Jane Alice Peters
Sign | Libra |
Born | Oct 6, 1908 Fort Wayne, IN |
Died | Jan 16, 1942 Table Rock Mountain, NV |
Age | Died at 33 |
Final Resting PlaceForest Lawn Memorial Park (Glendale) |
Carole Lombard | |
Job | Actress |
Years active | 1921-1942 |
Top Roles | Irene Bullock, Hazel Flagg, Lily Garland aka Mildred Plotka, Rhoda Philbrooke, Mary Magiz |
Top Genres | Drama, Comedy, Romance, Silent Films, Musical, Crime |
Top Topics | Screwball Comedy, Romance (Comic), Book-Based |
Top Collaborators | Mitchell Leisen (Director), Walter Walker, Mack Sennett (Producer), William LeBaron (Producer) |
Shares birthday with | Janet Gaynor, Mitchell Leisen, Jerome Cowan see more.. |
Carole Lombard Overview:
Legendary actress, Carole Lombard, was born Jane Alice Peters on Oct 6, 1908 in Fort Wayne, IN. Lombard died at the age of 33 on Jan 16, 1942 in Table Rock Mountain, NV and was laid to rest in Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Glendale) Cemetery in Glendale, CA.
Early Life
Carole Lombard
was born Jane Alice Peter's on October 6th, 1908 in Fort Wayne, Indiana.
In her earliest years, Lombard lived a life of wealth and privilege as both her
parents came from well-to-do families. By all accounts, she was a happy child
who enjoyed roughhousing, playing sports, and competing with her two older
brothers. Her parents, however, had a strained and difficult relationship that
would culminate in their permanent separation, although never divorce, in 1914.
Lombard then relocated to Los Angeles with her mother and two siblings. Her
father would continue to support them financially from afar.
Lombard's energetic, tomboy-ish nature made her a popular student and natural athlete.
She played on multiple sports teams while in school, winning awards in tennis,
volleyball, and swimming. In 1921, while playing baseball with some friends,
director Allan Dwan took notice of the young tomboy and approached her to play
a similar type in his next film. Her small role in the melodramatic A Perfect Crime, marked Lombard's film
debut at the age of 12. She found the work enjoyable and continued to pursue
acting, taking dance and theatre classes while in High School. Although given
multiple screen-tests, she would not be seen on screen for the next four years.
Early Career
In 1924, after
years of near-misses, Lombard was finally signed to a contract with Fox Film
Corporation. Soon after she quite school to concentrate her acting career full-time.
Her first film for Fox was the melodramatic comedy Marriage in Transit. She then transitioned into B-movie Westerns
such as Heart and Spurs and Durand of the Bad Lands. Although she
received mostly positive reviews from the critics for her work, Fox remained
unsure of the 16-year old appeal as a leading lady and did not renew her
contract. She was absent from the screen for a year before famed comedy
director Mack Sennett offered her a screen-test and subsequent contract.
Between 1927 and
1929, Lombard appeared in over 15 Sennetts short comedies, learning to hone her
innate sense of slap-stick comedy that would later become her trademark. Soon
after, Pathe Studios began casting her as a supporting character in feature
films such as 1928's Ned McCobbs's Daughter. She was generally positively reviewed. Pathe then decided to test
young actress appeal, casting her as the lead in her first talkie, High Voltage. The film was successful
and Lombard made the successful transition from silent films to sound with no
difficulty. Her next film was the Gregory La Cava 1929 comedy Big News. It was hit with both the
critics and audiences. Her next film was the crime drama The Racketeer. Once again, it was a hit and Lombard was well
reviewed.
Rising Stardom
In 1930, Lombard
was signed to Paramount Studios. Her first two films for company, Safety in Numbers and Fast and Loose were hits. The next year
she starred five pictures. In two of the films, Man of the World and Ladies
Man, she starred with Leading Man William Powell. The two soon became
romantically involved then married. Her final two releases of the year Up Pops the Devil I and I Take This Woman were success, with
many critics praising Lombard's comedic talent. In 1932, she again starred in
five feature films. Although No One Man and
Sinners in the Sun were not very
successful, she did received great reviews for her the romantic-drama Virtue. She next starred with future
husband, Clark Gable, in No Man of Her Own. She kept up her
brutal professional pace, yet again starring in five films in 1933 including
her only horror film Supernatural.
