DESCRIPTION: Actress JOAN CRAWFORD vintage 1940s authentic original GEORGE HURRELL MGM (see credit stamp on verso) doubleweight photograph signed with blue ink pen.
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JOAN CRAWFORD BIO
(March 23, 1905 – May 10, 1977),
born Lucille Fay LeSueur, was
an American actress in film,
television and theatre. Starting as
a dancer in traveling theatrical companies before debuting on Broadway, Crawford was signed to a motion picture contract
by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1925.
Initially frustrated by the size and quality of her parts,
Crawford began a campaign of self-publicity and became nationally known as a
flapper by the end of the 1920s. In
the 1930s, Crawford's fame rivaled
MGM colleagues Norma Shearer and Greta Garbo.
Crawford often played hardworking young women who find romance and financial
success. These
"rags-to-riches" stories were well-received by Depression-era
audiences and were popular with women.
Crawford became one of Hollywood's most
prominent movie stars and one of the highest paid women in the United States, but her films began losing money and by the end of
the 1930s she was labeled "box office poison".
After an absence of nearly two years from the screen,
Crawford staged a comeback by starring in Mildred Pierce (1945), for which she won the Academy Award for Best
Actress. In 1955, she became involved with the Pepsi-Cola Company
through her marriage to company Chairman Alfred Steele.
After his death in 1959, Crawford
was elected to fill his vacancy on the board of directors but was forcibly
retired in 1973. She continued
acting in film and television regularly through the 1960s,
when her performances became fewer; after the release of the British horror
film Trog in 1970, Crawford
retired from the screen. Following a
public appearance in 1974, after
which unflattering photographs were published,
Crawford withdrew from public life and became more and more reclusive until her
death in 1977.
Crawford married four times. Her
first three marriages ended in divorce; the last ended with the death of
husband Al Steele. She adopted five
children, one of whom was reclaimed
by his birth mother. Crawford's
relationships with her two older children,
Christina Crawford disinherited the two and,
after Crawford's death, Christina
wrote a "tell-all" memoir,
Mommie Dearest, in which she
alleged a lifelong pattern of physical and emotional abuse perpetrated by
Crawford. and Christopher, were acrimonious.
Crawford was born Lucille Fay LeSueur in San Antonio, Texas,
the third child of Tennessee-born Thomas E.
LeSueur (1868–1938), a laundry
laborer of French Huguenot and English ancestry,
and Anna Bell Johnson (1884–1958),
who was of Swedish and Irish descent.
Her older siblings were Daisy LeSueur,
who died very young, and Hal LeSueur. Thomas LeSueur abandoned the family a few months
before Crawford's birth. He
reappeared in Abilene,
Texas,
in 1930 as a 62-year-old construction laborer on the George R. Davis House,
built in Prairie School architecture.
Crawford's mother subsequently married Henry J.
Cassin. The family lived in Lawton,
Oklahoma,
where Cassin ran a movie theater.
Crawford was unaware that Cassin was not her birth father until her brother Hal
told her. The 1910 federal census
for Comanche County,
Oklahoma,
enumerated on April 20, showed Henry
and Anna living at 910 "D" Street in Lawton.
Crawford was listed as five years old,
thus showing 1905 as her likely year of birth.
However, the state of Texas did not require
the filing of birth certificates until 1908,
allowing Crawford to claim she was born in 1908.
Crawford preferred the nickname "Billie" as a child and she loved
watching vaudeville acts perform on the stage of her stepfather's theater. Her ambition was to be a dancer. However,
in an attempt to escape piano lessons to run and play with friends, she leaped from the front porch of her home and
cut her foot deeply on a broken milk bottle.
Crawford had three operations and was unable to attend elementary school for a
year and a half. She eventually
fully recovered and returned to dancing.
Around 1916, Crawford's family
moved to Kansas City, Missouri. Cassin was first listed in the City Directory in
1917, living at 403 East Ninth Street. While still in elementary school, Crawford was placed in St. Agnes
Academy,
a Catholic school in Kansas City. Later,
after her mother and stepfather broke up,
she stayed on at St. Agnes as a work
student. She then went to Rockingham Academy as a work student. While attending Rockingham she began dating and
had her first serious relationship,
with a trumpet player named Ray Sterling.
It was Sterling who inspired her to begin
challenging herself academically,
and in 1922, Crawford registered at Stephens College
in Columbia, Missouri. She gave her year of birth as 1906. Crawford attended Stephens for less than a year, as she recognized that she was not academically
prepared for college.
