Isabel Jewell

Isabel Jewell

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Isabel Jewell (July 19, 1907 – April 5, 1972) was an American actress most active in the 1930s and early 1940s. Some of her most famous films were Ceiling Zero, Marked Woman, A Tale of Two Cities, and Gone With the Wind. After years in theater stock companies, including an 87-week stint in Lincoln, Nebraska, she hit the big time after getting a part on Broadway in Up Pops the Devil (1930). She received glowing critical reviews for Blessed Event (1932) as well. Jewell's film debut came in Blessed Event (1932). She had been brought to Hollywood by Warner Brothers for the film version of Up Pops the Devil. Jewell gained other supporting roles, appearing in a variety of films in the early 1930s. She played stereotypical gangsters' women in such films as Manhattan Melodrama (1934) and Marked Woman (1937). She was well received playing against type, as the seamstress sentenced to death on the guillotine along with Sydney Carton (Ronald Colman in A Tale of Two Cities (1935). Her most significant role was as the prostitute Gloria Stone in Lost Horizon (1937). Jewell's films included Gone with the Wind (1939) (in the role of "that white trash, Emmy Slattery"), Northwest Passage (1940), High Sierra (1941), and the low-budget The Leopard Man (1943). By the end of the 1940s, her roles had reduced in significance to the degree that her performances were often uncredited, e.g. The Snake Pit. She performed in radio dramas in the 1950s, including This is Your FBI. In 1972, Jewell appeared opposite Edie Sedgwick in the film Ciao! Manhattan. Her final film was the B movie Sweet Kill (1973), the directorial debut of Curtis Hanson, a future Academy Award winner. Description above from the Wikipedia article Isabel Jewell, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia

Tentang

Stage Name: Isabel Jewell

Peran: Acting

Reputasi: 0.4756

Jenis Kelamin: Perempuan

Tanggal Lahir: 1907-07-19

Lokasi Lahir: Shoshone, Wyoming, USA

Riwayat Perfilman

1972

Sweet Kill

Mrs. Cole

1961

Hollywood: The Selznick Years

'A Tale of Two Cities' (archive footage) (uncredited)

1957

Bernardine

Ruby McDuff

1955

Gunsmoke

Madame Ahr

1954

Drum Beat

Lily White

1948

Belle Starr's Daughter

Belle Starr

1948

Michael O'Halloran

Mrs Laura Nelson

1947

The Bishop's Wife

Hysterical Mother

1947

Born to Kill

Laury Palmer

1946

Badman's Territory

Belle Starr

1945

Steppin' in Society

Jenny the Juke

1943

The Falcon and the Co-Eds

Mary Phoebus

1943

The Seventh Victim

Frances Fallon

1943

The Leopard Man

Maria the Fortune Teller

1941

For Beauty's Sake

Amy Devore

1941

High Sierra

Blonde

1940

Little Men

Stella

1940

Marked Men

Linda Harkness

1940

Scatterbrain

Esther Harrington

1940

Babies for Sale

Edith Drake

1940

Irene

Jane McGee

1940

Northwest Passage

Jennie Coit

1940

Oh, Johnny, How You Can Love!

Gertie - Truck Stop Waitress

1939

Gone with the Wind

Emmy Slattery

1939

They Asked For It

Molly Herkimer

1938

The Crowd Roars

Mrs. Martin

1938

Swing It, Sailor!

Myrtle Montrose

1937

Love on Toast

Belle Huntley

1937

Marked Woman

Emmy Lou Eagan

1937

Lost Horizon

Gloria Stone

1936

Career Woman

Gracie Clay

1936

The Man Who Lived Twice

Peggy Russell

1936

36 Hours to Kill

Jeanie Benson

1936

Small Town Girl

Emily 'Em' Brannan

1936

Big Brown Eyes

Bessie Blair

1936

Dancing Feet

Mabel Henry

1936

Ceiling Zero

Lou Clarke

1935

A Tale of Two Cities

The Seamstress

1935

Mad Love

Marianne (scenes deleted)

1935

I've Been Around

Sally Van Loan

1934

Evelyn Prentice

Judith Wilson

1934

She Had to Choose

Sally Bates

1934

Manhattan Melodrama

Annabelle

1933

Design for Living

Plunkett's Stenographer

1933

Counsellor at Law

Bessie Green

1933

The Women in His Life

Catherine Watson

1933

Day of Reckoning

Kate Lovett

1933

Bombshell

Nellie, Junior's Girlfriend

1933

Beauty for Sale

Hortense

1933

Bondage

Beulah

1933

The Crime of the Century

Bridge Player (uncredited)

1932

Blessed Event

Dorothy Lane