Louise Dresser
Louise Dresser | |
---|---|
Born |
Louise Josephine Kerlin October 17, 1879 Evansville, Indiana, U.S. |
Died |
April 24, 1965 85) Woodland Hills, California, U.S. | (aged
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1922 – 1937 |
Spouse(s) |
Jack Norworth (1899-1907) (divorced) Jack Gardner (1908-1950) (his death) |
Louise Dresser (October 17, 1879 – April 24, 1965) was an American actress.[1]
Born Louise Josephine Kerlin in Evansville, Indiana. Her father was a train conductor who died when she was fifteen years old. She had acted on the stage previously, being a Vaudeville singer at age fifteen and her first film was The Glory of Clementina (1922), and her first starring role was in The City that Never Sleeps (1924).
She took her professional last name as a tribute to her good friend, songwriter Paul Dresser. Dresser was a popular songwriter of the turn of the 20th century. During the first presentations of the Academy Awards in 1929 she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress for A Ship Comes In.
She portrayed Empress Elizabeth in Paramount Pictures's The Scarlet Empress (1934). Dresser's last film was Maid of Salem (1937). On television, she appeared in an episode spotlighting Buster Keaton on Ralph Edwards's program, This is Your Life. She had known Keaton since he was a small boy with his parents in vaudeville.
She was married twice. First, to Jack Gardner, who died in 1951, and to singer/songwriter, Jack Norworth, whom she divorced. Dresser died in Woodland Hills, California, after surgery for an intestinal ailment, and was interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California. Dresser died without issue.
Filmography
Silent
- The Glory of Clementina (1922)
- Burning Sands (1922)
- Enter Madame (1922)
- The Fog (1923)
- Prodigal Daughters (1923)
- Salomy Jane (1923)
- Ruggles of Red Gap (1923)
- Woman-Proof (1923)
- To the Ladies (1923)
- The Next Corner (1924)
- What Shall I Do? (1924)
- The City That Never Sleeps(1924)
- Cheap Kisses (1924)
- Enticement (1925)
- Percy (1925)
- The Goose Woman (1925)
- The Eagle (1925)
- Fifth Avenue (1926)
- The Blind Goddess (1926)
- Padlocked (1926)
- Broken Hearts of Hollywood (1926)
- Gigolo (1926)
- Everybody's Acting (1926)
- The Third Degree (1926)
- White Flannels (1927)
- Mr. Wu (1927)
- A Ship Comes In (1928)
- The Garden of Eden (1928)
- Mother Knows Best (1928)
Sound
- The Air Circus (1928)
- Not Quite Decent (1929)
- Madonna of Avenue A (1929)
- Mammy (1930)
- The Three Sisters (1930)
- This Mad World (1930)
- Lightnin' (1930)
- Caught (1931)
- Stepping Sisters (1932)
- State Fair (1933)
- Song of the Eagle (1933)
- Doctor Bull (1933)
- Cradle Song (1933)
- David Harum (1934)
- The Scarlet Empress (1934)
- The World Moves On (1934
- Servants' Entrance (1934)
- A Girl of the Limberlost (1934)
- Hollywood on Parade (1934)*short
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Louise Dresser. |
- Louise Dresser at the Internet Movie Database
- Louise Dresser at the Internet Broadway Database
- Louise Dresser at Find a Grave
- Louise Dresser photo gallery NYP Library
- Louise Dresser at Virtual History
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