Under the name Lucille LeSueur,
Crawford began dancing in the choruses of traveling revues and was spotted
dancing in Detroit
by producer Jacob J. Shubert. Shubert put her in the chorus line for his 1924
show Innocent Eyes at the Winter Garden Theatre on Broadway in New York City. While appearing in Innocent Eyes Crawford
met a saxophone player named James Welton.
The two were allegedly married in 1924 and the couple lived together for
several months, although this
supposed marriage was never mentioned in later life by Crawford. She wanted additional work and approached Loews
Theaters publicist Nils Granlund.
Granlund secured a position for her with producer Harry Richmond's act and
arranged for her to do a screen test which he sent to producer Harry Rapf in Hollywood. Stories have persisted that Crawford further
supplemented her income by appearing in one or more stag,
or soft-core pornographic, films,[7] although this has been disputed. Rapf notified Granlund on December 24, 1924 that Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer The night after
Christmas she left Kansas City and arrived in Culver City,
California.
had offered Crawford a contract at $75 a week.
Granlund immediately wired LeSueur – who had returned to her mother's home in
Kansas City – with the news; she borrowed $400 (which she never paid back) for
travel expenses.
As Lucille LeSueur, her first
film was Pretty Ladies in 1925,
which starred ZaSu Pitts. Also in
1925 she appeared in a small role in The Only Thing and in Old
Clothes opposite Jackie Coogan.
MGM publicity head Pete Smith recognized her ability but felt that her name
sounded fake; it also, he told
studio head Louis B. Mayer, sounded like "Le Sewer". Smith organized a contest in conjunction with the
fan magazine Movie Weekly to allow readers to select her new name. Initially the name "Joan Arden" was
selected but, when another actress
was found to have prior claim to that name,
the alternate name "Crawford" became the choice.
Crawford initially wanted her new first name to be pronounced
"Jo-anne". She hated the
name Crawford, saying it sounded
like "crawfish". Her
friend, actor William Haines, quipped,
"They might have called you 'Cranberry' and served you every Thanksgiving
with the turkey!" Crawford continued to dislike the name throughout her
life but, she said, "liked the security that went with it".
Growing increasingly frustrated over the size and quality of the parts she
was given, Crawford embarked on a
campaign of self-promotion. As MGM
screenwriter Frederica Sagor Maas recalled,
"No one decided to make Joan Crawford a star.
Joan Crawford became a star because Joan Crawford decided to become a star." She began attending dances in the afternoons
and evenings at hotels around Hollywood, where she often won dance competitions with her
performances of the Charleston
and the Black Bottom.Edmund
Goulding's Sally, Irene and Mary
(1925). She played Irene, a struggling chorus girl.
In the same year, Crawford worked on
Lady of the Night, starring
Norma Shearer. Crawford was made up
and used as a double for Shearer and her face is briefly seen. Crawford coveted the roles that Shearer played but
knew that Shearer's husband,
producer Irving Thalberg, guaranteed
Shearer first choice of roles in any MGM property.
"How can I compete with Norma?" Crawford was quoted as saying. "She sleeps with the boss." Her strategy worked,
and MGM cast her in the film where she first made an impression on audiences,
The following year, Crawford was
named one of the WAMPAS Baby Stars,
along with Mary Astor, Mary Brian, Dolores Costello,
Dolores del Río, Janet Gaynor and
Fay Wray. For the next two years, Crawford appeared in increasingly important films. In 1926,
she made Paris, where she was able to show her sex appeal. She became the romantic interest for some of MGM's
leading male stars, among them Ramón
Novarro, William Haines, John Gilbert and Tim McCoy.
Crawford appeared in The Unknown (1927),
starring Lon Chaney, Sr. who played a carnival knife thrower with no arms. Crawford played his skimpily clad young carnival
assistant whom he hopes to marry.
She stated that she learned more about acting from watching Chaney work than
from anything else in her career.
"It was then", she said, "I became aware for the first time of the
difference between standing in front of a camera,
and acting."
