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Marjorie Rambeau

Marjorie Burnet Rambeau (July 15, 1889 – July 6, 1970) was an American film and stage actress.[1] She began her stage career at age 12, and appeared in several silent films before debuting in her first sound film, Her Man (1930). She was twice nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her roles in Primrose Path (1940) and Torch Song (1953), and received the 1955 National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actress for her roles in A Man Called Peter and The View from Pompey's Head.[2]

Marjorie Rambeau
Rambeau in 1915
Born
Marjorie Burnet Rambeau

(1889-07-15)July 15, 1889
DiedJuly 6, 1970(1970-07-06) (aged 80)
Resting placeDesert Memorial Park, Cathedral City, California
Other namesMajorie Rambeau
Florence Rambeau
OccupationActress
Years active1901–1957
Spouse(s)
(m. 1913; div. 1917)

(m. 1919; div. 1923)

Francis A. Gudger
(m. 1931; died 1967)

Early life

Rambeau was born in San Francisco to Marcel and Lilian Garlinda (née Kindelberger) Rambeau.[3][4] Her parents separated when she was a child. She and her mother went to Nome, Alaska, where young Marjorie dressed as a boy, sang, and played the banjo in saloons and music halls. Her mother insisted she dress as a boy to thwart amorous attention from drunken grown men in such a wild and woolly outpost as Nome.[5] She began performing on the stage at the age of 12. She attained theatrical experience in a rambling early life as a strolling player. Finally she made her Broadway debut on March 10, 1913, in a tryout of Willard Mack's play, Kick In.[6]

Career

 
The Debt – 1917

In her youth she was a Broadway leading lady, starring in plays such as the 1915 comedy Sadie Love. In 1921, Dorothy Parker memorialized her in verse:

If all the tears you shed so lavishly / Were gathered, as they left each brimming eye. / And were collected in a crystal sea, / The envious ocean would curl up and dry— / So awful in its mightiness, that lake, / So fathomless, that clear and salty deep. / For, oh, it seems your gentle heart must break, / To see you weep. ...[7]

Her silent films with the Mutual company included Mary Moreland and The Greater Woman (1917). The films were not major successes but did expose Rambeau to film audiences. By the time talkies came along she was in her early forties and she began to take on character roles in films such as Min and Bill (1930), The Secret Six (1931) starring Wallace Beery, Jean Harlow and Clark Gable, Laughing Sinners (1931) with Joan Crawford and Clark Gable, Grand Canary (1934) with Warner Baxter and Madge Evans, Palooka (1934) with Jimmy Durante, and Primrose Path (1940) with Ginger Rogers and Joel McCrea, for which she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress.

Rambeau played a supporting role in Min and Bill (1930) with Marie Dressler and Wallace Beery. Tugboat Annie was a follow up to Min and Bill, even though it was not a sequel. Rambeau replaced Dressler after her death as Tugboat Annie in the sequel Tugboat Annie Sails Again (1940) also starring Alan Hale Sr., Jane Wyman, Ronald Reagan and Chill Wills. Also in 1940, she had second billing under Wallace Beery (the co-star of the original Tugboat Annie) in 20 Mule Team; she also played an Italian mother in East of the River with John Garfield and Brenda Marshall. In 1943, she played a supporting role in In Old Oklahoma with John Wayne, Martha Scott and Gabby Hayes. Other films included second billing in Tobacco Road (1941) and Broadway (1942) starring George Raft and Pat O'Brien. In 1953, she was again nominated for an Oscar, this time for Torch Song. She appeared in A Man Called Peter with Richard Todd and Jean Peters in 1955. She appeared in a supporting role in Man of a Thousand Faces (1957), a biographical film about the life of Lon Chaney Sr. starring James Cagney as Chaney, although she never worked with the real Chaney in silent films.

 
Rambeau with George "Gabby" Hayes in In Old Oklahoma, 1943

For her contribution to the motion picture industry, Rambeau has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6336 Hollywood Blvd.

