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Joan Bennett

Joan Geraldine Bennett (February 27, 1910 – December 7, 1990) was an American stage, film, and television actress. She came from a show-business family, one of three acting sisters. Beginning her career on the stage, Bennett appeared in more than 70 films from the era of silent films, well into the sound era. She is best remembered for her film noir femme fatale roles in director Fritz Lang's films—including Man Hunt (1941), The Woman in the Window (1944) and Scarlet Street (1945)—and for her television role as matriarch Elizabeth Collins Stoddard (and ancestors Naomi Collins, Judith Collins, and Flora Collins PT) in the gothic 1960s soap opera Dark Shadows, for which she received an Emmy nomination in 1968.

Joan Bennett
Bennett in Photoplay, December 1932
Born
Joan Geraldine Bennett

(1910-02-27)February 27, 1910
DiedDecember 7, 1990(1990-12-07) (aged 80)
Resting placePleasant View Cemetery, Lyme, Connecticut, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
OccupationActress
Years active1916–1982
Spouse(s)
John Marion Fox
(m. 1926; div. 1928)

(m. 1932; div. 1937)

(m. 1940; div. 1965)

David Wilde
(m. 1978)
Children4[1]
Parent(s)Richard Bennett
Adrienne Morrison
RelativesLewis Morrison (grandfather)
Constance Bennett (sister)
Barbara Bennett (sister)
Morton Downey Jr. (nephew)
Websitejoanbennett.com

Bennett's career had three distinct phases: first as a winsome blonde ingenue, then as a sensuous brunette femme fatale (with looks that movie magazines often compared to those of Hedy Lamarr), and finally as a warmhearted wife-and-mother figure.

In 1951, Bennett's screen career was marred by scandal after her third husband, film producer Walter Wanger, shot and injured her agent Jennings Lang. Wanger suspected that Lang and she were having an affair,[2] a charge which Bennett adamantly denied.[3] She married four times.

For her final film role, as Madame Blanc in Dario Argento's cult horror film Suspiria (1977), she received a Saturn Award nomination.

Early life

 
Richard Bennett with his three daughters (from left), Constance, Joan, and Barbara (1918)

Joan Geraldine Bennett was born in the Palisade section of Fort Lee, New Jersey, on February 27, 1910, the youngest of three daughters of actor Richard Bennett and actress/literary agent Adrienne Morrison.[4] Her elder sisters were actress Constance Bennett and actress/dancer Barbara Bennett, who was the first wife of singer Morton Downey and the mother of Morton Downey Jr. Part of a famous theatrical family, Bennett's maternal grandfather was Jamaica-born Shakespearean actor Lewis Morrison, who embarked on a stage career in the late 1860s. He was of English, Spanish, Jewish, and African ancestry.[5][6] On the side of her maternal grandmother, actress Rose Wood, the profession dated back to traveling minstrels in 18th-century England.

Bennett first appeared in a silent movie as a child with her parents and sisters in her father's drama The Valley of Decision (1916), which he adapted for the screen. She attended Miss Hopkins School for Girls in Manhattan, then St. Margaret's, a boarding school in Waterbury, Connecticut, and L'Hermitage, a finishing school in Versailles, France.

On September 15, 1926, 16-year-old Bennett married John M. Fox in London. They divorced in Los Angeles on July 30, 1928, based on charges of his alcoholism.[7] They had one child, Adrienne Ralston Fox (born February 20, 1928), for whom Bennett fought successfully in court to rename Diana Bennett Markey, when the child was eight years old.[8] Her name changed to Diana Bennett Wanger in 1944.[9]

Career

 
Bennett in the trailer for Disraeli (1929)

Bennett's stage debut was at the age of 18, acting with her father in Jarnegan (1928), which ran on Broadway for 136 performances and for which she received good reviews. By the time she turned 20 she had become a movie star through such roles as Phyllis Benton in Bulldog Drummond starring Ronald Colman, which was her first important role, and Lady Clarissa Pevensey opposite George Arliss in Disraeli (both 1929).

She moved quickly from movie to movie throughout the 1930s. Bennett appeared as a blonde (her natural hair color) for several years. She starred in the role of Dolores Fenton in the United Artists musical Puttin' On The Ritz (1930) opposite Harry Richman and as Faith Mapple, his beloved, opposite John Barrymore in an early sound version of Moby Dick (1930) at Warner Brothers.

Under contract to Fox Film Corporation, she appeared in several movies. Receiving top billing, she played the role of Jane Miller opposite Spencer Tracy in She Wanted a Millionaire (1932). She was billed second, after Tracy, for her role as Helen Riley, a personable waitress who trades wisecracks, in Me and My Gal (1932).

On March 16, 1932, she married screenwriter/film producer Gene Markey in Los Angeles,[10] but the couple divorced in Los Angeles on June 3, 1937.[11] They had one child, Melinda Markey (born February 27, 1934, on Bennett's 24th birthday).

 
Bennett in the trailer for Little Women (1933)

Bennett left Fox to play Amy, a pert sister competing with Katharine Hepburn's Jo in Little Women (1933), which was directed by George Cukor for RKO. This movie brought Bennett to the attention of independent film producer Walter Wanger, who signed her to a contract and began managing her career. She played the role of Sally MacGregor, a psychiatrist's young wife slipping into insanity, in Private Worlds (1935) with Joel McCrea. Bennett starred in the film Vogues of 1938 (1937), including the title sequence, in which she donned a diamond-and-platinum bracelet set with the Star of Burma ruby.[12]: 15  Wanger and director Tay Garnett persuaded her to change her hair from blonde to brunette as part of the plot for her role as Kay Kerrigan in the scenic Trade Winds (1938) opposite Fredric March.

With her change in appearance, Bennett began an entirely new screen career as her persona evolved into that of a glamorous, seductive femme fatale. She played the role of Princess Maria Theresa in The Man in the Iron Mask (1939) opposite Louis Hayward, and the role of the Grand Duchess Zona of Lichtenburg in The Son of Monte Cristo (1940) opposite Hayward.

During the search for an actress to play Scarlett O'Hara in Gone with the Wind, Bennett was given a screen test and impressed producer David O. Selznick to such an extent that she was one of the final four actresses, along with Jean Arthur, Vivien Leigh and Paulette Goddard.

 
Bennett in the trailer for The Woman in the Window (1944)

On January 12, 1940, Bennett and producer Walter Wanger were married in Phoenix, Arizona.[13] They were divorced in September 1965 in Mexico.[14] The couple had two children together, Stephanie Wanger (born June 26, 1943) and Shelley Wanger (born July 4, 1948). The following year, on March 13, 1949, Bennett became a grandmother at the age of 39.

