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Bette Davis

Bette Davis

The daughter of a Massachusetts lawyer, American actress Bette Davis matured with a desire to become an actress upon her graduation from Cushing Academy, but was turned away from Eva LeGallienne's Manhattan Civic Repertory in New York. Undaunted, Davis enrolled in John Murray Anderson's Dramatic School, where everyone (including classmate Lucille Ball) regarded her as the star pupil. After a 1928 summer season with director George Cukor's stock company in Rochester, NY (where she worked with future co-star -- and rival -- Miriam Hopkins), Davis went on to Broadway, starring in Broken Dishes and Solid South before Hollywood called. Dazzling on-stage, Davis was signed to a contract by Universal in 1930. After an unimpressive debut in Bad Sister in 1931, however, Davis was out of work, but picked up by Warner Bros. soon thereafter. Davis applied herself with white-hot intensity to becoming a star with that company, and after a major role in the 1932 George Arliss vehicle The Man Who Played God, a star she became. Still, the films at Warner Bros. were uneven, and it wasn't until the studio loaned out Davis to play the bravura role of Mildred in RKO's Of Human Bondage (1934) that the critics began to take notice. An Oscar nomination seemed inevitable for her performance in Bondage, but Davis was let down by Warner Bros., which didn't like the fact that her best appearance had been in a rival's movie, and it failed to get behind her Oscar campaign (although there was a significant write-in vote for the actress). But, in 1935, Davis excelled as a self-destructive actress in the otherwise turgid film Dangerous, and an Oscar was finally hers. And when Warner Bros. subsequently failed to give Davis the top roles she felt she then merited, the actress went on strike and headed for England. She lost a legal battle with the studio and came back, but it acknowledged her grit and talent by increasing her salary and giving her much better roles. In 1939 alone, Davis starred in Dark Victory, Juarez, The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex, and The Old Maid. But she didn't get the plum role of the season -- Scarlet O'Hara in Gone With the Wind -- because Warner Bros. wouldn't loan her to David O. Selznick unless Errol Flynn was chosen to play Rhett Butler (a piece of casting both Selznick and Davis violently opposed). But Davis had already had her turn at playing a Southern belle in Jezebel (1938), which won her second a Oscar. As her star status increased in the 1940s, Davis found that it would have to be at the expense of her private life -- she would be married and divorced four times, admitting toward the end of her life that her career came first, last, and always. A fling at being her own producer in 1946 was disappointing, and her contract with Warner Bros. petered out in 1949 with a string of unsuccessful films. Davis made a spectacular comeback in 1950 when she replaced an ailing Claudette Colbert in the role of Margot Channing in the Oscar-winning All About Eve. Though suffering from a bone disease that required part of her jaw to be removed, Davis continued to work in films throughout the '50s; but, in 1961, things came to a standstill, forcing the actress to take out a famous job-wanted ad in the trade papers. In 1962, Davis began the next phase of her career when she accepted the role of a whacked-out former child star in What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? This led to a string of gothic horror films that did little to advance Davis' reputation, but kept her in the public eye. It was also in 1962 that Davis penned her thoughtful and honest autobiography The Lonely Life. Working in movies, TV, on-stage and on one-woman lecture tours into the '70s, Davis may have been older but no less feisty and combative; her outspokenness may have unnerved some of her co-stars, but made her an ideal interview subject for young film historians and fans. In 1977, Davis received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Film Institute, an honor usually bestowed upon performers who were retired or inactive. Not Davis. She kept at her craft into the '80s, even after a stroke imposed serious limitations on her speech and movement. Amidst many TV movies and talk-show appearances, Davis gave one last memorable film appearance in The Whales of August (1987), in which she worked with another venerable screen legend, Lillian Gish. Though plagued with illness, Davis was formidable to the end -- so much so that when she died in France at the age of 82, a lot of her fans refused to believe it. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide


Bette Davis Trivia

When was Bette Davis born?
Bette Davis date of birth: April 5, 1908

Who did Bette Davis portray in Old Acquaintance?
Bette Davis was Katherine "Kittie" Marlowe in Old Acquaintance

What role did Bette Davis portray in The Nanny?
Bette Davis played Nanny in The Nanny

Who did Bette Davis portray in The Anniversary?
Bette Davis was Mrs. Taggart in The Anniversary

Who did Bette Davis portray in The Star?
Bette Davis was Margaret Elliot in The Star

Who did Bette Davis play in Dead Ringer?
Bette Davis was Edith in Dead Ringer

Who did Bette Davis play in Dead Ringer?
Bette Davis was Margaret in Dead Ringer

What role did Bette Davis play in What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?
Bette Davis played Jane Hudson in What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?

Who did Bette Davis play in The Whales of August?
Bette Davis was Libby Strong in The Whales of August

Who did Bette Davis portray in The Watcher in the Woods?
Bette Davis was Mrs. Aylwood in The Watcher in the Woods

What role did Bette Davis portray in The Virgin Queen?
Bette Davis played Elizabeth I in The Virgin Queen

What role did Bette Davis portray in Return from Witch Mountain?
Bette Davis played Letha in Return from Witch Mountain

Who did Bette Davis play in The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex?
Bette Davis was Elizabeth I in The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex

Who did Bette Davis play in Now, Voyager?
Bette Davis was Charlotte Vale in Now, Voyager

What role did Bette Davis play in Mr. Skeffington?
Bette Davis played "Fanny" Beatrice Trellis Skeffington in Mr. Skeffington

Who did Bette Davis play in Marked Woman?
Bette Davis was Mary Dwight (Stranger) in Marked Woman

Who did Bette Davis portray in The Man Who Came to Dinner?
Bette Davis was Maggie Cutler in The Man Who Came to Dinner

What role did Bette Davis play in The Little Foxes?
Bette Davis played Regina Hubbard Giddens in The Little Foxes

Who did Bette Davis portray in The Letter?
Bette Davis was Leslie Crosbie in The Letter

Who did Bette Davis portray in Jezebel?
Bette Davis was Julie Marsden in Jezebel

Who did Bette Davis portray in Hush ... Hush, Sweet Charlotte?
Bette Davis was Charlotte Hollis in Hush ... Hush, Sweet Charlotte

Who did Bette Davis play in All About Eve?
Bette Davis was Margo Channing in All About Eve

What role did Bette Davis portray in Pocketful of Miracles?
Bette Davis played Apple Annie, "Mrs. E. Worthington Manville" in Pocketful of Miracles

Who did Bette Davis portray in The Petrified Forest?
Bette Davis was Gabrielle Maple in The Petrified Forest

What role did Bette Davis play in Of Human Bondage?
Bette Davis played Mildred Rogers in Of Human Bondage

What role did Bette Davis play in The Bride Came C.O.D.?
Bette Davis played Joan Winfield in The Bride Came C.O.D.

Who did Bette Davis play in Death on the Nile?
Bette Davis was Mrs. Van Schuyler in Death on the Nile

What role did Bette Davis play in Phone Call from a Stranger?
Bette Davis played Marie Hoke in Phone Call from a Stranger

Who did Bette Davis play in Burnt Offerings?
Bette Davis was Aunt Elizabeth in Burnt Offerings

Who did Bette Davis portray in Hell's House?
Bette Davis was Peggy Gardner in Hell's House



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