In 1928, Crawford starred
opposite Ramón Novarro in Across to Singapore,
but it was her role as Diana Medford in Our Dancing Daughters (1928)
that catapulted her to stardom. The
role established her as a symbol of modern 1920s-style femininity that rivaled
the image of her friend Clara Bow,
the original IT girl, who was Hollywood's foremost
flapper. A stream of hits followed Our
Dancing Daughters, including two
more flapper-themed movies, in which
Crawford embodied for her legion of fans (many of whom were women) an idealized
vision of the free-spirited,
all-American girl. F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote of her:
Joan Crawford is doubtless the best example of the flapper, the girl you see in smart night clubs, gowned to the apex of sophistication, toying iced glasses with a remote, faintly bitter expression,
dancing deliciously, laughing a
great deal, with wide, hurt eyes.
Young things with a talent for living.
On June 3, 1929, Crawford married Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. at
Saint Malachy's Roman Catholic Church in New York City.[19]
Fairbanks was the son of Douglas Fairbanks and the stepson of Mary Pickford, who were considered Hollywood royalty. Fairbanks Sr.
and Pickford were opposed to the marriage and did not invite the couple to
their home, Pickfair, for eight months after the marriage. The relationship between Crawford and Fairbanks, Sr.
eventually warmed; she called him "Uncle Doug" and he called her
"Billie".[20]
Following that first invitation,
Crawford and Fairbanks, Jr. became more frequent guests,
which was hard on Crawford. While
the Fairbanks
men played golf together, Crawford
was left with Pickford or left alone.
To rid herself of her Southwestern accent,
Crawford tirelessly practiced diction and elocution.
She said:
If I were to speak lines, it
would be a good idea, I thought, to read aloud to myself,
listen carefully to my voice quality and enunciation,
and try to learn in that manner. I
would lock myself in my room and read newspapers,
magazines and books aloud. At my
elbow I kept a dictionary. When I
came to a word I did not know how to pronounce,
I looked it up and repeated it correctly fifteen times.
Her first talkie was Untamed (1929),
opposite Robert Montgomery, which
was a box office success. Crawford
made an effective transition to sound movies.
One critic wrote, "Miss
Crawford sings appealingly and dances thrillingly as usual; her voice is
alluring and her dramatic efforts in the difficult role she portrays are at all
times convincing."
With the early sound film, Our
Blushing Brides (1930), another
financial success, MGM began to
develop a more sophisticated image of Crawford,
rather than continuing to promote her flapper girl persona of the silent era. In 1931,
she starred opposite Clark Gable in Possessed.
They began an affair during the production,
resulting in an ultimatum from studio chief Louis B.
Mayer to Gable that the affair end.
Gable complied, although for many
years their affair resumed sporadically and secretly.
Upon release, Possessed was
an enormous hit.
The studio then cast her in Grand Hotel,
which starred the most famous actors of the 1930s and was MGM's most
prestigious movie of 1932. Crawford
later achieved continued success with Letty Lynton (1932). Soon after its release,
a plagiarism suit forced MGM to withdraw it.
It has never been shown on television or made available on home video, and is therefore considered the "lost"
Crawford film. The film is mostly
remembered because of the "Letty Lynton dress",
designed by Adrian:
a white cotton organdy gown with large ruffled sleeves,
puffed at the shoulder. It was with
this gown that Crawford's broad shoulders began to be accentuated by costume. Macy's copied the dress in 1932, and it sold over 500,000
replicas nationwide.
In May 1933, Crawford divorced Fairbanks. Crawford cited "grievous mental
cruelty"; "a jealous and suspicious attitude" toward her friends
and "loud arguments about the most trivial subjects" lasting
"far into the night".
Following Possessed,
Crawford starred opposite Gable in the hit Dancing Lady (1933), in which she received top billing. Crawford's next movies,
Sadie McKee, Chained
and Forsaking All Others (all 1934),
were among the top money makers of the mid-1930s.
In 1935, Crawford married her
second husband, Franchot Tone, a stage actor from New York who planned to use his film salary
to finance his theatre group. Tone
and Crawford appeared together in Today We Live (1933) and were immediately
drawn to each other, although
Crawford was hesitant about entering into another romance so soon after her
split from Fairbanks. The couple built a small theatre at Crawford's Brentwood home and put on productions of classic plays
for select groups of friends. Before
and during their marriage, Crawford
worked to promote Tone's Hollywood career but
Tone was ultimately not interested in being a movie star and Crawford
eventually wearied of the effort.
Tone began drinking and physically abusing Crawford and she filed for divorce, which was granted in 1939.