Legacy

Rambeau plays a role in one of the origin stories of the Reuben sandwich. According to author and theatre critic Bernard Sobel, the sandwich was invented for her upon a visit to Reuben's Restaurant and Delicatessen in New York City.[8]

Personal life

Rambeau was descended from colonial immigrant Peter Gunnarsson Rambo,[9] who immigrated in the 1600s from Sweden to New Sweden and served as a justice of the Governor's Council. He was the longest living of the original settlers and became known as the "Father of New Sweden".[10]

Rambeau was married three times, and had no children. She was first married in 1913 to Canadian writer, actor, and director Willard Mack. They divorced in 1917. She then married actor Hugh Dillman McGaughey in 1919, a marriage which also ended in divorce in 1923. Rambeau's last marriage was to Francis Asbury Gudger in 1931, with whom she remained until his death in 1967. Gudger was from Asheville, North Carolina. In the winters they often stayed there, and in the summer they lived in Sebring, Florida. His previous wife was killed in an automobile accident in Tampa two years before, but Rambeau and Gudger had been sweethearts years before when the former was the "toast of Broadway".[11]

Death

Rambeau died in 1970 at her home in Palm Springs, California and was buried at the Desert Memorial Park in Cathedral City.[12][13]

Filmography

Silent

Year Title Role Notes
1917 The Greater Woman Auriole Praed Lost film
Motherhood Louise Lost film
The Debt Countess Ann Lost film
The Mirror Blanche Lost film
The Dazzling Miss Davison Rachel, The Dazzling Miss Davison Lost film
Mary Moreland Mary Moreland Lost film
National Red Cross Pageant America Final episode
Lost film
1919 The Common Cause Columbia Prologue
Lost film
1920 The Fortune Teller Renee Browning Lost film
1922 On Her Honor[14] Rachel Davison Presumed lost
1926 Syncopating Sue Herself Lost film

Sound

Year Title Role Notes
1930 Her Man Annie
Min and Bill Bella Pringle
Great Day film never completed or released
1931 Inspiration Lulu
Trader Horn Edith Trent (scenes deleted)
The Easiest Way Elfie St. Clair
A Tailor Made Man Kitty Dupuy
Strangers May Kiss Geneva
The Secret Six Peaches
Laughing Sinners Ruby
Son of India Mrs. Darsey
Silence Mollie Burke
This Modern Age Diane Winters (scenes deleted)
Leftover Ladies The Duchess
Hell Divers Mame Kelsey
1933 Strictly Personal Annie Gibson
The Warrior's Husband Hippolyta
Man's Castle Flossie
1934 Palooka Mayme Palooka
A Modern Hero Madame Azais
Grand Canary Daisy Hemingway
Ready for Love Goldie Tate
1935 Under Pressure Amelia 'Amy' Hardcastle
Dizzy Dames Lillian Bennett / Lillian Marlowe
1937 First Lady Belle Hardwick
1938 Merrily We Live Mrs. Harlan
Woman Against Woman Mrs. Kingsley
1939 Sudden Money Elsie Patterson
The Rains Came Mrs. Simon
Heaven with a Barbed Wire Fence Mamie
Laugh It Off Sylvia Swan
1940 Santa Fe Marshal Ma Burton
Primrose Path Mamie Adams Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress
20 Mule Team Josie Johnson
Tugboat Annie Sails Again Capt. Annie Brennan
East of the River Mama Teresa Lorenzo
1941 Tobacco Road Sister Bessie Rice
Three Sons o' Guns Aunt Lottie
1942 Broadway Lillian "Lil" Rice
1943 In Old Oklahoma Bessie Baxter
1944 Oh, What a Night Lil Vanderhoven
Army Wives Mrs. Shannahan
1945 Salome, Where She Danced Madam Europe
It's Murder, She Says Anopheles Annie Short, Voice, Uncredited
1948 The Walls of Jericho Mrs. Dunham
1949 The Lucky Stiff Hattie Hatfield
Any Number Can Play Sarah Calbern
Abandoned Mrs. Donner
1953 Torch Song Mrs. Stewart Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress
Forever Female Older Actress at Bar
Bad for Each Other Mrs. Roger Nelson
1955 A Man Called Peter Miss Laura Fowler
The View from Pompey's Head Lucy Devereaux Wales
1957 Slander Mrs. Manley
Man of a Thousand Faces Gert (final film role)