Combined with her sultry eyes and husky voice, Bennett's new brunette look gave her an earthier, more arresting persona. She won praise for her performances as Brenda Bentley in The House Across the Bay (1940), also featuring George Raft, and as Carol Hoffman in the anti-Nazi drama The Man I Married, a film in which Francis Lederer also starred.

She then appeared in a sequence of highly regarded film noir thrillers directed by Fritz Lang, with whom she and Wanger formed their own production company. Bennett appeared in four movies under Lang's direction, including as Cockney Jerry Stokes in Man Hunt (1941) opposite Walter Pidgeon, as mysterious model Alice Reed in The Woman in the Window (1944) with Edward G. Robinson, and as vulgar blackmailer Katharine "Kitty" March in Scarlet Street (1945), another film with Robinson.

 
Bennett in Scarlet Street (1945)

Bennett was the shrewish, cuckolding wife, Margaret Macomber, in Zoltan Korda's The Macomber Affair (1947) opposite Gregory Peck, as the deceitful wife, Peggy, in Jean Renoir's The Woman on the Beach (also 1947) opposite Robert Ryan and Charles Bickford, and as tormented Lucia Harper in Max Ophüls' The Reckless Moment (1949) as the victim of a blackmailer played by James Mason. Then, easily shifting images again, she changed her screen persona to that of an elegant, witty and nurturing wife and mother in two comedies directed by Vincente Minnelli.

Playing the role of Ellie Banks, the wife of Spencer Tracy and mother of Elizabeth Taylor, Bennett appeared in both Father of the Bride (1950) and Father's Little Dividend (1951).

She made a number of radio appearances from the 1930s to the 1950s, performing on such programs as The Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy Show, Duffy's Tavern, The Jack Benny Program, Ford Theater, Suspense and the anthology series Lux Radio Theater and Screen Guild Theater.

With the increasing popularity of television, Bennett made five guest appearances in 1951, including an episode of Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca's Your Show of Shows.

Political views

She was a very active member of both the Hollywood Democratic Committee and The Hollywood Anti-Nazi League and donated her time and money to many liberal causes (such as the Civil Rights Movement) and political candidates (including Franklin D. Roosevelt, Henry A. Wallace, Adlai Stevenson II, John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, and Jimmy Carter) during her lifetime.[citation needed]

Scandal

For 12 years Bennett was represented by agent Jennings Lang, the onetime vice-president of the Sam Jaffe Agency, who then headed MCA's West Coast television operations. She and Lang met on the afternoon of December 13, 1951, to talk over an upcoming TV show.[3]

Bennett parked her Cadillac convertible in the lot at the back of the MCA offices, at Santa Monica Boulevard and Rexford Drive, across the street from the Beverly Hills Police Department, and she and Lang drove off in his car. Meanwhile, her husband Walter Wanger drove past about 2:30 p.m. and noticed his wife's car parked there. Half-an-hour later, he again saw her car there and stopped to wait. Bennett and Lang drove into the parking lot a few hours later and he walked her to her convertible. As she started the engine, turned on the headlights, and prepared to drive away, Lang leaned on the car, with both hands raised to his shoulders, and talked to her.

In a fit of jealousy, Wanger walked up and twice shot and wounded the unsuspecting agent. One bullet hit Jennings in the right thigh, near the hip, and the other penetrated his groin.[15] Bennett said she did not see Wanger at first. She said she suddenly saw two vivid flashes, then Lang slumped to the ground. As soon as she recognized who had fired the shots, she told Wanger, "Get away and leave us alone."[16] He tossed the pistol into his wife's car.

She and the parking lot's service station manager took Lang to the agent's doctor. He was then taken to a hospital, where he recovered. The police station was located across the lot, officers had heard the shots, and came to the scene and found the gun in Bennett's car when they took Wanger into custody. Wanger was booked and fingerprinted, and underwent lengthy questioning.[16]

"I shot him because I thought he was breaking up my home," Wanger told the chief of police of Beverly Hills. He was booked on suspicion of assault with intent to commit murder. Bennett denied a romance. "But if Walter thinks the relationships between Mr. Lang and myself are romantic or anything but strictly business, he is wrong," she declared. She blamed the trouble on financial setbacks involving film productions Wanger was involved with, and said he was on the verge of a nervous breakdown.[3] The following day Wanger, out on bond, returned to their Holmby Hills home, collected his belongings and moved out. Bennett, however, said there would not be a divorce.[17]

On December 14, Bennett issued a statement in which she said she hoped her husband "will not be blamed too much" for wounding her agent. She read the prepared statement in the bedroom of her home to a group of newspapermen while TV cameras recorded the scene.[18]

Wanger's attorney Jerry Giesler mounted a "temporary insanity" defense. He then decided to waive his right to a jury, and threw himself on the mercy of the court.[19] Wanger served a four-month sentence in the County Honor Farm at Castaic, California, 39 miles north of Downtown Los Angeles, quickly returning to his career to make a series of successful films.[20]

Meanwhile, Bennett went to Chicago to appear on the stage in the role as the young witch Gillian Holroyd in Bell, Book, and Candle, then went on national tour with the production.[21]

She made only five movies in the decade that followed the 1951 shooting incident, and only two films in the 1970s, for the incident was a stain on her career and she became virtually blacklisted. Blaming the scandal that occurred for destroying her career in the motion picture industry, Bennett once said, "I might as well have pulled the trigger myself." Although Humphrey Bogart, a longtime friend, pleaded with Paramount Pictures on her behalf to keep her after her role as Amelie Ducotel in We're No Angels (1955), the studio refused.

As the movie offers dwindled after the scandal, Bennett continued touring in stage successes, such as Susan and God, Once More, with Feeling, The Pleasure of His Company and Never Too Late. Her next TV appearance was in the role of Bettina Blane in an episode of General Electric Theater in 1954. Other roles included Honora in Climax! (1955) and Vickie Maxwell in Playhouse 90 (1957). In 1958, she appeared as the mother in the short-lived television comedy/drama Too Young to Go Steady to teenagers played by Brigid Bazlen and Martin Huston.

She starred on Broadway in the comedy Love Me Little (1958), which ran for only eight performances.

Of the scandal, in a 1981 interview, Bennett contrasted the judgmental 1950s with the sensation-crazed 1970s and 1980s. "It would never happen that way today," she said, laughing. "If it happened today, I'd be a sensation. I'd be wanted by all studios for all pictures."[22]

Later years

Despite the shooting scandal and the damage it caused Bennett's film career, she and Wanger remained married until 1965. She continued to work steadily on the stage and in television, including a guest role as Denise Mitchell in an episode of TV's Burke's Law (1965).