Crawford and Tone eventually reconciled their friendship and Tone even proposed
in 1964 that they remarry. When Tone
died in 1968, Crawford arranged for
him to be cremated and his ashes scattered at Muskoka Lakes,
Canada.
The Motion Picture Herald placed Crawford on its list of the top-ten
moneymaking stars from 1932, the
first year of the poll, through 1936
and Life magazine proclaimed her "First Queen of the Movies"
in 1937. Later in 1937 she dropped
out of the top ten for the first time,
and in 1938 the Independent Film Journal named her and several other
stars as "box office poison" based on their supposed lack of popular
appeal. However, Crawford made a small comeback with her role as
home-wrecker Crystal Allen in director George Cukor's comedy The Women
in 1939. She also broke from formula
by taking the unglamorous role of Julie in Strange Cargo (1940), her eighth and final film with Clark Gable. Crawford then starred as a facially disfigured blackmailer
in A Woman's Face (1941).
While the film was only a moderate box office success,
her performance was hailed by many critics.
Crawford adopted her first child,
a daughter, in 1940. Because she was single,
California law prevented her from adopting within
the state so she arranged the adoption through an agency in Las Vegas.
The child was temporarily called Joan until Crawford changed her name to
Christina. She married actor Phillip
Terry on July 21, 1942 after a
six-month courtship. Together the
couple adopted a son whom they named Christopher,
but his birth mother reclaimed the child.
They adopted another boy, whom they
named Phillip Terry, Jr. After the marriage ended in 1946, Crawford changed the child's name to Christopher
Crawford.
After 18 years, Crawford's
contract with MGM was terminated by mutual consent on June 29, 1943.
In lieu of one more movie owed under her contract,
MGM bought her out for $100,000.
For $500,000, Crawford signed with Warner Bros. for a three movie deal and was placed on the
payroll on July 1, 1943. She also made a cameo with many other stars in the
G.I.
morale-booster Hollywood Canteen (1944).
Crawford said one of the main reasons she signed with Warner Bros. was because she wanted to play the character
"Mattie" in a proposed 1944 film version of Edith Wharton's novel Ethan
Frome (1911). However, Bette Davis wanted to play Mattie and reportedly
told Jack Warner, "Joan's far
too old, and besides, she can't act."
Crawford wanted to play the title role in Mildred Pierce (1945), but Davis
was the studio's first choice.
However, Davis did not want to play the mother of a
seventeen year old daughter and she turned the role down.
Director Michael Curtiz did not want Crawford and told Jack Warner, "She comes over here with her high-hat airs
and her goddamn shoulder pads...why
should I waste my time directing a has-been?" Curtiz demanded Crawford
prove her suitability by taking a screen test.
After the test, Curtiz agreed to
Crawford's casting. Crawford starred
opposite Jack Carson, Zachary Scott, Eve Arden,
Ann Blyth and Butterfly McQueen. Mildred
Pierce was a commercial success.
It epitomized the lush visual style and the hard-boiled film noir sensibility
that defined Warner Bros. movies of
the later 1940s, earning Crawford
the Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role.
From 1945 to 1952, Crawford
reigned as a top star and respected actress,
appearing in such roles as Helen Wright in HumoresquePossessed (1947, for which she was nominated for a second Oscar for
Best Actress) and the title role in Daisy Kenyon (also 1947). She did a critically well received sendup of her
screen image in a cameo in the Doris Day-Jack Carson musical, It's a Great Feeling (1949). Crawford's other movie roles of the era include
Lane Bellamy in Flamingo Road (1949),
a dual role in the film noir The Damned Don't Cry (1950) and her
performance in the title role of Harriet Craig (1950) at Columbia
Pictures. After filming This
Woman Is Dangerous (1952),
Crawford asked to be released from her Warner Bros.
contract. As she had done before, Crawford triumphed as Myra Hudson in Sudden
Fear (1952) at RKO, which was
the movie that introduced her co-star,
Jack Palance, to the screen and
earned Crawford a third and final Oscar nomination for Best Actress. (1946),
Louise Howell Graham in
Crawford adopted two more children in 1947,
fraternal twins whom she named Cindy and Cathy.
Crawford worked in the radio series The Screen Guild Theater on
January 8, 1939; Good News; Baby, broadcast March 2,
1940 on Arch Oboler's Lights Out; The Word on Everyman's
Theater (1941); Chained on the Lux Radio Theater and Norman
Corwin's Document A/777pilot for her series,
The Joan Crawford Show, but
the show was never picked up by a network.
