Trivia
 When Joan Crawford was asked during an interview how she liked working with Lucille Ball on The Lucy Show, her response was, "And they call ME a bitch - Lucy can out-bitch me ANY day of the week!"
 Quit Stephens College, a posh university for women in Columbia, Missouri, in the early 1920s.
(imdb.com)
 Wore size 4C shoes. (Source: Celebrity Sleuth magazine)
(imdb.com)
 Measurements: 35-25-35 (as model 1930), 35-25 1/2-37 (precise studio stats, 1937) (Source: Celebrity Sleuth magazine)
(imdb.com)
 Her performance as Mildred Pierce Beragon in Mildred Pierce (1945) is ranked #93 on Premiere Magazine's 100 Greatest Performances of All Time (2006).
(imdb.com)
 Born at 10:00 PM.
(imdb.com)
 She was a favorite model of 'Walt Disney (I)' and Ub Iwerks for their early experiments in animation ("The Hand Behind The Mouse," by Leslie Iwerks).
(imdb.com)
 She has a granddaughter, Chrystal, from son Christopher. She has a granddaughter Carla, born c. 1970, from daughter Cathy. She has eight grandchildren altogether (four from Christopher and two each from Cindy and Cathy).
(imdb.com)
 When her daughter Christina Crawford decided to become an actress, Joan demanded that she change her last name, so it wouldn't appear that Christina was using it to further her career. Christina refused.
(imdb.com)
 Cousin-in-law of Lucile Fairbanks.
(imdb.com)
 On AFI's "100 Years 100 Stars", she was ranked the #10 Female Greatest Screen Legend.
(imdb.com)
 Has once said that Clark Gable was the only man she had ever loved.
(imdb.com)
 Was forced by MGM boss Louis B. Mayer to drop her real name Lucille LeSueur because it sounded too much like "sewer".
(imdb.com)
 Joan adopted another son in the early 1940s, but during a magazine interview, she disclosed the location of his birth, and his biological mother showed up at her Brentwood home wanting the baby back. Thinking that a fight would hurt the well-being of the child, Joan gave him back to his mother, who then sold him to another family.
(imdb.com)
 Thanked by Courtney Love in the liner notes of Hole's album "Celebrity Skin".
(imdb.com)
 Niece-in-law of Robert Fairbanks.
(imdb.com)
 She taught director Steven Spielberg how to belch while filming their episode of "Night Gallery" (1970).
(imdb.com)
 Worked as an elevator operator at Harzfeld's department store in downtown Kansas City, Missouri.
(imdb.com)
 She was of French descent on her father's side, and Irish/Scottish/English descent on her mother's side.
(imdb.com)
 Sister of actor Hal Le Sueur.
(imdb.com)
 In Italy, almost all of her films were dubbed by Tina Lattanzi and in the fifties mainly by Lidia Simoneschi. She was once dubbed by Gemma Griarotti in the second dubbing of Grand Hotel (1932).
(imdb.com)
 Is portrayed by Barrie Youngfellow in The Scarlett O'Hara War (1980) (TV) and by Faye Dunaway in Mommie Dearest (1981)
(imdb.com)
 After hearing that a plumber had used a toilet after installing it in her Brentwood home, she immediately had the fixture and pipes ripped out and replaced.
(imdb.com)
 Interred at Ferncliff Cemetery, Hartsdale, New York, USA.
(imdb.com)
 Daughter-in-law of Douglas Fairbanks.
(imdb.com)
 Was approached twice by the producers of the Airport disaster movie series. She was offered two different roles in both Airport 1975 (1974) and Airport '77 (1977), but refused.
(imdb.com)
 When Joan adopted her eldest daughter, Christina Crawford, she first named her 'Joan, Jr.'. Baby pictures from the book 'Mommie, Dearest' show baby Christina lying on a towel with 'Joan, Jr.' monogrammed on it. Later, for reasons that can only be speculated, Joan changed the baby's name to Christina. Joan did the same thing to her adopted son, who was named 'Phillip Terry, Jr.', after the man that Joan was married to at the time he was adopted. After her divorce to Phillip Terry was finalized, Joan changed the boy's name to Christopher.
(imdb.com)
 Adoptive mother of Christina Crawford.
(imdb.com)
 She was voted the 47th Greatest Movie Star of all time by Entertainment Weekly.
