Joan Crawford: The Ultimate Movie Star
- UNRATED
- Year:
- 2002
- 87 min
- 75 Views
lt's a great tragedy when people hear
the name Joan Crawford.
The first thing they think of is,
''No more wire hangers. ''
There is another Joan Crawford
that people should remember.
She really had to work her way...
...from a nothing,
Oh, she was a perfectionist
and so professional.
Crawford was very elegant and nice, but
you never quite believed what she said.
There were very few moments that l can
ever remember her just being a person.
She was just a control freak.
She didn't wanna be remembered
for shadows in her life.
l think to deny Joan Crawford
her place in Hollywood history...
...is to eliminate the center
of the whole story.
She is really the ultimate movie star.
Get out, Veda.
Get your things out of this house
before l throw them into the street.
Get out before l kill you.
When she came to the studio,
she was nobody.
Just a dancer.
A 1925 MGM memo announced
the arrival of a contract player...
...named Lucille Le Sueur,
later known as Joan Crawford.
Signed by Vice President Harry Rapf,
her contract gave the studio the option...
... to discard her within 10 weeks.
So Lucille Le Sueur entered running.
With limitless drive, she observed
work on the lot, made contacts...
...and sought every opportunity
to generate publicity...
...in order to succeed
in silent pictures.
In this 1925 studio short subject,
Lucille was presented to audiences...
...as a new find, and made the most
of her first close-up.
But her attempts at landing roles
yielded only extra work.
The big stars then were Lillian Gish
and Norma Shearer and Greta Garbo.
She lobbied for parts in prestige
films such as Lady of the Night...
...featuring Norma Shearer, who was
conducting an off-screen liaison...
... with studio chief, Irving Thalberg.
The character Norma Shearer
was playing was a twin.
There was a good sister
and bad sister.
And when you needed the backside
of the head, that was Lucille's head.
l don't think that she got a very good
impression of Norma Shearer.
lt was the beginning
Lucille's first break came
in Pretty Ladies...
... where in this scene, she was little
more than a glorified chorus girl.
But later in the film, she was given
a featured role opposite Zasu Pitts.
This role generated publicity
for Lucille Le Sueur...
... who was making a noise on the lot.
She'd broken through
to positive public reaction of the film...
...and had made an important alliance
with film star William Haines...
... who encouraged her
to get to know the right people...
... to aid in her rise to fame.
Namely, studio heads Irving Thalberg...
...and Louis B. Mayer.
But Lucille's wild nightlife
as an exhibition dancer...
... was getting attention as well.
She was gaining a reputation
as a fast and loose party girl...
... with a penchant for dancing,
drinking and men.
She used to go to the Cocoanut Grove,
and she loved to dance.
She loved the crowds
and the crowds loved her.
She loved to do the Charleston.
She used to go there every week.
And she told me about...
...some of the affairs she had.
She was going with a very wealthy
boy from the Cudahy family.
The meatpackers family.
But the Cudahy romance was not to
endure intervention from his family...
... who found her
unsuitable for their son.
She was, after all, a movie actress...
...and came from a background
that was questionable at best.
The young actress was born into an
impoverished Oklahoma family in 1906.
her biological father.
l think he left when she was very little.
She did not get along with her mother
and her brother...
...and l don't think she ever really did.
She always thought that
Grandmother Anna loved Hal the best.
She, as the girl, was left out.
She took the name Billie Cassin...
...after her stepfather that ran the
vaudeville house, and then he left.
The first love of a girl's life
is her father.
lf she doesn't trust her father...
...if she gets disillusioned about Father,
...for the rest of her life
to distrust men.
how humiliated she was...
...when she was going to school, where
she had to work as a maid, almost...
...to get an education.
She started her career in show business
as a dancer in clubs...
...in Chicago, Kansas City, and went
to Broadway and was a chorus girl.
She worked at Roseland
as a dance girl for hire...
...and then she came out to Hollywood
under contract as a dancer...
...not as an actress.
After only a few months at MGM,
L. B. Mayer promoted his new starlet...
rename Lucille Le Sueur...
...a name he felt sounded
too much like ''sewer. ''
The first choice was Joan Arden,
but as that was taken...
... the second choice
won for the name Joan Crawford...
...and a new star was born.
When she was named Joan Crawford,
things started to crystallize for her.
She finally started to have an identity.
She created Joan Crawford.
That was a wall for her to shut out
that miserable childhood.
She'd crossed certain railroad tracks,
but she still could hear the train roar.
Her first break as Joan Crawford
was a leading role...
...in, Sally, lrene and Mary,
l made four pictures with Joan Crawford.
l didn't consider her a great actress.
No, not in the beginning at all.
The studio was uncertain about what
to do with their free-spirited starlet...
...and tried her out
in comedies, dramas...
...and even Westerns,
to moderate response.
But L. B. Mayer followed a hunch,
and took a chance on her...
... with a starring role
in The Taxi Dancer.
Crawford was a natural on the screen.
Whether from a youthful zeal,
or a lack of education...
...she came across as a fresh, new face
in an age of affectation.
that Joan 's inexperience...
...contributed to the film 's failure.
Once again, she was assigned
to supporting roles.
In her next film, Joan played
a seedy carnival performer...
...opposite Lon Chaney in The Unknown.
It was on this project
that she received an education...
...by observing her costar's
total immersion in his character.
She was learning to use
inner resources...
...from an unhappy
and abused childhood...
... to make her scenes jump
from the screen.
The starlet was becoming an actress.
With renewed interest,
MGM made her a leading lady...
... to the studio 's top star,
John Gilbert, in Twelve Miles Out.
Their on-screen chemistry
struck a chord with audiences.
Off-screen, Crawford continued
She went on the other sound stages
to watch the other productions.
She took that time to learn as much as
she could, and also to make friends...
...because she found out that
your friends behind the camera...
...were more important than your
fellow players in front of the camera.
Joan 's achievements were noted
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