Crawford married her final husband,
Alfred Steele, at the Flamingo Hotel
in Las Vegas on
May 10, 1955.
Crawford and Steele met at a party in 1950 when Steele was an executive with
Coca-Cola. They renewed their
acquaintance at a New Year's Eve party in 1954.
Steele by that time had become the president of Pepsi Cola. Crawford traveled extensively on behalf of Pepsi
following the marriage. She
estimated that she traveled over 100,000
miles for the company. Steele died
of a heart attack in April 1959.
Crawford was initially advised that her services were no longer required. After she told the story to Louella Parsons, Pepsi reversed its position and Crawford was
elected to fill the vacant seat on the board of directors.
Crawford, left near-penniless
following Steele's death, accepted a
supporting role in the film The Best of Everything (1959). It was her first non-starring role in her later
career.
Crawford received the sixth annual "Pally Award", which was in the shape of a bronze Pepsi bottle. It was awarded to the employee making the most
significant contribution to company sales.
In 1973, Crawford was forcibly
retired from the company at the behest of company executive Don Kendall, whom Crawford had referred to for years as
"Fang."
After her triumph in RKO's Sudden Fear,
Crawford appeared in films ranging from the camp western film Johnny Guitar
(1954) to the drama Autumn Leaves (1956),
opposite a young Cliff Robertson. By
the early 1960s, however, Crawford's status in motion pictures had
diminished.
Crawford starred as Blanche Hudson,
a physically disabled woman and former A-list movie star in conflict with her
psychotic sister in the highly successful thriller What Ever Happened To
Baby Jane? (1962). Despite the
actresses' earlier tensions,
Crawford suggested Bette Davis for the role of Jane.
The two stars maintained publicly that there was no feud between them. However,
Crawford accused Davis of kicking her during the
filming of a scene in which Jane attacks Blanche,
and reportedly retaliated by wearing weights under her clothes in a scene in
which Davis had
to carry her. The director, Robert Aldrich,
explained that Davis and Crawford were each aware of how important the film was
to their respective careers and commented,
"It's proper to say that they really detested each other, but they behaved absolutely perfectly." After filming was completed, their public comments against each other allowed
the tension to develop into a lifelong feud.
The film became a huge success,
recouping its costs in 11 days of nationwide release and temporarily reviving
Crawford's career. Davis was nominated for an Academy Award for
her performance as Jane Hudson.
Crawford secretly contacted all the other Oscar nominees to tell them if they
were unable to attend the ceremony,
she would be happy to accept the Oscar on their behalf.
Both Davis and Crawford were backstage when the absent Anne Bancroft was
announced as the winner and Crawford accepted the award on her behalf. Davis
claimed for the rest of her life that Crawford campaigned against her, a charge Crawford denied.
That same year, Crawford starred as
Lucy Harbin in William Castle's horror mystery Strait-Jacket (1964).
Director Robert Aldrich cast Crawford and Davis in Hush... Hush,
Sweet Charlotte
(1964). After a campaign of
intimidation by Davis while the film was on
location in Louisiana,
Crawford returned to Hollywood
and entered a hospital. After a
prolonged absence in which Crawford was accused of feigning illness, Aldrich was forced to replace her with Olivia de
Havilland. Crawford was devastated. "I heard the news of my replacement over the
radio, lying in my hospital
bed", Crawford said. "I wept for 39 hours."[43]
Crawford nursed grudges against Davis and Aldrich for the rest of her life, saying of Aldrich,
"He is a man who loves evil,
horrendous, vile things." (to which Aldrich replied, "If the shoe fits,
wear it, and I am very fond of Miss
Crawford.")
Upon her release from the hospital Crawford played the role of Amy Nelson in
I Saw What You Did (1965),
another William Castle vehicle. She
starred as Monica Rivers in Herman Cohen's horror thriller film Berserk!
(1967). After the film's release, Crawford guest-starred as herself on The Lucy
Show. The episode, "Lucy and the Lost Star", first aired on February 26,
1968. Crawford struggled during
rehearsals and drank heavily on-set,
leading series star Lucille Ball to suggest replacing her with Gloria Swanson. Crawford was letter-perfect the day of the show
and received two standing ovations from the studio audience.