See also

References

  1. ^ Marjorie Rambeau – North American Theatre Online
  2. ^ "Best Supporting Actress Archives – National Board of Review". National Board of Review. Retrieved February 2, 2015.
  3. ^ Marjorie Burnet Rambeau; Geni.com..Retrieved April 26, 2018
  4. ^ Lillian Rambeau portrait; ecrater
  5. ^ Great Stars of the American Stage by Daniel Blum Profile #62 c. 1952 (this second edition c. 1954)
  6. ^ Great Stars of the American Stage by Daniel C. Blum "Profile #62", c. 1952 (2nd edition c. 1954), no page numbers, pages are referred to as Profiles
  7. ^ Parker, Dorothy. "To Marjorie Rambeau." Life. December 8, 1921. p. 7; Silverstein, Stuart Y., ed. (1996). Not Much Fun: The Lost Poems of Dorothy Parker. New York: Scribner. p. 101. ISBN 0-7432-1148-0.
  8. ^ Sobel, Bernard (1953). "Broadway Heartbeat: Memoirs of a Press Agent". New York City: Hermitage House: 233. OCLC 1514676. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on July 6, 2008. Retrieved July 6, 2016.
  10. ^ "The Rambo Family Tree: Descendants of Peter Gunnarson Rambo 1611-1986", Beverly Nelson Rambo, p. 690
  11. ^ St. Petersburg Times, November 28, 1932
  12. ^ "Marjorie Rambeau, 'Grande Dame,' Dies". The Milwaukee Journal. AP. July 8, 1970. Retrieved September 30, 2012.
  13. ^ Brooks, Patricia; Brooks, Jonathan (2006). "Chapter 8: East L.A. and the Desert". Laid to Rest in California: a guide to the cemeteries and grave sites of the rich and famous. Guilford, CT: Globe Pequot Press. p. 238. ISBN 978-0762741014. OCLC 70284362.
  14. ^ Kelly, Mary (1922). "'On Her Honor'", review, The Moving Picture World, March 25, 1922, p. 402. Internet Archive. Retrieved December 6, 2019.

External links

  • Marjorie Rambeau at IMDb
  • Marjorie Rambeau at the Internet Broadway Database  
  • Marjorie Rambeau photo gallery at NYP Library (the man in the color photos with Marjorie is most likely her third husband Francis Gudger)
  • Marjorie Rambeau in film "Mary Moreland" Calgary Herald 3 November 1917
  • Marjorie Rambeau (Aveleyman)
  • photo of mother Lillian circa 1920