In 1934, Lombard
career soared. She starred in no less than six films, causing her to turn down
the lead role in It Happened One Night
due to her busy schedule. Her film, Bolero
was a hit, demonstrating her superior comedic skill. Her next film Were Not Dressing was also a hit. Her
next film Twentieth Century would be
the one that would launch Lombard into Stardom. In the film, Lombard plays a
Hollywood starlet who is relentlessly pursued by her former stage mentor, hoping
she can help save his now fledgling career. The film was massive success;
audiences flocked to see the lighting fast dialoged and critics hailed
Lombard's performance as the best of career. With the success of her next two
films, Now and Forever and Lady By Choice, it became clear that
Lombard was officially one of the biggest stars in Hollywood.
Hollywood Star
In 1935 Lombard
appeared in two films. The first was opposite the dancing drama, Rumba, opposite George Raft. She returned
to her comedic strengths in Hands Across
the Table, with leading man Fred MacMurray. The film was a hit. The pairing
of Lombard and MacMurray proved so successful they would star together three
films together including 1936's The
Princess Comes Across. For her next film, she was loaned to Universal
Studios for the screwball comedy, My Man
Godfrey. The film paired Lombard with her now ex-husband, William Powell,
who played the titular role. Although divorce, the two remained good friends,
with Powell stating he would only star in the film if Lombard was cast opposite
him. The films features Lombard as eccentric heiress who hires a vagrant man,
Godfrey, as butler, and then proceeds to fall in love with him. The film was a
massive hit, a perfect blend of escapism and fantasy for hardened
depression-era public.
Audiences flocked to see it and critics couldn't print enough praises.
The film was nominated for nine Academy Awards including a Best Leading Actress
nomination for Lombard.
With the success
of My Man Godfrey, Lombard was one of
most popular and well paid actress in Hollywood, earning over 500,000 dollars a
year. Her next film, Swing High, Swing
Low, once again starring opposite MacMurray, was a hit and in 1937, Lombard
had her first role written with her in mind, William A. Wellman's Nothing Sacred. In the film, Lombard's plays a Hazel Flagg, a woman who exploits her misdiagnoses terminal illness to
her advantage. The film remains one of the quintessential examples of screwball
comedy and is Lombard's personal favorite. Although the next year Lombard had
one of her few box office failures, the forgettable Fools for Scandal. The next year Lombard decided to try her hand
out at drama, with the surprising dark Made
for Each opposite James Stewart and war romance In Name Only opposite Cary Grant. That year she also found profound
happiness in her personal life by marrying the King of Hollywood, Clark Gable.
Final Roles and Death
In 1940, she
starred in yet another drama, this time in George Steven's Vigil in the Night. The film was not successful, as audiences
wanted Lombard in another comedy.
Their wishes were met with only of Alfred Hitchcock's few comedies Mr. & Mrs. Smith. In 1942,Lombard
starred in her final role, Ernst Lubitsch's To
Be or Not to Be. In the film, Lombard plays an actress on Nazi Occupied
Poland who must aid the resistance in tracking down a German Spy. The film was
released two months after her death. While flying back to Hollywood after a War
Bond rally, the plane containing Lombard, her mother, and 15 military men
crashed into the Potosi Mountain. On January 16th, Carole Lombard,
and rest of passengers, died instantly as a result of the plane crash. She was
33 years old.
HONORS and AWARDS:
.Although Lombard was nominated for one Oscar, she never won a competitive Academy Award.
Academy Awards
Year | Award | Film name | Role | Result |
1936 | Best Actress | My Man Godfrey (1936) | Irene Bullock | Nominated |
She was honored with one star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in the category of Motion Pictures.
BlogHub Articles:
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By Stephen Reginald on May 1, 2023 From Classic Movie Manand Robert Montgomery are "Mr and Mrs. Smith" In 1940, Alfred Hitchcock’s third American film, Mr. and Mrs. Smith (released in 1941), was a screwball comedy. Yes, that’s right a screwball comedy. And it starred , who had recently been proclaimed the R... Read full article
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By Stephen Reginald on Aug 13, 2020 From Classic Movie Manand Jack Benny in Ernst Lubitsch’s “To Be or Not to Be” To Be or Not to Be (1942) is a comedy directed by Ernst Lubitsch and starring and Jack Benny The film is set in Warsaw, Poland, before the 1939 Nazi invasion. Josef Tura (Jack Benny) and his... Read full article
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Carole Lombard Quotes:
Diana Harrison: Thank you very much. It's so easy for a woman to make a fool of herself; I'm surprised I haven't done it before.
Lily Garland, aka Mildred Plotka: Oscar, you're complete. The most horrible excuse for a human being that ever walked on two legs.
read more quotes from Carole Lombard...