In October 1968, Crawford's
29-year-old daughter, Christina (who
was then acting in New York
on the soap opera The Secret Storm),
needed immediate medical attention for a ruptured ovarian tumor. Until Christina was well enough to return, Crawford offered to play her role, to which producer Gloria Monty readily agreed. Although Crawford did well in rehearsal, she lost her composure while taping and the
director and producer were left to struggle to piece together the necessary
footage.
Crawford's appearance in the 1969 TV film Night Gallery (which served
as pilot to the series that followed),
marked one of Steven Spielberg's earliest directing jobs.
She starred on the big screen one final time,
playing Dr. Brockton in Herman
Cohen's science fiction horror film Trog (1970),
rounding out a career spanning 45 years and over 80 motion pictures. Crawford made four more TV appearances, as Stephanie White in an episode of The
Virginian (1970), entitled
"The Nightmare"; as a board member in an episode of The Name of
the Game (1971), entitled
"Los Angeles"; as Allison Hayes in the made-for-TV movie Beyond
the Water's Edge (1972); and as Joan Fairchild (her final performance) on
an episode of the television series,
The Sixth Sense, entitled, "Dear Joan: We're Going To Scare You To
Death" (1972). Crawford also
starred as Della in a television pilot of the same name in 1964. In this nighttime soap opera she played a
reclusive millionaire who lives alone with her daughter and is only ever seen
at night.
In 1970, Crawford was presented
with the Cecil B. DeMille Award by
John Wayne at the Golden Globes,
which was telecast from the Coconut Grove at The Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. She also spoke at her alma mater, Stephens
College, from which she never graduated.
Crawford published her autobiography,
A Portrait of Joan – written with Jane Kesner Ardmore – in 1962 through
Doubleday. Crawford's next book, My Way of Life,
was published in 1971 by Simon and Schuster.
Those expecting a racy tell-all were disappointed,
although Crawford's meticulous ways were revealed in her advice on grooming, wardrobe,
exercise, and even food storage.
In September 1973, Crawford moved
from apartment 22-G
to the smaller apartment 22-H
in the Imperial House. Her last
public appearance was September 23,
1974, at a party honoring her old
friend Rosalind Russell at New York's
Rainbow Room. Russell was suffering
from breast cancer at the time and died two years later in 1976. When Crawford saw the unflattering photos of both
stars that appeared in the papers the next day,
she said, "If that's how I look, then they won't see me anymore." Crawford cancelled all public appearances, began declining interviews and left her apartment
less and less. Her dental-related
issues, including surgery which left
her in need of round the clock nursing care,
also plagued her from 1972 until the middle of 1975.
While on antibiotics for this problem in October 1974,
Crawford's drinking caused her to black out,
slip and strike her face. This
incident scared her enough to give up drinking and smoking, although in public she insisted it was due to her
return to Christian Science. The
whole incident is recorded in a series of letters sent to her insurance company
held at the Lincoln Center Library for the Performing Arts, as well as being documented by her friend, Carl Johnnes,
in his book.
On May 8, 1977, Crawford gave away her beloved Shih Tzu
"Princess Lotus Blossom",
which she was too weak to care for properly.heart
attack, while also ill with
pancreatic cancer. A funeral was
held at Campbell Funeral Home, New York, on May 13,
1977. All four of her adopted
children attended, as did her niece, Joan Crawford LeSueur (aka Joan Lowe), who was the daughter of her late brother, Hal LeSueur (who had died in 1963). In her will,
which was signed October 28, 1976, Crawford bequeathed to her two youngest children, Cindy and Cathy,
$77,500 each from her $2,000,000
estate. She explicitly disinherited
the two eldest, Christina and
Christopher, writing "It is my
intention to make no provision herein for my son Christopher or my daughter
Christina for reasons which are well known to them."
Crawford died two days later at her New
York apartment from a
A memorial service was held for Crawford at All Souls' Unitarian
Church on Lexington Avenue in New York on May 16,
1977, and was attended by, among others,
her old Hollywood friend Myrna Loy.
Another memorial service, organized
by George Cukor, was held on June 24
in the Samuel Goldwyn Theater at the Academy
of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in
Beverly Hills, California. Crawford was cremated and her ashes placed in a
crypt with her last husband, Alfred
Steele, in Ferncliff
Cemetery,
Hartsdale, New York.
Crawford's hand and footprints are immortalized in the forecourt of
Grauman's Chinese Theater on Hollywood
Boulevard in Hollywood. She also has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
at 1750 Vine Street. In 1999,
Playboy listed Crawford as one of the "100 Sexiest Women of the
20th century", ranking her #84.