 
Bennett in the TV series Dark Shadows

Bennett received star billing in the gothic soap opera Dark Shadows for its entire five-year run, 1966 to 1971, receiving an Emmy Award nomination in 1968 for her performance as Elizabeth Collins Stoddard, mistress of the haunted Collinwood Mansion. Her other roles in Dark Shadows were Naomi Collins, Judith Collins Trask, Elizabeth Collins Stoddard PT (parallel time, as the show described its alternate reality), Flora Collins, and Flora Collins PT. In 1970, she appeared as Elizabeth in House of Dark Shadows, the feature film adaptation of the series. However, she declined to appear in the sequel Night of Dark Shadows, and her character Elizabeth was mentioned therein as being recently deceased.

Her autobiography The Bennett Playbill, written with Lois Kibbee, was published in 1970.[23]

Her other TV guest appearances include Bennett's roles as Joan Darlene Delaney in an episode of The Governor & J.J. (1970) and as Edith in an episode of Love, American Style (1971). She starred in five made-for-TV movies between 1972 and 1982.

Bennett also appeared in one more feature film, as Madame Blanc in director Dario Argento's horror film Suspiria (1977), for which she received a 1978 Saturn Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress.

Bennett and retired publisher/movie critic David Wilde were married on February 14, 1978, 13 days before her 68th birthday, in White Plains, New York.[24] Their marriage lasted until her death in 1990.

 
Bennett's star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6300 Hollywood Blvd

Celebrated for not taking herself too seriously, Bennett said in a 1986 interview, "I don't think much of most of the films I made, but being a movie star was something I liked very much."[22]

Bennett has a motion pictures star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her contributions to the film industry. Her star is located at 6300 Hollywood Boulevard,[25] a short distance from the star of her sister Constance.

Death

Bennett died of heart failure on Friday evening, December 7, 1990, aged 80, at her home in Scarsdale, New York. She is interred in Pleasant View Cemetery, Lyme, Connecticut, with her parents.[22]

Filmography

Bennett appeared in many movies and television productions, listed below in their entirety.

Film

 
Bennett in the trailer for Father's Little Dividend (1951)
Year Title Role Notes
1916 The Valley of Decision unborn soul
1923 The Eternal City Page uncredited
1928 Power a dame
1929 The Divine Lady extra uncredited
1929 Bulldog Drummond Phyllis Benton
1929 Three Live Ghosts Rose Gordon
1929 Disraeli Lady Clarissa Pevensey
1929 The Mississippi Gambler Lucy Blackburn
1930 Puttin' On the Ritz Delores Fenton
1930 Crazy That Way Ann Jordan
1930 Moby Dick Faith Mapple, his beloved
1930 Maybe It's Love (a.k.a. Eleven Men and a Girl) Nan Sheffield
1930 Scotland Yard Xandra, Lady Lasher
1931 Many a Slip Pat Coster
1931 Doctors' Wives Nina Wyndram
1931 Hush Money Joan Gordon
1932 She Wanted a Millionaire Jane Miller
1932 Careless Lady Sally Brown
1932 The Trial of Vivienne Ware Vivienne Ware
1932 Week Ends Only Venetia Carr
1932 Wild Girl Salomy Jane
1932 Me and My Gal Helen Riley
1933 Arizona to Broadway Lynn Martin
1933 Little Women Amy March
1934 The Pursuit of Happiness Prudence Kirkland
1934 The Man Who Reclaimed His Head Adele Verin
1935 Private Worlds Sally MacGregor
1935 Mississippi Lucy Rumford
1935 Two for Tonight Bobbie Lockwood
1935 She Couldn't Take It Carol Van Dyke
1935 The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo Helen Berkeley
1936 Big Brown Eyes Eve Fallon
1936 Thirteen Hours by Air Felice Rollins
1936 Two in a Crowd Julia Wayne
1936 Wedding Present Monica "Rusty" Fleming
1937 Vogues of 1938 Wendy Van Klettering
1938 I Met My Love Again Julie Weir Shaw
1938 The Texans Ivy Preston
1938 Artists and Models Abroad Patricia Harper
1938 Trade Winds Kay Kerrigan
1939 The Man in the Iron Mask Princess Maria Theresa
1939 The Housekeeper's Daughter Hilda
1940 Green Hell Stephanie Richardson
1940 The House Across the Bay Brenda Bentley
1940 The Man I Married Carol Hoffman
1940 The Son of Monte Cristo Grand Duchess Zona of Lichtenburg
1941 She Knew All the Answers Gloria Winters
1941 Man Hunt Jerry Stokes
1941 Wild Geese Calling Sally Murdock
1941 Confirm or Deny Jennifer Carson
1942 The Wife Takes a Flyer Anita Woverman
1942 Twin Beds Julie Abbott
1942 Girl Trouble June Delaney
1943 Margin for Error Sophia Baumer
1944 The Woman in the Window Alice Reed
1945 Nob Hill Harriet Carruthers
1945 Scarlet Street Katharine "Kitty" March
1946 Colonel Effingham's Raid Ella Sue Dozier
1947 The Macomber Affair Margaret Macomber
1947 The Woman on the Beach Peggy Butler
1947 Secret Beyond the Door... Celia Lamphere
1948 Hollow Triumph (aka The Scar) Evelyn Hahn
1949 The Reckless Moment Lucia Harper
1950 Father of the Bride Ellie Banks
1950 For Heaven's Sake Lydia Bolton
1951 Father's Little Dividend Ellie Banks
1951 The Guy Who Came Back Kathy Joplin
1954 Highway Dragnet Mrs. Cummings
1955 We're No Angels Amelie Ducotel
1956 There's Always Tomorrow Marion Groves
1956 Navy Wife Peg Blain
1960 Desire in the Dust Mrs. Marquand
1970 House of Dark Shadows Elizabeth Collins Stoddard
1977 Suspiria Madame Blanc

Television

Made-for-TV movies

As herself

Short subject

  • Screen Snapshots (1932)
  • Hollywood on Parade No. A-12 (1933)
  • The Fashion Side of Hollywood (1935)
  • Hollywood Party (1937)
  • Screen Snapshots Series 19, No. 9: Sports in Hollywood (1940)
  • Hedda Hopper's Hollywood, No. 6 (1942)
  • Screen Actors (1950) (uncredited)

Radio appearances

Year Program Episode/source
1941 Philip Morris Playhouse Girl in the News[26]
1946 Screen Guild Players Experiment Perilous[27]
1947 Suspense "Overture in Two Keys"[28]

Further reading

  • Bennett, Joan (1943). How to Be Attractive. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
  • Bennett, Joan; Lois Kibbee (1970). The Bennett Playbill. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. ISBN 978-0030818400.
  • Hamrick, Craig; R. J. Jamison (2012). Barnabas & Company: The Cast of the TV Classic Dark Shadows (Revised ed.). pp. 41–53. ISBN 978-1-4759-1034-6.
  • Kellow, Brian (November 26, 2004). The Bennetts: An Acting Family. Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0813123295.
  • Karina Longworth; Vanessa Hope. "Love is a Crime". Vanity Fair (Podcast). Zooey Deschanel as Joan Bennett, Jon Hamm as Walter Wanger, and Griffin Dunne as Jennings Lang. Condé Nast and Cadence13. Retrieved 2 April 2022.

