Silent Stars that had short Careers after Big Successes
Silent Stars that had short Careers after Big Successes
Two from the silent era come to mind Mary Fuller and Olga Petrova both were big for a period then nothing.
Last edited by Gagman 66 on Wed Feb 23, 2011 5:39 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Geraldine Farrar, perhaps? Although she certainly didn't need the movies to boost her, Carmen, The Woman God Forgot and Joan the Woman were probably the high points. Of course, Lou Tellegen was driving her career into the ditch, rather than she falling out of favor with audiences, so perhaps she doesn't really belong on the thread.
Christopher DiGrazia
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Someone who had big fame and then went uncredited the rest of her career was Mary MacClaren (1895-1984) She ended up being very poor and looked like a bag lady when they showed her on Entertainment Tonight on Estelle Winwood's 100th birthday. I'm amazed how many once big silent stars couldn't get a credited role anymore, some spent the years from the era of talkies beginning till the 1960s without one credited role, very strange. My own feeling is that Louis B. Mayer and the other studio heads saw the arrival of talkies as a way to bring down salaries and the studio system took hold where they had you stuck before lawsuits from the likes of Olivia Da Havilland and Bette Davis broke the hold. In the silent era there was soo much freelancing and many stars set up their own film companies by the early 1930s though the studio heads who had whined about the Edison Trust now had a hold on the industry themselves.
Houdini had a short film career because he couldn't act. The parts of his films which don't involve action sequences are laughable. Had he lived he'd never have made it in talkies- the few recordings of his voice display a heavy Brooklynesque accent which he tries to cover up by o-ver e-nun-ci-at-ing his syl-a-bles.salus wrote:Harry Houdini had a short film career but he couldn't give away too many tricks on film or the people wouldn't have come out to see him live.
Eric Stott