Madge Kennedy |
||
|
|
||
Career Highlights |
||
Actor Credits
|
||
Madge Kennedy Biography |
||
|
Madge Kennedy (April 19, 1891 in California – June 9, 1987 in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California) was a movie and stage actress of the silent film era. Kennedy came to New York City with her mother to paint. She was admitted to the Art Student`s League. Luis Mora saw her art work and recommended that she go to Siasconset (Nantucket, Massachusetts) for a summer. Mora described Kennedy as talented but very lazy. The Siasconset colony was evenly divided among actors and artists, and painters often gave theatrical performances. Kennedy appeared at a painter`s play and impressed one of the professionals there. He commented, she could act rings around anybody. The professional was Harry Woodruff who promptly offered her a job in his play, The Genius. Soon she was in Cleveland, Ohio where Robert McLaughlin gave her work with his stock company. Kennedy first started out on Broadway with the show, Little Miss Brown. This was a farce in three acts presented at the 48th Street Theater in August 1912. Critics found Kennedy`s performance most pleasing, writing Miss Kennedy`s youth, good looks, and marked sense of fun helped her to make a decidedly favorable impression last night. After making movies for three years she returned to the New York stage in November 1920. Kennedy played in Cornered, staged at the Astor Theatre. Produced by Henry Savage, the play was taken from the writing of Dodson Mitchell. Kennedy performed a dual role. She acted the character of a widow in the comedy Beware of Widows which was produced by the Maxine Elliott Theatre in December 1925. A reviewer for The New York Times remarked about Kennedy`s physical beauty as well as her skill as a comedian. She returned to Broadway in her later years, performing in August 1965 with Ruth Gordon, in A Very Rich Woman. This was her first stage appearance in 33 years. After Broadway, Sam Goldwyn of Goldwyn Pictures signed Kennedy to a big movie contract. Kennedy starred in movies such as Baby Mine (1917), Our Little Wife (1918) and Dollars and Sense (1920). Kennedy told a reporter in 1916, I have discovered that one of the best ways to act is to make your mind as vacant as possible. In 1918 Our Little Wife premiered with Kennedy playing the role of Dodo Warren. The story is about a woman whose marriage is both humorous and sad. The screenplay was adapted from a comedy by Avery Hopwood. A Perfect Lady (1918) was released in December and was taken from a stage play by Channing Pollock and Rennold Wolf. Kennedy co-starred with James Montgomery. In 1923 she starred in The Purple Highway. The screenplay is an adaptation of the stage play Dear Me, written by Luther Reed and Hale Hamilton. The cast included Monte Blue and Emily Fitzroy. The 1920s was a productive period for Kennedy. Following The Purple Highway she had prominent roles in Three Miles Out (1924), Scandal Sheet (1925), Bad Company (1925), Lying Wives (1925), Oh, Baby! (1926), Walls Tell Tales (1928). She was out of motion pictures until she resumed her career in The Marrying Kind (1952) and Main Street To Broadway (1953). In the late 1950s she combined t.v. work with roles in movies like The Catered Affair (1956), Lust For Life (1956), Houseboat (1958), A Nice Little Bank That Should Be Robbed (1958), Plunderers of Painted Flats (1959), and North by Northwest (1959). She has an uncredited part as a secretary in the Marilyn Monroe film Let`s Make Love (1960). Biography Credit: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madge_Kennedy |
||
Top News Stories |
||
|
||
Snapshot |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Photo Gallery |
||
|
|
||
Fans |
||
|
Madge Kennedy has no fans yet!
|
||
Trivia |
||
|
| ||
Top Contributors |
||
|
Top editors for this profile:
|
||
Related Links |
||
|
||
Related Profiles |
||
Comments
Submit a Comment