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Gloria Swanson

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Gloria in one of her many movie roles.
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Gloria in one of her many movie roles.

Gloria Swanson (March 27, 1897 - April 4, 1983) was an American actress.

Early life

Born Gloria May Josephine Swanson (or Svensson) in a small house in Chicago, Illinois to a Swedish American father, who was a soldier, and a Polish American mother, but she grew up mainly in Puerto Rico, Chicago, and Key West, Florida. Gloria didn't intend on going into show business. After her formal education in the Chicago school system and elsewhere, she began work in a department store as a sales clerk.

Silent films

[Her film debut] was in 1914 as an extra in The Song of Soul for Uptown Chicago's Essanay Studios. While on a tour of the studio, a young Gloria asked to be in the movie just for fun. Seeing her star quality, Essanay Studios hired her to star in several movies, including "His New Job," which also starred Charlie Chaplin. By four years later she was a star in Teddy at the Throttle.

She played in many Mack Sennett slapstick comedies, and in 1919 she signed with Cecil B. DeMille, who turned her into a romantic lead in such films as Don't Change Your Husband, Male and Female, The Affairs of Anatol, and Why Change Your Wife?. Swanson later appeared in a series of films directed by Sam Wood. In 1922 she starred in the silent film Beyond the Rocks with Rudolph Valentino (this film had been believed lost but was rediscovered in 2004 in a private collection in The Netherlands.)

In her heyday, audiences flocked to her films not only for her emotional portrayals in lurid romances, but to see her wardrobe. Frequently decked out in beads, jewels, peacock and ostrich feathers, haute couture of the day or extravagant period pieces, one would hardly suspect that Gloria was barely five feet tall.

She was nominated for an Academy Awards for Best Actress for her performance as Sadie Thompson in the 1928 film, costarring and directed by Raoul Walsh, of the same title that was based on Somerset Maugham's novel, Rain. Her first independent production The Love of Sunya, in which she costarred with John Boles and Pauline Garon, opened the Roxy Theater in New York City on March 11, 1927. (Swanson was pictured in the ruins of the Roxy on October 14, 1960 in a famous photo taken by Time-Life photographer Eliot Elisofon.)

Swanson's unfinished 1928 film Queen Kelly was directed by Erich von Stroheim and produced by Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr., father of President John F. Kennedy. She was romantically linked to the elder Kennedy at the time.

Swanson ultimately made "talkies" even singing in The Trespasser (1929), Indiscreet (1931), and Music in the Air (1934). Even though she managed to make the transition into talkies, her career began to decline.

Comeback in Sunset Boulevard

Gloria Swanson in Sunset Boulevard.
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Gloria Swanson in Sunset Boulevard.

After several other former silent screen actresses (including Mary Pickford, Pola Negri and Mae West) were rejected or turned down the role, Swanson, gamely acknowledging reality, starred in 1950s Sunset Boulevard, and made celluloid history with her still remarkable, if short-lived, comeback.

It is scenes from Swanson's silent film Queen Kelly that her character Norma Desmond watches with her co-stars, William Holden and Erich von Stroheim.

Swanson was nominated for her 3rd Best Actress Oscar but lost to Judy Holliday (who was photographed sitting next to Swanson and Jose Ferrer in New York during the telecast), but Swanson was gracious in defeat.

She received several subsequent acting offers but turned most of them down, saying they tended to be pale imitations of Norma Desmond.

Gloria Swanson and James Warren in a scene from the 1952 Warner Bros. film Three for Bedroom C.
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Gloria Swanson and James Warren in a scene from the 1952 Warner Bros. film Three for Bedroom C.

Her last serious, respectable Hollywood motion picture was Three for Bedroom C (her first color film) in 1952. Swanson played an aging movie star who, along with her precocious daughter, hides out in the compartment of a scientist (Warren) during a cross-country rail journey from New York to Los Angeles. Shot exclusively aboard Super Chief passenger cars loaned to the production company by the Santa Fe Railway, the film met with lukewarm reviews and did not, as had been hoped, revitalize Swanson's career.

Television

Swanson hosted a television anthology series, Crown Theatre with Gloria Swanson, in which she occasionally acted. Her last acting role was in the television horror film Killer Bees in 1974, though she also appeared as herself in the movie Airport 1975, the same year. Through the 1970's and early 1980's, Swanson appeared on various talk and variety shows such as The Carol Burnett Show and The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson to recollect on her films and to lampoon them as well.

Marriages and Relationships

To understand the Swanson at the height of her fame and popularity, one only needs to read this oft-repeated telegram she sent to her studio from Paris: "Arrving in New York Tuesday. Arrange ovation."

Gloria Swanson died in New York City of a heart ailment (she was believed to be 84); she was cremated and her ashes were buried at the Episcopal Church of Heavenly Rest in New York City.

She has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, one for motion pictures at 6748 Hollywood Boulevard and another for television at 6301 Hollywood Boulevard.

Academy Award nominations

Trivia

Filmography

Further reading

Swanson on Swanson, 1980, autobiography

External links

 


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