In November 1978, a year and a
half after Crawford's death,
Christina published Mommie Dearest,
which contained allegations that Crawford was emotionally and physically
abusive to Christina and her brother Christopher.
Many of Crawford's friends and co-workers,
including Van Johnson, Ann Blyth, Marlene Dietrich,
Myrna Loy, Cesar Romero, and Crawford's other daughters, Cathy and Cindy,
denounced the book, categorically
denying any abuse. But others, including Helen Hayes and Crawford's rival Bette
DavisB. D.
Hyman's tell-all in 1985, My
Mother's Keeper). Mommie
Dearest became a bestseller and was made into the 1981 film Mommie
Dearest, starring Faye Dunaway
as Joan Crawford. supported
Christina's version, with Davis saying that Christina could not have made it up (Davis, while still alive,
would ironically later become the target of her own daughter
Feature films
Silent Films
|
Year
|
#
|
Title
|
Role
|
Production Company
|
|
1925
|
1
|
Lady of the Night
|
double for Norma Shearer
|
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
|
|
2
|
Proud Flesh
|
San
Francisco Girl
|
|
3
|
A Slave of Fashion
|
Mannequin
|
|
4
|
The Merry Widow
|
Ballroom Dancing Extra
|
|
5
|
Pretty Ladies
|
Bobby, a
showgirl
|
|
6
|
The Circle
|
Young Lady Catherine[1]
|
|
7
|
The Midshipman
|
Extra[1]
|
|
8
|
The Exquisite Sinner
|
Extra[1]
|
|
9
|
The Big Parade
|
Extra[1]
|
|
10
|
Ben Hur
|
Extra[1]
|
|
11
|
Old Clothes
|
Mary Riley[2]
|
|
|
12
|
The Only Thing
|
Party Guest[1]
|
|
|
13
|
Sally,
Irene and Mary
|
Irene
|
|
|
1926
|
14
|
Tramp,
Tramp, Tramp
|
Betty Burton
|
First National Pictures
|
|
15
|
The Boob
|
Jane
|
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
|
|
16
|
Paris
|
The Girl
|
|
1927
|
17
|
Winners of the Wilderness
|
René Contrecoeur
|
|
18
|
The Taxi Dancer
|
Joslyn Poe
|
|
19
|
The Understanding Heart
|
Monica Dale
|
|
20
|
The Unknown
|
Estrellita or Nanon,
Zanzi's Daughter
|
|
21
|
Twelve Miles Out
|
Jane
|
|
22
|
Spring Fever
|
Allie Monte
|
|
1928
|
23
|
West Point
|
Betty Channing
|
|
24
|
The Law of the Range
|
Betty Dallas
|
|
25
|
Rose-Marie
|
Rose-Marie
|
|
26
|
Across to Singapore
|
Priscilla Crowninshield
|
|
27
|
Four Walls
|
Frieda
|
|
29
|
Our Dancing Daughters
|
Diana Medford
|
Cosmopolitan Production (an MGM company)
|
|
29
|
Dream of Love
|
Adrienne Lecouvreur
|
|
1929
|
30
|
The Duke Steps Out
|
Susie
|
|
31
|
Tide of Empire
|
Josephita Guerrero (Incomplete Project)
|
|
32
|
Our Modern Maidens
|
Billie Brown
|
Sound Features
|
Year
|
#
|
Title
|
Role
|
Production Company
|
|
1929
|
33
|
The Hollywood
Revue of 1929[3]
|
Specialty
|
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
|
|
34
|
Untamed
|
Alice
"Bingo" Dowling
|
|
1930
|
35
|
Montana
Moon
|
Joan Prescott
|
|
36
|
Our Blushing Brides
|
Gerry Marsh
|
|
37
|
Paid
|
Mary Turner
|
|
1931
|
38
|
Dance,
Fools, Dance
|
Bonnie Jordan
|
|
39
|
Complete Surrender
|
Ivy Stevens
|
|
40
|
Laughing Sinners (remake of Complete Surrender)
|
Ivy Stevens
|
|
41
|
This Modern Age
|
Val Winters
|
|
42
|
Wir Schalten um auf Hollywood
|
Herself
|
|
43
|
Possessed
|
Marian Martin
|
|
1932
|
44
|
Grand Hotel
|
Flaemmchen
|
|
|
45
|
Letty Lynton
|
Letty Lynton
|
|
|
46
|
Rain
|
Sadie Thompson
|
United Artists
|
|
1933
|
47
|
Today We Live
|
Diana "Ann" Boyce-Smith
|
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
|
|
48
|
Dancing Lady
|
Janie "Duchess" Barlow
|
|
1934
|
49
|
Sadie McKee
|
Sadie McKee Brennan
|
|
50
|
Chained
|
Diane Lovering,
also called "Dinah"
|
|
51
|
Forsaking All Others
|
Mary Clay
|
|
1935
|
52
|
No More Ladies
|
Marcia Townsend
|
|
53
|
I Live My Life
|
Kay Bentley
|
|
1936
|
54
|
The Gorgeous Hussy
|
Margaret O'Neal "Peggy" Eaton
|
|
55
|
Love on the Run
|
Sally Parker
|
|
1937
|
56
|
The Last of Mrs.