marjorie, rambeau, marjorie, burnet, rambeau, july, 1889, july, 1970, american, film, stage, actress, began, stage, career, appeared, several, silent, films, before, debuting, first, sound, film, 1930, twice, nominated, academy, award, best, supporting, actres. Marjorie Burnet Rambeau July 15 1889 July 6 1970 was an American film and stage actress 1 She began her stage career at age 12 and appeared in several silent films before debuting in her first sound film Her Man 1930 She was twice nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her roles in Primrose Path 1940 and Torch Song 1953 and received the 1955 National Board of Review Award for Best Supporting Actress for her roles in A Man Called Peter and The View from Pompey s Head 2 Marjorie RambeauRambeau in 1915BornMarjorie Burnet Rambeau 1889 07 15 July 15 1889San Francisco California U S DiedJuly 6 1970 1970 07 06 aged 80 Palm Springs California U S Resting placeDesert Memorial Park Cathedral City CaliforniaOther namesMajorie RambeauFlorence RambeauOccupationActressYears active1901 1957Spouse s Willard Mack m 1913 div 1917 wbr Hugh Dillman m 1919 div 1923 wbr Francis A Gudger m 1931 died 1967 wbr Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Legacy 4 Personal life 5 Death 6 Filmography 6 1 Silent 6 2 Sound 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEarly life EditRambeau was born in San Francisco to Marcel and Lilian Garlinda nee Kindelberger Rambeau 3 4 Her parents separated when she was a child She and her mother went to Nome Alaska where young Marjorie dressed as a boy sang and played the banjo in saloons and music halls Her mother insisted she dress as a boy to thwart amorous attention from drunken grown men in such a wild and woolly outpost as Nome 5 She began performing on the stage at the age of 12 She attained theatrical experience in a rambling early life as a strolling player Finally she made her Broadway debut on March 10 1913 in a tryout of Willard Mack s play Kick In 6 Career Edit The Debt 1917 In her youth she was a Broadway leading lady starring in plays such as the 1915 comedy Sadie Love In 1921 Dorothy Parker memorialized her in verse If all the tears you shed so lavishly Were gathered as they left each brimming eye And were collected in a crystal sea The envious ocean would curl up and dry So awful in its mightiness that lake So fathomless that clear and salty deep For oh it seems your gentle heart must break To see you weep 7 Her silent films with the Mutual company included Mary Moreland and The Greater Woman 1917 The films were not major successes but did expose Rambeau to film audiences By the time talkies came along she was in her early forties and she began to take on character roles in films such as Min and Bill 1930 The Secret Six 1931 starring Wallace Beery Jean Harlow and Clark Gable Laughing Sinners 1931 with Joan Crawford and Clark Gable Grand Canary 1934 with Warner Baxter and Madge Evans Palooka 1934 with Jimmy Durante and Primrose Path 1940 with Ginger Rogers and Joel McCrea for which she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress Rambeau played a supporting role in Min and Bill 1930 with Marie Dressler and Wallace Beery Tugboat Annie was a follow up to Min and Bill even though it was not a sequel Rambeau replaced Dressler after her death as Tugboat Annie in the sequel Tugboat Annie Sails Again 1940 also starring Alan Hale Sr Jane Wyman Ronald Reagan and Chill Wills Also in 1940 she had second billing under Wallace Beery the co star of the original Tugboat Annie in 20 Mule Team she also played an Italian mother in East of the River with John Garfield and Brenda Marshall In 1943 she played a supporting role in In Old Oklahoma with John Wayne Martha Scott and Gabby Hayes Other films included second billing in Tobacco Road 1941 and Broadway 1942 starring George Raft and Pat O Brien In 1953 she was again nominated for an Oscar this time for Torch Song She appeared in A Man Called Peter with Richard Todd and Jean Peters in 1955 She appeared in a supporting role in Man of a Thousand Faces 1957 a biographical film about the life of Lon Chaney Sr starring James Cagney as Chaney although she never worked with the real Chaney in silent films Rambeau with George Gabby Hayes in In Old Oklahoma 1943 For her contribution to the motion picture industry Rambeau has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6336 Hollywood Blvd Legacy EditRambeau plays a role in one of the origin stories of the Reuben sandwich According to author and theatre critic Bernard Sobel the sandwich was invented for her upon a visit to Reuben s Restaurant and Delicatessen in New York City 8 Personal life EditRambeau was descended from colonial immigrant Peter Gunnarsson Rambo 9 who immigrated in the 1600s from Sweden to New Sweden and served as a justice of the Governor s Council He was the longest living of the original settlers and became known as the Father of New Sweden 10 Rambeau was married three times and had no children She was first married in 1913 to Canadian writer actor and director Willard Mack They divorced in 1917 She then married actor Hugh Dillman McGaughey in 1919 a marriage which