(imdb.com)
 She disliked her 'new' name and initially encouraged others to pronounce it Jo-Anne Crawford. In private, she liked to be referred to as Billie.
(imdb.com)
 One of the original MGM Contract Stars from the studio's early period.
(imdb.com)
 She has a grandson, Casey LaLonde, by her daughter Cathy. He was born c. 1972.
(imdb.com)
 Was very close friends with William Haines and his partner Jimmy Shields.
(imdb.com)
 Joan Arden was chosen as the young star's screen name after a write-in contest was held in the pages of "Movie Weekly" magazine, but a bit player came forward and said she was already using it. Mrs. Marie M. Tisdale, a crippled woman living in Albany, New York, won $500 for submitting the runner-up name "Joan Crawford".
(imdb.com)
 Adopted 4 children. her 2 oldest children, Christina Crawford and Chistopher were completely excluded from her will.
(imdb.com)
 Was asked to take over Carole Lombard 's role in They All Kissed the Bride (1942) after she died in a air crash during a war bond tour. She then donated all of her salary to the Red Cross who found Lombard's body, and promptly fired her agent for taking his usual 10%.
(imdb.com)
 Salary for 1941, $195,673.
(imdb.com)
 Blue Öyster Cult wrote a song about her, titled "Joan Crawford".
(imdb.com)
 While touring the talk show circuit to promote What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962), she told one interviewer that when she and Joan Crawford were first suggested for the leads, Warner studio head Jack L. Warner replied: "I wouldn`t give a plugged nickel for either of those two old broads." Recalling the story, Davis laughed at her own expense. The following day, she reportedly received a telegram from Crawford: "In future, please do not refer to me as an old broad!".
 In 1959, just after the death of her husband Alfred Steele, Joan remained employed by Pepsi-Cola, earning $60,000 per year.
 In 1933 she appeared in a Coca-Cola print advertisement. Some years later, in 1955, she married Pepsi-Cola board chairman Alfred N. Steele.
 She was actually Fred Astaire`s first on-screen dance partner. They appeared in Dancing Lady (1933).
 Often wore shoulder pads.
 In 1963, she accepted the Oscar for "Best Actress in a Leading Role" on behalf of Anne Bancroft, who wasn`t present at the awards ceremony.
 Although Crawford claimed her youngest daughters Cathy and Cindy were twins, most sources, including her two older children, claim they were just two babies born about a month apart. Her two older children claimed they couldn`t be twins because they looked nothing alike. In the early 1990s, Cathy found their birth certificate, which proved that they were indeed twins, born on January 13, 1947. The fact that they were fraternal twins, rather than identical, can account for the fact that they did not look alike. The twins eventually met their birth father and other biological relatives. They found out that their birth mother had died of kidney failure soon after birth and that their father, who had not been married to their mother, did not find out about them until after it was too late. They were sold illegally to Joan Crawford by Tennessee Children`s Home Society director Georgia Tann.
 After her husband died, she still continued to set a place for him at the dinner table.
 Comedic actress Betty Hutton, who lived near Crawford for a time, stated that she seen some of the abuse claimed by Joan`s daughter `Christina Crawford`. Hutton would often encourage her own children to spend some time with "those poor children", as she felt they needed some fun in their lives.
 After she was signed to MGM, someone attempted to extort money from the studio by claiming they had a porn film that featured a young Crawford. The attempt failed when MGM pointed out they could not definitely prove the actress in the film was Crawford. The incident was mentioned in a couple of biographies.
 Met her biological father only once when he visited her on the set of Chained (1934). She would never see him again.
 WAMPAS Baby of 1926
 Her popularity grew so quickly after her name was changed to Joan Crawford that two films in which she was still billed as Lucille Le Sueur: Old Clothes (1925) and The Only Thing (1925) were recalled, and the billings were altered.
 Her Oscar statuette for Mildred Pierce (1945) went on auction after her death and sold for $68,000. The auction house had predicted a top bid of $15,000.
 Her little tap dancing in The Hollywood Revue of 1929 (1929) was the first audible tap dance on the screen.
 Adopted four children: Christina, Christopher, and twins Cynthia and Cathy.
 Joan never liked the name "Crawford", saying to friend, actor William Haines that it sounded too much like "Crawfish". He replied that it was much better than "Cranberry," which became the nickname he used for Crawford for over 50 years.