References

  1. ^ Lesher, David (9 December 1990). "Joan Bennett, Movie, Stage, TV Star, Dies". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2 April 2022.
  2. ^ Erickson, Hal. Joan Bennett: Biography AllMovie.
  3. ^ a b c
    • "Joan Bennett Sees Mate Shoot Agent: 'Thought He Was Breaking Up My Home,' Says Wanger". Los Angeles Times. December 14, 1951. p. 1. Retrieved July 22, 2020.
    • "Hollywood Actors' Agent Is Shot; Joan Bennett's Husband Questioned; Hollywood Actors' Agent Is Shot; Joan Bennett's Husband Questioned Producer in Financial Trouble". The New York Times. 14 December 1951. Retrieved 2 April 2022.
  4. ^ "Actress Joan Bennett Dead At 80", Associated Press, December 10, 1990. Accessed December 12, 2013. "The actress, born in Fort Lee, N.J., made her 1928 debut in the Broadway play Jarnegan."
  5. ^ Downey, Phil. A Black, Jewish Officer in the Civil War, Jewish-American History Documentation Foundation. Retrieved May 8, 2013.
  6. ^ Bennett, Joan; Kibbee, Lois (1970). The Bennett Playbill. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. ISBN 978-0030818400.
  7. ^ "Daughter Of Actor Divorced: Joan Bennett Fox Wins Decree on Charges of Mate's Intoxication". Los Angeles Times. July 31, 1928. p. A20.
  8. ^ "Wins Fight Over Daughter's Surname: Child Given New Name, Young Daughter Becomes Diana Markey Under Court Decision", Los Angeles Times, August 22, 1936, p. 3.
  9. ^ "Wanger Moves to Adopt Child of Joan Bennett", Los Angeles Times, April 18, 1944, p. 2.
  10. ^ "Bennett Sister Weds Here: Actress Becomes Scenarist's Bride", Los Angeles Times, March 17, 1932, p.A 2.
  11. ^ "Actress' Marital Tie Cut: Joan Bennett Granted Divorce From Gene Markey, Writer", Los Angeles Times, June 4, 1937, p.3.
  12. ^ Markowitz, Yvonne J. (2014). The Jewels of Trabert & Hoeffer-Mauboussin. Boston: MFA Publications. ISBN 978-0-87846-811-9. LCCN 2013957243. Retrieved October 9, 2016.
  13. ^ "Joan Bennett and Wanger Marry in Phoenix Elopement – Actress and Producer Make Trip by Auto; Announce They'll Return to Hollywood Today", Los Angeles Times, January 13, 1940, p.1.
  14. ^ "Joan Bennett Divorced". The New York Times, September 21, 1965, p. SU 3.
  15. ^ "Police Sgt. Erwin F. Uhde & Ray Pinker, director of the crime scientific laboratory, indicating .38 caliber bullet holes in Shetland grey suit worn by Agent Jennings when shot by Walter Wanger". calisphere. Los Angeles Public Library, Los Angeles Herald Examiner Collection. 1951. Retrieved 2 April 2022.
  16. ^ a b Vestuto, Kathleen (July 13, 2018). The Lives of Justine Johnstone: Follies Star, Research Scientist, Social Activist. McFarland. ISBN 978-1476672762.
  17. ^ "Detectives Shadowed Joan For Months, Says Wanger: Film Producer Tells Reasons for Jealousy; Divorce Discussed". Los Angeles Times, December 15, 1951, p. 1.
  18. ^ "Joan Bennett Hopes Wanger 'Won't Be Blamed Too Much'" Statement Cites Film Producer's Money Worries". Los Angeles Times, December 15, 1951, p. A
  19. ^ "Wanger Fate Will Rest On Transcript: Producer to Escape Open Trial by Letting Judge Decide Case on Grand Jury Evidence". Los Angeles Times, April 15, 1952, p. 1.
  20. ^ "Wanger to Be Released From County Jail Today". Los Angeles Times, September 13, 1952, p. A 1.
  21. ^ "Joan Bennett to Play Witch if Wanger Trial Is on Time". Los Angeles Times, April 3, 1952, p. 4.
  22. ^ a b c Flint, Peter B. (December 9, 1990). "Joan Bennett, Whose Roles Ripened From Sweet to Siren, Dies at 80". The New York Times. p. A52.
  23. ^ Higham, Charles (November 29, 1970). "Her Father's Daughter". The New York Times. p. 322.
  24. ^ "Notes on People". The New York Times. February 16, 1978. p. C2.
  25. ^ "Hollywood Walk of Fame - Joan Bennett". walkoffame.com. Hollywood Chamber of Commerce. Retrieved November 16, 2017.
  26. ^ "WHP Radio Programs for the Entire Week Starting November 16, 1941". Harrisburg Telegraph. November 15, 1941. p. 29. Retrieved July 26, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.  
  27. ^ "Bennett, Brent, Menjou Star on "Screen Guild"". Harrisburg Telegraph. October 12, 1946. p. 17. Retrieved October 1, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.  
  28. ^ "Suspense - Overture in Two Keys". Escape and Suspense!. Retrieved Aug 11, 2019.

