Joan Crawford Overview:

Legendary actress, Joan Crawford, was born Lucille Fay LeSueur on Mar 23, 1905 in San Antonio, TX. Crawford died at the age of 72 on May 10, 1977 in New York City, NY and was laid to rest in Ferncliff Cemetery and Mausoleum in Hartsdale, Westchester County, NY.

MINI BIO:

Dark-haired (earlier blonde), thick-browed, dominating American actress. After an apprenticeship playing bitchy, hard-headed flappers, the Crawford of the forties and fifties, great haunted eyes and jagged mouth to the fore, excelled as women born to suffer. Still in leading roles when past 50, she remains one of the few actresses to create her own genre, with its ingredients of melodrama, mayhem, murder, and mink. Academy Award for Mildred Pierce. Married to actors Douglas Fairbanks Jr. (1929-1933), Franchot Tone (1935-1939), and Phillip Terry (1942-1946). Her last husband, a businessman, left her a widow in 1959. Died from a heart attack. Also Oscar-nominated for Possessed (1947 version) and Sudden Fear.

(Source: available at Amazon Quinlan's Film Stars).

HONORS and AWARDS:

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Joan Crawford was nominated for three Academy Awards, winning one for Best Actress for Mildred Pierce (as Mildred Pierce) in 1945.

Academy Awards

YearAwardFilm nameRoleResult
1945Best ActressMildred Pierce (1945)Mildred PierceWon
1947Best ActressPossessed (1947)Louise HowellNominated
1952Best ActressSudden Fear (1952)Myra HudsonNominated
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She was honored with one star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in the category of Motion Pictures. Joan Crawford's handprints and footprints were 'set in stone' at Grauman's Chinese Theater during imprint ceremony #15 on Sep 14, 1929.

BlogHub Articles:

Norma Shearer, , and Rosalind Russell are “The Women”

By Stephen Reginald on Feb 10, 2026 From Classic Movie Man

Norma Shearer, , and Rosalind Russell are “The Women” The Women (1939), directed by George Cukor, is a biting, high-society comedy-drama unique for its entirely female cast—not a single man appears on screen. However, their influence looms over every scene. The st... Read full article


and Melvyn Douglas lead the cast in “A Woman’s Face”

By Stephen Reginald on Jan 29, 2025 From Classic Movie Man

and Melvyn Douglas lead the cast in “A Woman’s Face” A Woman’s Face (1941) is an American drama film directed by George Cukor and starring and Melvin Douglas. The strong supporting cast includes Conrad Veidt, Osa Massen, Reginald Owen, Albert ... Read full article


THE PAIRS THAT NEVER WERE: and Humphrey Bogart

By Carol Martinheira on Nov 25, 2024 From The Old Hollywood Garden

THE PAIRS THAT NEVER WERE: and Humphrey Bogart On November 25, 2024 By CarolIn Uncategorized Noirvember?s THE PAIRS THAT NEVER WERE goes out to two people whom I frankly cannot believe never made a movie together. I mean, of all the actors from Hollywo... Read full article


, Dana Andrews, and Henry Fonda in Otto Preminger's Production of “Daisy Kenyon”

By Stephen Reginald on Nov 20, 2024 From Classic Movie Man

, Dana Andrews, and Henry Fonda in Otto Preminger's Production of “Daisy Kenyon” Daisy Kenyon (1947), based on the best-selling novel by Elizabeth Janeway, is one of many films referred to as “women’s pictures” during Hollywood’s Golden Age. In m... Read full article


, Dana Andrews, and Henry Fonda in Otto Preminger's Production of “Daisy Kenyon”

By Stephen Reginald on Oct 5, 2024 From Classic Movie Man

, Dana Andrews, and Henry Fonda in Otto Preminger's Production of “Daisy Kenyon” Daisy Kenyon (1947), based on the best-selling novel by Elizabeth Janeway, is one of many films referred to as “women’s pictures” during Hollywood’s Golden Age. In m... Read full article


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Joan Crawford Quotes:

Eva Phillips: [about Carol] She doesn't have many friends you know, I suppose it's just her personality. She doesn't even like me.


Marcia Townsend Warren: Who is she, Sherry?
Sheridan 'Sherry': Therese? A graduate of the old speakeasies - ordinary, I suppose you'd call her.
Marcia Townsend Warren: I'm afraid if I ever started, I'd call her more than *that*.


Crystal Allen: Say, listen, I've worked too hard to land this meal ticket to make any false moves now.


read more quotes from Joan Crawford...



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Grauman's Imprints

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Joan Crawford on the
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Joan Crawford Facts
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.

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.

After her friend Steven Spielberg hit it big, Joan sent him periodic notes of congratulations. The last one came two weeks before her death.

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