词条 | Lombard, Carole |
释义 | Lombard, Carole American actress original name Jane Alice Peters born October 6, 1908, Fort Wayne, Indiana, U.S. died January 16, 1942, near Las Vegas, Nevada American actress and comedienne who starred in some of the most successful comedies of the 1930s. After studying acting and dancing as a child, she made her screen debut as a 13-year-old tomboy in A Perfect Crime (1921); legend has it that the actress was cast in the role after the film's director, Allan Dwan, saw her playing baseball in the street. After graduating from junior high school, she appeared in the film Dick Turpin (1925) under the stage name Carol (after 1930, Carole) Lombard. She appeared in more than 20 silent films during the 1920s, mostly in bit roles or as a supporting player in several Mack Sennett (Sennett, Mack)-produced comedy shorts. In 1930 she signed a seven-year contract with Paramount (Paramount Pictures Corporation) and was occasionally afforded the opportunity to display her comic skills in such films as Fast and Loose (1930), It Pays to Advertise (1931), and Man of the World (1931). It was also during this period that Lombard appeared in No Man of Her Own (1932), her only film with future husband Clark Gable (Gable, Clark) (married 1939). ![]() Although remembered primarily for her comedic skills, Lombard was also a highly capable dramatic actress, as evidenced by her performances as a noble and selfless nurse in Vigil in the Night (1940) and as a waitress mired in a deceitful mail-order romance in They Knew What They Wanted (1940). Lombard's other well-regarded films of the period include the melodrama In Name Only (1939), in which she appeared opposite Cary Grant (Grant, Cary); the comedy-drama Made for Each Other (1939), costarring James Stewart (Stewart, James); and Mr. and Mrs. Smith (1941), in which Lombard's performance highlighted director Alfred Hitchcock (Hitchcock, Sir Alfred)'s only attempt at straightforward comedy. In January 1942 Lombard visited her native Indiana to participate in a war-bond rally. As Lombard and her mother were returning home on January 16, they and 20 others were killed in a plane crash outside Las Vegas, Nevada. Lombard was at the peak of her popularity; her death stunned the nation and left husband Gable emotionally shattered. President Franklin Roosevelt (Roosevelt, Franklin D.) expressed the feelings of millions in his telegram to Gable: “She brought great joy to all who knew her and to millions who knew her only as a great artist.…She is and always will be a star, one we shall never forget nor cease to be grateful to.” Additional Reading Frederick W. Ott, The Films of Carole Lombard (1972); Robert D. Matzen, Carole Lombard: A Bio-Bibliography (1988). |
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