External links

joan, bennett, other, people, named, disambiguation, joan, geraldine, bennett, february, 1910, december, 1990, american, stage, film, television, actress, came, from, show, business, family, three, acting, sisters, beginning, career, stage, bennett, appeared, . For other people named Joan Bennett see Joan Bennett disambiguation Joan Geraldine Bennett February 27 1910 December 7 1990 was an American stage film and television actress She came from a show business family one of three acting sisters Beginning her career on the stage Bennett appeared in more than 70 films from the era of silent films well into the sound era She is best remembered for her film noir femme fatale roles in director Fritz Lang s films including Man Hunt 1941 The Woman in the Window 1944 and Scarlet Street 1945 and for her television role as matriarch Elizabeth Collins Stoddard and ancestors Naomi Collins Judith Collins and Flora Collins PT in the gothic 1960s soap opera Dark Shadows for which she received an Emmy nomination in 1968 Joan BennettBennett in Photoplay December 1932BornJoan Geraldine Bennett 1910 02 27 February 27 1910Fort Lee New Jersey U S DiedDecember 7 1990 1990 12 07 aged 80 Scarsdale New York U S Resting placePleasant View Cemetery Lyme Connecticut U S NationalityAmericanOccupationActressYears active1916 1982Spouse s John Marion Fox m 1926 div 1928 wbr Gene Markey m 1932 div 1937 wbr Walter Wanger m 1940 div 1965 wbr David Wilde m 1978 wbr Children4 1 Parent s Richard BennettAdrienne MorrisonRelativesLewis Morrison grandfather Constance Bennett sister Barbara Bennett sister Morton Downey Jr nephew Websitejoanbennett wbr comBennett s career had three distinct phases first as a winsome blonde ingenue then as a sensuous brunette femme fatale with looks that movie magazines often compared to those of Hedy Lamarr and finally as a warmhearted wife and mother figure In 1951 Bennett s screen career was marred by scandal after her third husband film producer Walter Wanger shot and injured her agent Jennings Lang Wanger suspected that Lang and she were having an affair 2 a charge which Bennett adamantly denied 3 She married four times For her final film role as Madame Blanc in Dario Argento s cult horror film Suspiria 1977 she received a Saturn Award nomination Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Political views 4 Scandal 5 Later years 6 Death 7 Filmography 7 1 Film 7 2 Television 7 3 Made for TV movies 7 4 As herself 7 5 Short subject 7 6 Radio appearances 8 Further reading 9 References 10 External linksEarly life Edit Richard Bennett with his three daughters from left Constance Joan and Barbara 1918 Joan Geraldine Bennett was born in the Palisade section of Fort Lee New Jersey on February 27 1910 the youngest of three daughters of actor Richard Bennett and actress literary agent Adrienne Morrison 4 Her elder sisters were actress Constance Bennett and actress dancer Barbara Bennett who was the first wife of singer Morton Downey and the mother of Morton Downey Jr Part of a famous theatrical family Bennett s maternal grandfather was Jamaica born Shakespearean actor Lewis Morrison who embarked on a stage career in the late 1860s He was of English Spanish Jewish and African ancestry 5 6 On the side of her maternal grandmother actress Rose Wood the profession dated back to traveling minstrels in 18th century England Bennett first appeared in a silent movie as a child with her parents and sisters in her father s drama The Valley of Decision 1916 which he adapted for the screen She attended Miss Hopkins School for Girls in Manhattan then St Margaret s a boarding school in Waterbury Connecticut and L Hermitage a finishing school in Versailles France On September 15 1926 16 year old Bennett married John M Fox in London They divorced in Los Angeles on July 30 1928 based on charges of his alcoholism 7 They had one child Adrienne Ralston Fox born February 20 1928 for whom Bennett fought successfully in court to rename Diana Bennett Markey when the child was eight years old 8 Her name changed to Diana Bennett Wanger in 1944 9 Career Edit Bennett in the trailer for Disraeli 1929 Bennett s stage debut was at the age of 18 acting with her father in Jarnegan 1928 which ran on Broadway for 136 performances and for which she received good reviews By the time she turned 20 she had become a movie star through such roles as Phyllis Benton in Bulldog Drummond starring Ronald Colman which was her first important role and Lady Clarissa Pevensey opposite George Arliss in Disraeli both 1929 She moved quickly from movie to movie throughout the 1930s Bennett appeared as a blonde her natural hair color for several years She starred in the role of Dolores Fenton in the United Artists musical Puttin On The Ritz 1930 opposite Harry Richman and as Faith Mapple his beloved opposite John Barrymore in an early sound version of Moby Dick 1930 at Warner Brothers Under contract to Fox Film Corporation she appeared in several movies Receiving top billing she played the role of Jane Miller opposite Spencer Tracy in She Wanted a Millionaire 1932 She was billed second after Tracy for her role as Helen Riley a personable waitress who trades wisecracks in Me and My Gal 1932 On March 16 1932 she married screenwriter film producer Gene Markey in Los Angeles 10 but the couple divorced in Los Angeles on June 3 1937 11 They had one child Melinda Markey born February 27 1934 on Bennett s 24th birthday Bennett in the trailer for Little Women 1933 Bennett left Fox to play Amy a pert sister competing with Katharine Hepburn s Jo in Little Women 1933 which was directed by George Cukor for RKO This movie brought Bennett to the attention of independent film producer Walter Wanger who signed her to a contract and began managing her career She played the role of Sally MacGregor a psychiatrist s young wife slipping into insanity in Private Worlds 1935 with Joel McCrea Bennett starred in the film Vogues of 1938 1937 including the title sequence in which she donned a diamond and platinum bracelet set with the Star of Burma ruby 12 15 Wanger and director Tay Garnett persuaded her to change her hair from blonde to brunette as part of the plot for her role as Kay Kerrigan in the scenic Trade Winds 1938 opposite Fredric March With her change in appearance Bennett began an entirely new screen career as her persona evolved into that of a glamorous seductive femme fatale She played the role of Princess Maria Theresa in The Man in the Iron Mask 1939 opposite Louis Hayward and the role of the Grand Duchess Zona of Lichtenburg in The Son of Monte Cristo 1940 opposite Hayward During the search for an actress to play Scarlett O Hara in Gone with the Wind Bennett was given a screen test and impressed producer David O Selznick to such an extent that she was one of the final