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Lana Turner

Lana Turner

One of the most glamorous superstars of Hollywood's golden era, Lana Turner was born February 8, 1921, in Wallace, ID. At the age of 15, while cutting school, she was spotted by Hollywood Reporter staffer Billy Wilkinson in a Hollywood drugstore; enchanted by her beauty, he escorted her to the offices of the Zeppo Marx Agency, resulting in a bit part in 1937's A Star Is Born. Rejected by RKO, Fox, and any number of other studios, Turner next briefly showed up in They Won't Forget. Mervin LeRoy, the picture's director, offered her a personal contract at 50 dollars a week, and she subsequently appeared fleetingly in a series of films at Warner Bros. When LeRoy moved to MGM, Turner followed, and the usual series of bit parts followed before she won her first lead role in the 1939 B-comedy These Glamour Girls. Dancing Co-Ed, a vehicle for bandleader Artie Shaw, followed that same year, and after starring in 1940's Two Girls on Broadway, she and Shaw married. Dubbed "the Sweater Girl" by the press, Turner was touted by MGM as a successor to Jean Harlow, but audiences did not take her to heart; she did, however, become a popular pin-up, especially with American soldiers fighting overseas. In 1941 she starred opposite Clark Gable in Honky Tonk, her first major hit. They again teamed in Somewhere I'll Find You the next year. Upon separating from Shaw, Turner married actor Stephen Crane, but when his earlier divorce was declared invalid, a media frenzy followed; MGM chief Louis B. Mayer was so incensed by the debacle that he kept the now-pregnant Turner off movie screens for a year. Upon returning in 1944's Marriage Is a Private Affair, Turner's stardom slowly began to grow, culminating in her most sultry and effective turn to date as a femme fatale in 1946's The Postman Always Rings Twice. The film was a tremendous success, and it made Turner one of Hollywood's brightest stars. Both 1947's Green Dolphin Street and Cass Timberlane were hits, but a 1948 reunion with Gable in Homecoming failed to re-create their earlier sparks. After appearing in The Three Musketeers, she disappeared from screens for over a year, resurfacing in the George Cukor trifle A Life of Her Own. Turner's box-office stock was plummeting, a situation which MGM attempted to remedy by casting her in musicals; while the first, 1951's Mr. Imperium, was an unmitigated disaster, 1952's The Merry Widow was more successful. However, a string of failures followed, and after 1955's Diane, MGM opted not to renew her contract. When Turner's next project, The Rains of Ranchipur, also failed to ignite audience interest, she again took a sabbatical from movie-making. She returned in 1957 with Peyton Place, director Mark Robson's hugely successful adaptation of Grace Metalious' infamous best-seller about the steamy passions simmering beneath the surface of small-town life. Turner's performance won an Academy Award nomination, and the following year she made international headlines when her lover, gangster Johnny Stampanato, was stabbed to death by her teenage daughter, Cheryl Crane; a high-profile court trial followed, and although Crane was eventually acquitted on the grounds of justifiable homicide, Turner's reputation took a severe beating. The 1959 Douglas Sirk tearjerker Imitation of Life was Turner's last major hit, however, and after a string of disappointments culminating in 1966's Madame X, she did not reappear in films for three years, returning with The Big Cube. Also in 1969, she and George Hamilton co-starred in the short-lived television series The Survivors. After touring in a number of stage productions, Turner starred in the little-seen 1974 horror film Persecution, followed in 1976 by Bittersweet Love. Her final film, Witches' Brew, a semi-comic remake of the 1944 horror classic Weird Woman, was shot in 1978 but not widely released until 1985. In 1982, she published an autobiography, Lana: The Lady, the Legend, the Truth, and also began a stint as a semi-regular on the TV soap opera Falcon Crest. After spending the majority of her final decade in retirement, Lana Turner died June 29, 1995, at the age of 74. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide


Lana Turner Trivia

When was Lana Turner born?
Lana Turner date of birth: February 8, 1921

What role did Lana Turner play in Mr. Imperium?
Lana Turner played Fredda Barlo in Mr. Imperium

Who did Lana Turner portray in The Big Cube?
Lana Turner was Adriana Roman in The Big Cube

What role did Lana Turner play in The Prodigal?
Lana Turner played Samarra in The Prodigal

Who did Lana Turner portray in The Postman Always Rings Twice?
Lana Turner was Cora Smith in The Postman Always Rings Twice

What role did Lana Turner portray in Peyton Place?
Lana Turner played Constance MacKenzie in Peyton Place

Who did Lana Turner portray in Imitation of Life?
Lana Turner was Lora Meredith in Imitation of Life

Who did Lana Turner play in Another Time, Another Place?
Lana Turner was Sara Scott in Another Time, Another Place

Who did Lana Turner play in The Three Musketeers?
Lana Turner was Milady Countess DeWinter in The Three Musketeers

Who did Lana Turner play in The Sea Chase?
Lana Turner was Elsa Keller in The Sea Chase

Who did Lana Turner play in The Bad and the Beautiful?
Lana Turner was Georgia Lorrison in The Bad and the Beautiful

What role did Lana Turner portray in Love Finds Andy Hardy?
Lana Turner played Cynthia Potter in Love Finds Andy Hardy

Who did Lana Turner play in Ziegfeld Girl?
Lana Turner was Sheila Regan in Ziegfeld Girl

What role did Lana Turner portray in The Adventures of Marco Polo?
Lana Turner played Maid in The Adventures of Marco Polo

What role did Lana Turner play in A Star Is Born?
Lana Turner played Marion (Santa Anita bar) in A Star Is Born

Who did Lana Turner portray in Du Barry Was a Lady?
Lana Turner was Guest Star in Du Barry Was a Lady


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Portions of Content Provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC.© 2008 All Media Guide, LLC.