

A Woman's Face

Actor
Anna Holm, aka Ingrid Paulson
Movie
1941

Strange Cargo

Actor
Julie
Movie
1940

Susan and God

Actor
Susan Trexel
Movie
1940

The WomenStream

Actor
Crystal Allen
Movie
1939
94%

Ice Follies of 1939

Actor
Mary McKay
Movie
1939

The Shining Hour

Actor
Olivia Riley
Movie
1938

The Last of Mrs. Cheyney

Actor
Mrs. Fay Cheyney
Movie
1937

The Bride Wore Red

Actor
Anni Pavlovitch
Movie
1937

Mannequin

Actor
Jessie Cassidy
Movie
1937

The Gorgeous Hussy

Actor
Peggy Eaton
Movie
1936

Love on the Run

Actor
Sally Parker
Movie
1936

I Live My Life

Actor
Kay Bentley
Movie
1935

No More Ladies

Actor
Marcia
Movie
1935

Sadie McKee

Actor
Sadie McKee
Movie
1934

Forsaking All Others

Actor
Mary Clay
Movie
1934

Chained

Actor
Diane Lovering
Movie
1934

Dancing Lady

Actor
Janie Barlow
Movie
1933

Today We Live

Actor
Diana
Movie
1933

Grand HotelStream

Actor
Flaemmchen
Movie
1932
87%

Rain

Actor
Sadie Thompson
Movie
1932

This Modern Age

Actor
Valentine `'Val'` Winters
Movie
1931

Paid

Actor
Mary Turner
Movie
1931

Dance, Fools, Dance

Actor
Bonnie
Movie
1931

Possessed

Actor
Marian
Movie
1931

Laughing Sinners

Actor
Ivy "Bunny" Stevens
Movie
1931

Montana Moon

Actor
Joan "Montana" Prescott
Movie
1930

Our Blushing Brides

Actor
Geraldine "Gerry" March
Movie
1930

The Duke Steps Out

Actor
Susie
Movie
1929

Our Modern Maidens

Actor
Billie Brown
Movie
1929

Untamed

Actor
Alice `'Bingo'` Dowling
Movie
1929

The Hollywood Revue

Self
Movie
1929

Four Walls

Actor
Frieda
Movie
1928

Rose-Marie

Actor
Rose-Marie
Movie
1928

The Law of the Range

Actor
Betty Dallas
Movie
1928

Our Dancing Daughters

Actor
Diana Medford
Movie
1928

Dream of Love

Actor
Adrienne Lecouvreur
Movie
1928

Across to Singapore

Actor
Priscilla Crowninshield
Movie
1928

West Point

Actor
Betty Channing
Movie
1928

Spring Fever

Actor
Allie Monte
Movie
1927

Twelve Miles Out

Actor
Jane
Movie
1927

The Unknown

Actor
Nanon
Movie
1927

Tramp, Tramp, Tramp

Actor
Betty Burton
Movie
1926

The Boob

Actor
Jane
Movie
1926

Pretty Ladies

Actor
Bobby - a Showgirl
Movie
1925

Sally, Irene and Mary

Actor
Irene
Movie
1925

News aboutJoan Crawford