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Mary Astor

Mary Astor

Pressured into an acting career by her ambitious parents, Mary Astor was a silent film star before she was 17 -- a tribute more to her dazzling good looks than anything else. Debuting in The Beggar Maid (1921), Astor appeared opposite John Barrymore in 1923's Beau Brummell with whom she had a romantic relationship and later starred with in Don Juan (1926), Anxious not to be a victim of the talking-picture revolution, the actress perfected her vocal technique in several stage productions for Edward Everett Horton's Los Angeles-based Majestic Theatre, and the result was a most successful talkie career. Things nearly fell to pieces in 1936 when, in the midst of a divorce suit, Astor's ex-husband tried to gain custody of the couple's daughter by making public a diary she had kept. In this volume, Astor detailed her affair with playwright George S. Kaufman; portions of the diary made it to the newspapers, causing despair for Astor and no end of embarrassment for Kaufman. But Astor's then-current employer, producer Sam Goldwyn, stood by his star and permitted her to complete her role in his production of Dodsworth (1936). Goldwyn was touched by Astor's fight for the custody of her child, and was willing to overlook her past mistakes. Some of Astor's best films were made after the scandal subsided, including The Maltese Falcon (1941), in which she played the gloriously untrustworthy Brigid O'Shaughnessy opposite Humphrey Bogart's Sam Spade, and The Great Lie (1941), in which she played a supremely truculent concert pianist (and won an Academy Award in the bargain). Seemingly getting better as she got older, Astor spent the final phase of her career playing spiteful or snobbish mothers, with one atypical role as murderer Robert Wagner's slow-on-the-uptake mom in A Kiss Before Dying (1956). A lifelong aspiring writer, Astor wrote two entertaining and insightful books on her career, My Story and A Life on Film. Retiring after the film Hush Hush Sweet Charlotte (1966), Astor fell victim to health complications and financial tangles, compelling her to spend her last years in a small but comfortable bungalow on the grounds of the Motion Picture Country House and Hospital. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide


Mary Astor Trivia

When was Mary Astor born?
Mary Astor date of birth: May 3, 1906

Who did Mary Astor play in Trapped by Television?
Mary Astor was Bobby Blake in Trapped by Television

Who did Mary Astor play in Behind Office Doors?
Mary Astor was Mary Linden in Behind Office Doors

What role did Mary Astor portray in The Maltese Falcon?
Mary Astor played Brigid O'Shaughnessy in The Maltese Falcon

Who did Mary Astor portray in The Kennel Murder Case?
Mary Astor was Hilda Lake in The Kennel Murder Case

Who did Mary Astor portray in Beau Brummell?
Mary Astor was Margery Avonley in Beau Brummell

Who did Mary Astor play in The Royal Bed?
Mary Astor was Princess Anne in The Royal Bed

Who did Mary Astor play in The Palm Beach Story?
Mary Astor was Princess Centimillia in The Palm Beach Story

What role did Mary Astor play in Meet Me in St. Louis?
Mary Astor played Mrs. Anne Smith in Meet Me in St. Louis

Who did Mary Astor play in Return to Peyton Place?
Mary Astor was Roberta Carter in Return to Peyton Place

Who did Mary Astor portray in Dodsworth?
Mary Astor was Edith Cortright in Dodsworth

Who did Mary Astor portray in A Kiss Before Dying?
Mary Astor was Mrs. Corliss in A Kiss Before Dying

Who did Mary Astor portray in Midnight?
Mary Astor was Helen Flammarion in Midnight

Who did Mary Astor portray in Hush ... Hush, Sweet Charlotte?
Mary Astor was Jewel Mayhew in Hush ... Hush, Sweet Charlotte

Who did Mary Astor play in Brigham Young?
Mary Astor was Mary Ann Young in Brigham Young

Who did Mary Astor play in Little Women?
Mary Astor was Marmee March in Little Women


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