also ended in divorce in 1923 Rambeau s last marriage was to Francis Asbury Gudger in 1931 with whom she remained until his death in 1967 Gudger was from Asheville North Carolina In the winters they often stayed there and in the summer they lived in Sebring Florida His previous wife was killed in an automobile accident in Tampa two years before but Rambeau and Gudger had been sweethearts years before when the former was the toast of Broadway 11 Death EditRambeau died in 1970 at her home in Palm Springs California and was buried at the Desert Memorial Park in Cathedral City 12 13 Filmography EditSilent Edit Year Title Role Notes1917 The Greater Woman Auriole Praed Lost filmMotherhood Louise Lost filmThe Debt Countess Ann Lost filmThe Mirror Blanche Lost filmThe Dazzling Miss Davison Rachel The Dazzling Miss Davison Lost filmMary Moreland Mary Moreland Lost filmNational Red Cross Pageant America Final episodeLost film1919 The Common Cause Columbia PrologueLost film1920 The Fortune Teller Renee Browning Lost film1922 On Her Honor 14 Rachel Davison Presumed lost1926 Syncopating Sue Herself Lost filmSound Edit Year Title Role Notes1930 Her Man AnnieMin and Bill Bella PringleGreat Day film never completed or released1931 Inspiration LuluTrader Horn Edith Trent scenes deleted The Easiest Way Elfie St ClairA Tailor Made Man Kitty DupuyStrangers May Kiss GenevaThe Secret Six PeachesLaughing Sinners RubySon of India Mrs DarseySilence Mollie BurkeThis Modern Age Diane Winters scenes deleted Leftover Ladies The DuchessHell Divers Mame Kelsey1933 Strictly Personal Annie GibsonThe Warrior s Husband HippolytaMan s Castle Flossie1934 Palooka Mayme PalookaA Modern Hero Madame AzaisGrand Canary Daisy HemingwayReady for Love Goldie Tate1935 Under Pressure Amelia Amy HardcastleDizzy Dames Lillian Bennett Lillian Marlowe1937 First Lady Belle Hardwick1938 Merrily We Live Mrs HarlanWoman Against Woman Mrs Kingsley1939 Sudden Money Elsie PattersonThe Rains Came Mrs SimonHeaven with a Barbed Wire Fence MamieLaugh It Off Sylvia Swan1940 Santa Fe Marshal Ma BurtonPrimrose Path Mamie Adams Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress20 Mule Team Josie JohnsonTugboat Annie Sails Again Capt Annie BrennanEast of the River Mama Teresa Lorenzo1941 Tobacco Road Sister Bessie RiceThree Sons o Guns Aunt Lottie1942 Broadway Lillian Lil Rice1943 In Old Oklahoma Bessie Baxter1944 Oh What a Night Lil VanderhovenArmy Wives Mrs Shannahan1945 Salome Where She Danced Madam EuropeIt s Murder She Says Anopheles Annie Short Voice Uncredited1948 The Walls of Jericho Mrs Dunham1949 The Lucky Stiff Hattie HatfieldAny Number Can Play Sarah CalbernAbandoned Mrs Donner1953 Torch Song Mrs Stewart Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting ActressForever Female Older Actress at BarBad for Each Other Mrs Roger Nelson1955 A Man Called Peter Miss Laura FowlerThe View from Pompey s Head Lucy Devereaux Wales1957 Slander Mrs ManleyMan of a Thousand Faces Gert final film role See also Edit Biography portalList of actors with Academy Award nominationsReferences Edit Marjorie Rambeau North American Theatre Online Best Supporting Actress Archives National Board of Review National Board of Review Retrieved February 2 2015 Marjorie Burnet Rambeau Geni com Retrieved April 26 2018 Lillian Rambeau portrait ecrater Great Stars of the American Stage by Daniel Blum Profile 62 c 1952 this second edition c 1954 Great Stars of the American Stage by Daniel C Blum Profile 62 c 1952 2nd edition c 1954 no page numbers pages are referred to as Profiles Parker Dorothy To Marjorie Rambeau Life December 8 1921 p 7 Silverstein Stuart Y ed 1996 Not Much Fun The Lost Poems of Dorothy Parker New York Scribner p 101 ISBN 0 7432 1148 0 Sobel Bernard 1953 Broadway Heartbeat Memoirs of a Press Agent New York City Hermitage House 233 OCLC 1514676 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Kalmar Nyckel Archived from the original on July 6 2008 Retrieved July 6 2016 The Rambo Family Tree Descendants of Peter Gunnarson Rambo 1611 1986 Beverly Nelson Rambo p 690 St Petersburg Times November 28 1932 Marjorie Rambeau Grande Dame Dies The Milwaukee Journal AP July 8 1970 Retrieved September 30 2012 Brooks Patricia Brooks Jonathan 2006 Chapter 8 East L A and the Desert Laid to Rest in California a guide to the cemeteries and grave sites of the rich and famous Guilford CT Globe Pequot Press p 238 ISBN 978 0762741014 OCLC 70284362 Kelly Mary 1922 On Her Honor review The Moving Picture World March 25 1922 p 402 Internet Archive Retrieved December 6 2019 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marjorie Rambeau Marjorie Rambeau at IMDb Marjorie Rambeau at the Internet Broadway Database Marjorie Rambeau photo gallery at NYP Library the man in the color photos with Marjorie is most likely her third husband Francis Gudger Marjorie Rambeau in film Mary Moreland Calgary Herald 3 November 1917 Marjorie Rambeau Aveleyman photo of mother Lillian circa 1920 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marjorie Rambeau amp oldid 1141591256, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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