Cheyney
|
Fay Cheyney
|
|
57
|
The Bride Wore Red
|
Anni Pavlovitch
|
|
1938
|
58
|
Mannequin
|
Jessica Cassidy
|
|
59
|
The Shining Hour
|
Olivia Riley
|
|
1939
|
60
|
Ice Follies of 1939
|
Mary McKay,
a.k.a
Sandra Lee
|
|
61
|
The Women
|
Crystal Allen
|
|
1940
|
62
|
Strange Cargo
|
Julie
|
|
63
|
Susan and God
|
Susan Trexel
|
|
1941
|
64
|
A Woman's Face
|
Anna Holm
|
|
65
|
When Ladies Meet
|
Mary Howard
|
|
1942
|
66
|
They All Kissed the Bride
|
Margaret Drew
|
Columbia
Pictures
|
|
67
|
Reunion in France
|
Michelle de la Becque
|
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
|
|
1943
|
68
|
Above Suspicion
|
Frances Myles
|
|
1944
|
69
|
Hollywood
Canteen
|
Herself
|
Warner Brothers
|
|
1945
|
70
|
Mildred Pierce
|
Mildred Pierce
|
|
1946
|
71
|
Humoresque
|
Helen Wright
|
|
1947
|
72
|
Possessed
|
Louise Howell Graham
|
|
1948
|
73
|
Daisy Kenyon
|
Daisy Kenyon
|
20th Century Fox
|
|
1949
|
74
|
Flamingo Road
|
Lane Bellamy
|
Warner Brothers
|
|
75
|
It's a Great Feeling
|
Herself
|
|
1950
|
76
|
The Damned Don't Cry!
|
Ethel Whitehead
|
|
77
|
Harriet Craig
|
Harriet Craig
|
Columbia
Pictures
|
|
1951
|
78
|
Goodbye,
My Fancy
|
Agatha Reed
|
Warner Brothers
|
|
1952
|
79
|
This Woman is Dangerous
|
Beth Austin
|
|
80
|
Sudden Fear
|
Myra Hudson
|
RKO Radio Pictures
|
|
1953
|
81
|
Torch Song
|
Jenny Stewart
|
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
|
|
1954
|
82
|
Johnny Guitar
|
Vienna
|
Republic Pictures
|
|
1955
|
83
|
Female on the Beach
|
Lynn Markham
|
Universal Pictures
|
|
84
|
Queen Bee
|
Eva Phillips
|
Columbia
Pictures
|
|
1956
|
85
|
Autumn Leaves
|
Millicent Wetherby
|
|
1957
|
86
|
The Story of Esther Costello
|
Margaret Landi
|
|
1959
|
87
|
The Best of Everything
|
Amanda Farrow
|
20th Century Fox
|
|
1962
|
88
|
What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?
|
Blanche Hudson
|
Warner Brothers
|
|
1963
|
89
|
The Caretakers
|
Lucretia Terry
|
United Artists
|
|
1964
|
90
|
Strait-Jacket
|
Lucy Harbin
|
Columbia
Pictures
|
|
1965
|
91
|
I Saw What You Did
|
Amy Nelson
|
Universal Pictures
|
|
1967
|
92
|
The Karate Killers
|
Amanda True
|
MGM
|
|
1968
|
93
|
Berserk!
|
Monica Rivers
|
Columbia
Pictures
|
|
1970
|
94
|
Trog
|
Dr.
Brockton
|
Warner Brothers
|
(courtesy
of wikipedia)