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Ruth Chatterton

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Birth Date:
24.12.1892
Death date:
24.11.1961
Categories:
Actor, Pilot, Writer
Nationality:
 american
Cemetery:
New Rochelle, Beechwoods Cemetery

Ruth Chatterton (December 24, 1892 – November 24, 1961) was an American stage, film and television actress. In the late 1930s, Chatterton retired from film acting but continued her career on the stage. She later became a successful novelist and early aviator. Chatterton briefly returned to screen acting in the 1950s before her death of a cerebral hemorrhage in 1961.

Early life

Chatterton was born in New York City on Christmas Eve 1892, to Walter, an architect, and Lillian Chatterton (nee Reed). She was of English and French extraction. Her parents separated while she was still quite young. Chatterton attended Mrs. Hagen's School in Pelham, New York.

In 1908, Chatterton and her friends were attending a play in Washington D. C.. Chatterton later criticized the acting of the lead actress to her friends who challenged her to become a stage actress herself or "shut up". Chatterton accepted the challenge and, a few days later, joined the chorus of the stage show. She soon dropped out of school to further pursue a stage career. At the age of 16, Chatterton joined the Friend Stock Company in Milwaukee where she remained for six months.

Career

In 1911, Chatterton made her Broadway stage debut in The Great Name. Her greatest success onstage came in 1914 when she starred in the play Daddy Long Legs, adapted from the novel by Jean Webster.

In 1924, Chatterton and her first husband, actor Ralph Forbes, moved to Los Angeles. With the help of Emil Jannings, she was cast in her first film role in Sins of the Fathers in 1928. That same year, she was signed to a contract by Paramount Pictures. Chatterton's first film for Paramount was also her first sound film, The Doctor's Secret, released in 1929. Chatterton was able to make the transition from silents to sound because of her stage experience.

Later in 1929, Chatterton was loaned to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer where she starred in Madame X. The film was a critical and box office success and effectively launched Chatterton's career. For her work in the film, Chatterton received her first nomination for Academy Award for Best Actress. The following year, she starred in Sarah and Son, portraying an impoverished housewife who rises to fame and fortune as an opera singer. The film was another critical and financial success and Chatterton received a second Academy Award nomination for Best Actress. Later that year, Chatterton was voted the second female star of the year (behind Norma Shearer in a poll conducted by the West Coast film exhibitors.

When she left Paramount, her initial studio, for Warner Bros. (along with Kay Francis and William Powell), it was noted that the brothers Warner needed an infusion of "class". She co-starred in the film Dodsworth (1936), for Samuel Goldwyn, which is widely regarded as her finest film (giving what many consider an Oscar worthy performance, though she wasn't nominated). Due to her age and the studios' focus on younger, more bankable stars, she moved to England and continued to star in films there. Chatterton's final film was A Royal Divorce (1938).

Later years

By 1938, Chatterton had tired of motion picture acting and retired from films. She moved back to the Eastern United States where she lived with her third husband. She continued acting in Broadway productions and appeared in the London production of The Constant Wife, for which she received good reviews. Chatterton also raised French poodles and began a successful writing career. Her first novel, Homeward Bourne, was published in 1950 and became a best seller. Chatterton would go on to write two more novels.

Chatterton came out of retirement in the 1950s, and appeared on U.S. television in several plays, including a TV adaptation of Dodsworth on CBS's Prudential Playhouse, alongside Mary Astor and Walter Huston. Her last television appearance was as Gertrude in a 1953 adaptation of Hamlet, with Maurice Evans in the title role, on the anthology series Hallmark Hall of Fame.

Personal life

Flying

Chatterton was also one of the few woman aviators at the time, and was good friends with Amelia Earhart. She flew solo across the U.S. several times solo, and served as sponsor of the Sportsman Pilot Mixed Air Derby and the annual Ruth Chatterton Air Derby during the 1930s; she also opened the National Air Races in Los Angeles in 1936. She taught British film and stage actor Brian Aherne to fly, an experience he described at length in his 1969 autobiography, A Proper Job.

Marriages

Chatterton was married three times and had no children. In 1924, she married British actor Ralph Forbes who starred opposite her that same year in The Magnolia Lady, a musical version of the A.E. Thomas and Alice Duer Miller hit Come Out of the Kitchen. Their divorced was finalized on August 12, 1932. The following day, August 13, Chatterton married her The Rich Are Always with Us and The Crash co-star Irish-born actor George Brent, in Harrison, New York. The couple separated in March 1934 and were divorced in October 1934.

Chatterton married actor Barry Thomson in 1942. They remained married until his death in 1960.

Death

After the death of her third husband in 1960, Chatterton lived alone in the home they shared near Redding, Connecticut. On November 21, 1961, she suffered a cerebral hemorrhage while friends were visiting her home. She was taken to Norwalk Hospital in Norwalk, Connecticut where she died on November 24. She was cremated and is interred in a niche in the Lugar Mausoleum (Section 11, Lot 303) at Beechwoods Cemetery in New Rochelle, New York.

Honors

For her contribution to the motion picture industry, Ruth Chatterton has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6263 Hollywood Blvd. She is also a member of the American Theater Hall of Fame.

Source: wikipedia.org

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        Relation nameRelation typeBirth DateDeath dateDescription
        1George BrentGeorge BrentHusband15.03.190426.05.1979
        2Ralph ForbesRalph ForbesHusband30.09.190431.03.1951
        3Mary ForbesMary ForbesMother in-law30.12.188322.07.1974
        4Brenda ForbesBrenda ForbesSister in-law14.01.190911.09.1996
        5Amelia  EarhartAmelia EarhartFriend24.07.189702.07.1937
        6Walter HustonWalter HustonCoworker05.04.188307.04.1950
        7Madame Sul-Te-WanMadame Sul-Te-WanCoworker07.03.187301.02.1959
        8William WylerWilliam WylerCoworker01.07.190227.07.1981
        9Paul LukasPaul LukasCoworker26.05.189515.08.1971
        10Maurice EvansMaurice EvansCoworker03.06.190112.03.1989
        11Samuel GoldwynSamuel GoldwynCoworker17.08.187931.01.1974
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