four actresses along with Jean Arthur Vivien Leigh and Paulette Goddard Bennett in the trailer for The Woman in the Window 1944 On January 12 1940 Bennett and producer Walter Wanger were married in Phoenix Arizona 13 They were divorced in September 1965 in Mexico 14 The couple had two children together Stephanie Wanger born June 26 1943 and Shelley Wanger born July 4 1948 The following year on March 13 1949 Bennett became a grandmother at the age of 39 Combined with her sultry eyes and husky voice Bennett s new brunette look gave her an earthier more arresting persona She won praise for her performances as Brenda Bentley in The House Across the Bay 1940 also featuring George Raft and as Carol Hoffman in the anti Nazi drama The Man I Married a film in which Francis Lederer also starred She then appeared in a sequence of highly regarded film noir thrillers directed by Fritz Lang with whom she and Wanger formed their own production company Bennett appeared in four movies under Lang s direction including as Cockney Jerry Stokes in Man Hunt 1941 opposite Walter Pidgeon as mysterious model Alice Reed in The Woman in the Window 1944 with Edward G Robinson and as vulgar blackmailer Katharine Kitty March in Scarlet Street 1945 another film with Robinson Bennett in Scarlet Street 1945 Bennett was the shrewish cuckolding wife Margaret Macomber in Zoltan Korda s The Macomber Affair 1947 opposite Gregory Peck as the deceitful wife Peggy in Jean Renoir s The Woman on the Beach also 1947 opposite Robert Ryan and Charles Bickford and as tormented Lucia Harper in Max Ophuls The Reckless Moment 1949 as the victim of a blackmailer played by James Mason Then easily shifting images again she changed her screen persona to that of an elegant witty and nurturing wife and mother in two comedies directed by Vincente Minnelli Playing the role of Ellie Banks the wife of Spencer Tracy and mother of Elizabeth Taylor Bennett appeared in both Father of the Bride 1950 and Father s Little Dividend 1951 She made a number of radio appearances from the 1930s to the 1950s performing on such programs as The Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy Show Duffy s Tavern The Jack Benny Program Ford Theater Suspense and the anthology series Lux Radio Theater and Screen Guild Theater With the increasing popularity of television Bennett made five guest appearances in 1951 including an episode of Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca s Your Show of Shows Political views EditShe was a very active member of both the Hollywood Democratic Committee and The Hollywood Anti Nazi League and donated her time and money to many liberal causes such as the Civil Rights Movement and political candidates including Franklin D Roosevelt Henry A Wallace Adlai Stevenson II John F Kennedy Robert F Kennedy and Jimmy Carter during her lifetime citation needed Scandal EditFor 12 years Bennett was represented by agent Jennings Lang the onetime vice president of the Sam Jaffe Agency who then headed MCA s West Coast television operations She and Lang met on the afternoon of December 13 1951 to talk over an upcoming TV show 3 Bennett parked her Cadillac convertible in the lot at the back of the MCA offices at Santa Monica Boulevard and Rexford Drive across the street from the Beverly Hills Police Department and she and Lang drove off in his car Meanwhile her husband Walter Wanger drove past about 2 30 p m and noticed his wife s car parked there Half an hour later he again saw her car there and stopped to wait Bennett and Lang drove into the parking lot a few hours later and he walked her to her convertible As she started the engine turned on the headlights and prepared to drive away Lang leaned on the car with both hands raised to his shoulders and talked to her In a fit of jealousy Wanger walked up and twice shot and wounded the unsuspecting agent One bullet hit Jennings in the right thigh near the hip and the other penetrated his groin 15 Bennett said she did not see Wanger at first She said she suddenly saw two vivid flashes then Lang slumped to the ground As soon as she recognized who had fired the shots she told Wanger Get away and leave us alone 16 He tossed the pistol into his wife s car She and the parking lot s service station manager took Lang to the agent s doctor He was then taken to a hospital where he recovered The police station was located across the lot officers had heard the shots and came to the scene and found the gun in Bennett s car when they took Wanger into custody Wanger was booked and fingerprinted and underwent lengthy questioning 16 I shot him because I thought he was breaking up my home Wanger told the chief of police of Beverly Hills He was booked on suspicion of assault with intent to commit murder Bennett denied a romance But if Walter thinks the relationships between Mr Lang and myself are romantic or anything but strictly business he is wrong she declared She blamed the trouble on financial setbacks involving film productions Wanger was involved with and said he was on the verge of a nervous breakdown 3 The following day Wanger out on bond returned to their Holmby Hills home collected his belongings and moved out Bennett however said there would not be a divorce 17 On December 14 Bennett issued a statement in which she said she hoped her husband will not be blamed too much for wounding her agent She read the prepared statement in the bedroom of her home to a group of newspapermen while TV cameras recorded the scene 18 Wanger s attorney Jerry Giesler mounted a temporary insanity defense He then decided to waive his right to a jury and threw himself on the mercy of the court 19 Wanger served a four month sentence in the County Honor Farm at Castaic California 39 miles north of Downtown Los Angeles quickly returning to his career to make a series of successful films 20 Meanwhile Bennett went to Chicago to appear on the stage in the role as the young witch Gillian Holroyd in Bell Book and Candle then went on national tour with the production 21 She made only five movies in the decade that followed the 1951 shooting incident and only two films in the 1970s for the incident was a stain on her career and she became virtually blacklisted Blaming the scandal that occurred for destroying her career in the motion picture industry Bennett once said I might as well have pulled the trigger myself Although Humphrey Bogart a longtime friend pleaded with Paramount Pictures on her behalf to keep her after her role as Amelie Ducotel in We re No Angels 1955 the studio refused As the movie offers dwindled after the scandal Bennett continued touring in stage successes such as Susan and God Once More with Feeling The Pleasure of His Company and Never Too Late Her next TV appearance was in the role of Bettina Blane in an episode of General Electric