 Joan was dancing in a chorus line in 1925 when she was spotted by MGM and offered a screen test. Joan, who wanted more than anything to continue dancing, turned down the offer at first. But another chorus girl pursuaded Joan to try the test, and a few weeks later she was put under contract.
 As a child, Joan was playing in the front yard of her home in Texas when she got a large piece of glass lodged in her foot. After it was removed, doctors told her she would likely never walk again without a limp. Joan was determined to be a dancer, so she practiced walking and dancing every day for over six months until she was able to walk without pain. Not only did she make a full recovery, she also fulfilled her dream of becoming a chorus dancer.
 Joan adopted all of her children except Christopher Crawford while she was unmarried. Since the state of California did not allow single men and women to adopt children at that time, Joan had to search for agencies in the eastern United States. The agency in charge of the adoption of Christina Crawford was later uncovered as part of a black market baby ring.
 During her later years, Crawford was drinking up to a quart of vodka a day.
 Drank excessively and smoked until she began practicing Christian Science, at which time she abruptly quit doing both.
 Decided to adopt children after suffering a series of miscarriages with her husbands and being told by doctors that she would never be able to have a baby.
 Because Joan was bullied and shunned at Stephens College by the other students due to her poor homelife, she answered every single piece of fanmail she received in her lifetime except those from former classmates at Stephens.
 Joan always considered The Unknown (1927) a big turning point for her. She said it wasn`t until working with Lon Chaney in this film that she learned the difference between standing in front of a camera and acting in front of a camera. She said that was all due to Lon Chaney and his intense concentration, and after that experience she said she worked much harder to become a better actress.
 It was recently learned from an excellent, detailed and objective TV biography of her (including information from Christina Crawford) that Joan Crawford`s hatred of wire hangers derived from her poverty as a child and her experiences working with her mother in what must have been a grim job in a laundry. [6 August 2002]
 Her final words before dying were quoted as being "Damn it . . . Don`t you dare ask God to help me." which was said to her housekeeper, who had begun to pray aloud.
 In her final years at MGM, Crawford was handed weak scripts in the hopes that she`d break her contract. Two films she hungered to appear in were Random Harvest (1942) and Madame Curie (1943). Both films went to bright new star Greer Garson instead, and Crawford left the studio soon after.
 Despite being a big star, Crawford really didn`t appear in that many film classics. One she missed out on was From Here to Eternity (1953) in 1953. When the domineering actress insisted that her costumes be designed by Sheila O`Brien, studio head Harry Cohn replaced her with Deborah Kerr.
 In the early 1930s, tired of playing fun-loving flappers, Joan wanted to change her image. Thin lips would not do for her, she wanted big lips. Ignoring Crawford`s natural lip contours, Max Factor ran a smear of color across her upper and lower lips; it was just what she wanted. To Max, the Crawford look, which became her trademark, was always `the smear`. To the public, it became known as `Hunter`s Bow Lips`. Crawford is often credited as helping to rout America`s prejudice against lipstick.
 Was born Catholic but converted to Christian Science in later years.
 She was named as `the other woman` in at least two divorces.
 Her 1933 contract with MGM was so detailed and binding, it even had a clause in it indicating what time she was expected to be in bed each night.
 Her cleanliness obsession lead her to prefer showers to tubs, as she abhorred sitting in her own bathwater.
 Whenever she stayed in a hotel, no matter how good and well-reputed it was, Joan always scrubbed the bathroom herself before using it.
 Always slept in white pyjamas.
 She would never smoke a cigarette unless she opened the pack herself, and would never use another cigarette out of that pack if someone else had touched it.
 She had a cleanliness obsession. She used to wash her hands every ten minutes and follow guests around her house wiping everything they touched, especially doorknobs and pieces from her china set.
 At the time of her death, the only photographs displayed in her apartment were of Barbara Stanwyck and President John F. Kennedy.
 Cartoonist Milton Caniff claimed he created the character of "Dragon Lady" for his popular "Terry and the Pirates comic strip, based on Joan Crawford.
 After her friend Steven Spielberg hit it big, Joan sent him periodic notes of congratulations. The last one came two weeks before her death.
 She was so dedicated to her fans that she always personally responded to her fan mail by typing them responses on blue paper and autographing it. A great deal of her spare time and weekends were spent doing this.
 Each time Crawford married, she changed the name of her Brentwood estate and installed all new toilet seats.
Who's Dated Who content is contributed and edited by our readers.
Please report errors or omissions on this page.
|