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Joan Bennett

Joan Bennett

The title of actress Joan Bennett's 1970 autobiography is The Bennett Playbill, in reference to the fact that she came from an old and well-established theatrical family: her father was stage star Richard Bennett and her sisters were screen actresses Constance and Barbara Bennett. Though she made an appearance as a child in one of her father's films, Joan Bennett did not originally intend to pursue acting as a profession. Honoring her wishes, her father bundled her off to finishing school in Versailles. Alas, her impulsive first marriage at 16 ended in divorce, leaving her a single mother in dire need of an immediate source of income. Thus it was that she became a professional actress, making her first Broadway appearance in her father's vehicle, Jarnegan (1928). In 1929, she began her film career in the low-budget effort Power, then co-starred with Ronald Colman in Bulldog Drummond. She was inexperienced and awkward and she knew it, but Bennett applied herself to her craft and improved rapidly; by the early '30s she was a busy and popular ingénue, appearing in such enjoyable programmers as Me and My Gal (1932) and important A-pictures like Little Women (1933) (as Amy). During this period she briefly married again to writer/producer Gene Markey. It was her third husband, producer Walter Wanger, who made the decision that changed the direction of her career: in Wanger's Trade Winds (1938), Bennett was obliged to dye her blonde hair black for plot purposes. Audiences approved of this change, and Bennett thrived throughout the next decade in a wide variety of "dark" roles befitting her brunette status. She was especially effective in a series of melodramas directed by Fritz Lang: Man Hunt (1941), The Woman in the Window (1944), Scarlet Street (1945), and The Secret Beyond the Door (1948). In 1950, she switched professional gears again, abandoning femme-fatale roles for the part of Spencer Tracy's ever-patient spouse in Father of the Bride (1950). Though her personal life was turbulent in the early '50s -- her husband Walter Wanger allegedly shot and wounded agent Jennings Lang, claiming that Lang was trying to steal his wife -- Bennett's professional life continued unabated on both stage and screen. Her television work included the 1959 sitcom Too Young to Go Steady and the "gothic" soap opera Dark Shadows (1965-1971). In failing health, Joan Bennett spent her last years in retirement with her fourth husband, media critic David Wilde. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide


Filmography of Joan Bennett:

Joan Bennett Trivia

When was Joan Bennett born?
Joan Bennett was born on February 27, 1910

Who did Joan Bennett portray in Secret Beyond the Door?
Joan Bennett was Celia Lamphere in Secret Beyond the Door

What role did Joan Bennett portray in The Woman in the Window?
Joan Bennett played Alice Reed in The Woman in the Window

Who did Joan Bennett portray in Vogues of 1938?
Joan Bennett was Wendy Van Klettering in Vogues of 1938

Who did Joan Bennett portray in Suspiria?
Joan Bennett was Madame Blanc in Suspiria

What role did Joan Bennett portray in The Son of Monte Cristo?
Joan Bennett played Grand Duchess Zona in The Son of Monte Cristo

Who did Joan Bennett play in Scarlet Street?
Joan Bennett was Kitty March in Scarlet Street

What role did Joan Bennett play in Little Women?
Joan Bennett played Amy March in Little Women

Who did Joan Bennett play in The Scar?
Joan Bennett was Evelyn Nash in The Scar

What role did Joan Bennett play in Colonel Effingham's Raid?
Joan Bennett played Ella Sue Dozier in Colonel Effingham's Raid

Who did Joan Bennett portray in Father of the Bride?
Joan Bennett was Ellie Banks in Father of the Bride

Who did Joan Bennett play in We're No Angels?
Joan Bennett was Amelie Ducotel in We're No Angels


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