Theater in 1954 Other roles included Honora in Climax 1955 and Vickie Maxwell in Playhouse 90 1957 In 1958 she appeared as the mother in the short lived television comedy drama Too Young to Go Steady to teenagers played by Brigid Bazlen and Martin Huston She starred on Broadway in the comedy Love Me Little 1958 which ran for only eight performances Of the scandal in a 1981 interview Bennett contrasted the judgmental 1950s with the sensation crazed 1970s and 1980s It would never happen that way today she said laughing If it happened today I d be a sensation I d be wanted by all studios for all pictures 22 Later years EditDespite the shooting scandal and the damage it caused Bennett s film career she and Wanger remained married until 1965 She continued to work steadily on the stage and in television including a guest role as Denise Mitchell in an episode of TV s Burke s Law 1965 Bennett in the TV series Dark Shadows Bennett received star billing in the gothic soap opera Dark Shadows for its entire five year run 1966 to 1971 receiving an Emmy Award nomination in 1968 for her performance as Elizabeth Collins Stoddard mistress of the haunted Collinwood Mansion Her other roles in Dark Shadows were Naomi Collins Judith Collins Trask Elizabeth Collins Stoddard PT parallel time as the show described its alternate reality Flora Collins and Flora Collins PT In 1970 she appeared as Elizabeth in House of Dark Shadows the feature film adaptation of the series However she declined to appear in the sequel Night of Dark Shadows and her character Elizabeth was mentioned therein as being recently deceased Her autobiography The Bennett Playbill written with Lois Kibbee was published in 1970 23 Her other TV guest appearances include Bennett s roles as Joan Darlene Delaney in an episode of The Governor amp J J 1970 and as Edith in an episode of Love American Style 1971 She starred in five made for TV movies between 1972 and 1982 Bennett also appeared in one more feature film as Madame Blanc in director Dario Argento s horror film Suspiria 1977 for which she received a 1978 Saturn Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress Bennett and retired publisher movie critic David Wilde were married on February 14 1978 13 days before her 68th birthday in White Plains New York 24 Their marriage lasted until her death in 1990 Bennett s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6300 Hollywood Blvd Celebrated for not taking herself too seriously Bennett said in a 1986 interview I don t think much of most of the films I made but being a movie star was something I liked very much 22 Bennett has a motion pictures star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her contributions to the film industry Her star is located at 6300 Hollywood Boulevard 25 a short distance from the star of her sister Constance Death EditBennett died of heart failure on Friday evening December 7 1990 aged 80 at her home in Scarsdale New York She is interred in Pleasant View Cemetery Lyme Connecticut with her parents 22 Filmography EditBennett appeared in many movies and television productions listed below in their entirety Film Edit Bennett in the trailer for Father s Little Dividend 1951 Year Title Role Notes1916 The Valley of Decision unborn soul1923 The Eternal City Page uncredited1928 Power a dame1929 The Divine Lady extra uncredited1929 Bulldog Drummond Phyllis Benton1929 Three Live Ghosts Rose Gordon1929 Disraeli Lady Clarissa Pevensey1929 The Mississippi Gambler Lucy Blackburn1930 Puttin On the Ritz Delores Fenton1930 Crazy That Way Ann Jordan1930 Moby Dick Faith Mapple his beloved1930 Maybe It s Love a k a Eleven Men and a Girl Nan Sheffield1930 Scotland Yard Xandra Lady Lasher1931 Many a Slip Pat Coster1931 Doctors Wives Nina Wyndram1931 Hush Money Joan Gordon1932 She Wanted a Millionaire Jane Miller1932 Careless Lady Sally Brown1932 The Trial of Vivienne Ware Vivienne Ware1932 Week Ends Only Venetia Carr1932 Wild Girl Salomy Jane1932 Me and My Gal Helen Riley1933 Arizona to Broadway Lynn Martin1933 Little Women Amy March1934 The Pursuit of Happiness Prudence Kirkland1934 The Man Who Reclaimed His Head Adele Verin1935 Private Worlds Sally MacGregor1935 Mississippi Lucy Rumford1935 Two for Tonight Bobbie Lockwood1935 She Couldn t Take It Carol Van Dyke1935 The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo Helen Berkeley1936 Big Brown Eyes Eve Fallon1936 Thirteen Hours by Air Felice Rollins1936 Two in a Crowd Julia Wayne1936 Wedding Present Monica Rusty Fleming1937 Vogues of 1938 Wendy Van Klettering1938 I Met My Love Again Julie Weir Shaw1938 The Texans Ivy Preston1938 Artists and Models Abroad Patricia Harper1938 Trade Winds Kay Kerrigan1939 The Man in the Iron Mask Princess Maria Theresa1939 The Housekeeper s Daughter Hilda1940 Green Hell Stephanie Richardson1940 The House Across the Bay Brenda Bentley1940 The Man I Married Carol Hoffman1940 The Son of Monte Cristo Grand Duchess Zona of Lichtenburg1941 She Knew All the Answers Gloria Winters1941 Man Hunt Jerry Stokes1941 Wild Geese Calling Sally Murdock1941 Confirm or Deny Jennifer Carson1942 The Wife Takes a Flyer Anita Woverman1942 Twin Beds Julie Abbott1942 Girl Trouble June Delaney1943 Margin for Error Sophia Baumer1944 The Woman in the Window Alice Reed1945 Nob Hill Harriet Carruthers1945 Scarlet Street Katharine Kitty March1946 Colonel Effingham s Raid Ella Sue Dozier1947 The Macomber Affair Margaret Macomber1947 The Woman on the Beach Peggy Butler1947 Secret Beyond the Door Celia Lamphere1948 Hollow Triumph aka The Scar Evelyn Hahn1949 The Reckless Moment Lucia Harper1950 Father of the Bride Ellie Banks1950 For Heaven s Sake Lydia Bolton1951 Father s Little Dividend Ellie Banks1951 The Guy Who Came Back Kathy Joplin1954 Highway Dragnet Mrs Cummings1955 We re No Angels Amelie Ducotel1956 There s Always Tomorrow Marion Groves1956 Navy Wife Peg Blain1960 Desire in the Dust Mrs Marquand1970 House of Dark Shadows Elizabeth Collins Stoddard1977 Suspiria Madame BlancTelevision Edit The Nash Airflyte Theater 1951 episode Peggy Your Show of Shows 1951 1 episode Danger 1951 episode A Clear Case of Suicide Somerset Maugham TV Theatre 1951 episode Smith Serves Somerset Maugham TV Theatre 1951 episode The Dream General Electric Theater 1954 episode You Are Young Only Once as Bettina Blane The Best of Broadway 1954 episode The Man Who Came to Dinner as Lorraine Sheldon Climax 1955 episode The Dark Fleece as Honora The Ford Television Theatre 1955 episode Letters Marked Personal as Marcia Manners The Ford Television Theatre 1956 episode Dear Diane as Marion Playhouse 90 1957 episode The Thundering Wave as Vickie Maxwell The DuPont Show of the Month 1957 episode Junior Miss as Grace Graves Pursuit 1958 episode Epitaph for a Golden Girl Too Young to Go Steady 1959 own series as Mary Blake Burke s Law 1965 episode Who Killed Mr Colby in Ladies Lingerie as Denise Mitchell Dark Shadows 1966 1971 series regular 386 episodes as Elizabeth Collins Stoddard Naomi Collins Judith Collins Flora Collins The Governor amp J J 1970 episode Check the Check as Joan Darlene Delaney Love American Style 1971 episode segment Love and the Second Time as Edith Dr Simon Locke 1972 episode The Cortessa Rose as Cortessa Made for TV movies Edit Gidget Gets Married 1972 as Claire Ramsey The Eyes of Charles Sand 1972 as Aunt Alexandra Suddenly Love 1978 as Mrs Graham This House Possessed 1981 as Rag Lady Divorce Wars A Love Story 1982 as Adele BurgessAs herself Edit Screen Actors 1950 uncredited The Colgate Comedy Hour 1951 1 episode What s My Line 1951 1 episode The Ken Murray Show 1951 1 episode Ford Festival 1951 I ve Got A Secret 1953 Climax 1956 episode The Louella Parsons Story To Tell the Truth 1958 1 episode The Mike Douglas Show 1964 1967 1970 1970 1977 5 episodes The Merv Griffin Show 1967 1 episode Personality 1968 1 episode The Hollywood Squares 1970 1 episode The Virginia Graham Show 1970 1 episode The Hollywood Greats 1977 2 episodes Humphrey Bogart Spencer Tracy The Guiding Light 1982 1 episode The Spencer Tracy Legacy A Tribute by Katharine Hepburn 1986 Short subject Edit Screen Snapshots 1932 Hollywood on Parade No A 12 1933 The Fashion Side of Hollywood 1935 Hollywood Party 1937 Screen Snapshots Series 19 No 9 Sports in Hollywood 1940 Hedda Hopper s Hollywood No 6 1942 Screen Actors 1950 uncredited Radio appearances Edit Year Program Episode source1941 Philip Morris Playhouse Girl in the News 26 1946 Screen Guild Players Experiment Perilous 27 1947 Suspense Overture in Two Keys 28 Further reading EditBennett Joan 1943 How to Be Attractive New York Alfred A Knopf Bennett Joan Lois Kibbee 1970 The Bennett Playbill New York Holt Rinehart and Winston ISBN 978 0030818400 Hamrick Craig R J Jamison 2012 Barnabas amp Company The Cast of the TV Classic Dark Shadows Revised ed pp 41 53 ISBN 978 1 4759 1034 6 Kellow Brian November 26 2004 The Bennetts An Acting Family Lexington KY University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0813123295 Karina Longworth Vanessa Hope Love is a Crime Vanity Fair Podcast Zooey Deschanel as Joan Bennett Jon Hamm as Walter Wanger and Griffin Dunne as Jennings Lang Conde Nast and Cadence13 Retrieved 2 April 2022 References Edit Biography portal New York state portal New Jersey portal California portal Radio portal Film portal Television portal Theater portal Lesher David 9 December 1990 Joan Bennett Movie Stage TV Star Dies Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2 April 2022 Erickson Hal Joan Bennett Biography AllMovie a b c Joan Bennett Sees Mate Shoot Agent Thought He Was Breaking Up My Home Says Wanger Los Angeles Times December 14 1951 p 1 Retrieved July 22 2020 Hollywood Actors Agent Is Shot Joan Bennett s Husband Questioned Hollywood Actors Agent Is Shot Joan Bennett s Husband Questioned Producer in Financial Trouble The New York Times 14 December 1951 Retrieved 2 April 2022 Actress Joan Bennett Dead At 80 Associated Press December 10 1990 Accessed December 12 2013 The actress born in Fort Lee N J made her 1928 debut in the Broadway play Jarnegan Downey Phil A Black Jewish Officer in the Civil War Jewish American History Documentation Foundation Retrieved May 8 2013 Bennett Joan Kibbee Lois 1970 The Bennett Playbill New York Holt Rinehart and Winston ISBN 978 0030818400 Daughter Of Actor Divorced Joan Bennett Fox Wins Decree on Charges of Mate s Intoxication Los Angeles Times July 31 1928 p A20 Wins Fight Over Daughter s Surname Child Given New Name Young Daughter Becomes Diana Markey Under Court Decision Los Angeles Times August 22 1936 p 3 Wanger Moves to Adopt Child of Joan Bennett Los Angeles Times April 18 1944 p 2 Bennett Sister Weds Here Actress Becomes Scenarist s Bride Los Angeles Times March 17 1932 p A 2 Actress Marital Tie Cut Joan Bennett Granted Divorce From Gene Markey Writer Los Angeles Times June 4 1937 p 3 Markowitz Yvonne J 2014 The Jewels of Trabert amp Hoeffer Mauboussin Boston MFA Publications ISBN 978 0 87846 811 9 LCCN 2013957243 Retrieved October 9 2016 Joan Bennett and Wanger Marry in Phoenix Elopement Actress and Producer Make Trip by Auto Announce They ll Return to Hollywood Today Los Angeles Times January 13 1940 p 1 Joan Bennett Divorced The New York Times September 21 1965 p SU 3 Police Sgt Erwin F Uhde amp Ray Pinker director of the crime scientific laboratory indicating 38 caliber bullet holes in Shetland grey suit worn by Agent Jennings when shot by Walter Wanger calisphere Los Angeles Public Library Los Angeles Herald Examiner Collection 1951 Retrieved 2 April 2022 a b Vestuto Kathleen July 13 2018 The Lives of Justine Johnstone Follies Star Research Scientist Social Activist McFarland ISBN 978 1476672762 Detectives Shadowed Joan For Months Says Wanger Film Producer Tells Reasons for Jealousy Divorce Discussed Los Angeles Times December 15 1951 p 1 Joan Bennett Hopes Wanger Won t Be Blamed Too Much Statement Cites Film Producer s Money Worries Los Angeles Times December 15 1951 p A Wanger Fate Will Rest On Transcript Producer to Escape Open Trial by Letting Judge Decide Case on Grand Jury Evidence Los Angeles Times April 15 1952 p 1 Wanger to Be Released From County Jail Today Los Angeles Times September 13 1952 p A 1 Joan Bennett to Play Witch if Wanger Trial Is on Time Los Angeles Times April 3 1952 p 4 a b c Flint Peter B December 9 1990 Joan Bennett Whose Roles Ripened From Sweet to Siren Dies at 80 The New York Times p A52 Higham Charles November 29 1970 Her Father s Daughter The New York Times p 322 Notes on People The New York Times February 16 1978 p C2 Hollywood Walk of Fame Joan Bennett walkoffame com Hollywood Chamber of Commerce Retrieved November 16 2017 WHP Radio Programs for the Entire Week Starting November 16 1941 Harrisburg Telegraph November 15 1941 p 29 Retrieved July 26 2015 via Newspapers com Bennett Brent Menjou Star on Screen Guild Harrisburg Telegraph October 12 1946 p 17 Retrieved October 1 2015 via Newspapers com Suspense Overture in Two Keys Escape and Suspense Retrieved Aug 11 2019 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Joan Bennett Wikimedia Commons has media related to Joan Bennett Joan Bennett at IMDb Joan Bennett at Find a Grave Joan Bennett at the Internet Broadway Database Joan Bennett at AllMovie Joan Bennett at the TCM Movie Database Photos of Joan Bennett in Trade Winds 1938 by Ned Scott Joan Bennett Photo Gallery A collection of old time radio recordings featuring Joan Bennett Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joan Bennett amp oldid 1133988216, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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