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Madge Evans

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Occupation
  
Actress

Years active
  
1914-1971


Name
  
Madge Evans

Role
  
Film actress

Madge Evans Madge Evans Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Full Name
  
Margherita Evans

Born
  
July 1, 1909 (
1909-07-01
)
New York City, New York, U.S.

Died
  
April 26, 1981, Oakland, New Jersey, United States

Spouse
  
Sidney Kingsley (m. 1939–1981)

Movies
  
Dinner at Eight, The Greeks Had a Word for, The Mayor of Hell, Pennies from Heaven, Stand Up and Cheer!

Similar People
  
Sidney Kingsley, Lowell Sherman, Lionel Barry, Jack Conway, Charles Brabin

Movie Legends - Madge Evans (Reprise)


Madge Evans (July 1, 1909 – April 26, 1981) was an American stage and film actress. She began her career as a child performer and model.

Contents

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Movie legends madge evans


Child model and stage actress

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Born in Manhattan as Margherita Evans, Madge Evans was featured in print ads as the 'Fairy Soap girl' as an infant. She made her professional debut at the age of six months, posing for artist's models. As a youth, her playmates included Robert Warwick, Holbrook Blinn, and Henry Hull. When she was four years old, Evans was featured in a series of child plays produced by William A. Brady. She worked at the old Long Island, New York movie studio. Her success was immediate, so much so that her mother loaned her daughter's name to a hat company. Evans posed in a mother and child tableau with Anita Stewart, then 16, for an Anheuser-Busch Brewing Company calendar, and as the little mountain girl in Heidi of the Alps.

Madge Evans Madge EvansAnnex

At the age of eight in 1917, Evans appeared in the Broadway production of Peter Ibbetson with John Barrymore, Constance Collier and Laura Hope Crews. At 17, she returned to the stage and appeared as the ingenue (stock character) in Daisy Mayme. Some of her best work in plays came in productions of Dread, The Marquis, and The Conquering Male. Her last appearance was in Philip Goes Forth produced by George Kelley. Evans' mother took her to England and Europe when she was 15.

Film career

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As a child film actress, Evans had quite a prolific career appearing in dozens of films, including with Marguerite Clark in The Seven Sisters (1915), a film with a large female ensemble that had been played on stage with Clark's rival Mary Pickford and Laurette Taylor in the cast. She was featured with Robert Warwick in Alias Jimmy Valentine (1915), a still extant film that has seen release on home video/DVD. At 14, she was the star of J. Stuart Blackton's rural melodrama On the Banks of the Wabash (1923). She co-starred with Richard Barthelmess in Classmates (1924).

She was working on stage when she signed with Metro Goldwyn Mayer in 1927. As with theater, she continued to play ingenue parts, often as the fiancé of the leading man. She played the love interest to both Al Jolson and Henry Morgan in the 1933 film Hallelujah, I'm a Bum.

Working for MGM in the 1930s, she appeared in Dinner at Eight (1933), Broadway to Hollywood (1933), Hell Below (1933), and David Copperfield (1935). In 1933, she starred with James Cagney in a melodrama entitled The Mayor of Hell, playing a pretty nurse who solicits the aid of a tough politician, played by Cagney. Other notable movies in which she appeared are Beauty for Sale (1933), Grand Canary (1934), What Every Woman Knows (1934), and Pennies From Heaven (1936).

In 1960, for Evans' contribution to the motion picture industry, she was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame located at 1752 Vine Street.

Marriage

In York Village, Maine, on July 25, 1939, she married playwright Sidney Kingsley, best known for his plays Dead End and Detective Story which were later turned into popular films. The couple owned a 250-acre (1,000,000 m2) estate in Oakland, New Jersey. Following her marriage to Kingsley, Evans left Hollywood and moved to the New Jersey home.

Radio and television

Later, she worked in radio and television in New York City. Evans performed on the Philco Television Playhouse (1949–1950), Studio One (1954), Matinee Theater (1955), and The Alcoa Hour (1956).

Madge Evans died at her home in Oakland, New Jersey from cancer in 1981, aged 71.

Articles

  • Los Angeles Times, Marriages In Hollywood Exceed Divorces In 1939, January 2, 1940, Page A1.
  • Los Angeles Times, Child Film Star, Ingenue Madge Evans Dies at 71, April 27, 1981, Page A1.
  • Oakland, California Tribune, Two Wise Young Maidens, January 10, 1937, Page 80.
  • San Mateo Times, A Defence of Youth, January 18, 1936, Page 15.
  • Syracuse Herald, Madge Evans, Joan Marsh, and Jackie Coogan head Sextet Surviving, Sunday Morning, July 19, 1931, Section 3, Page 11.
  • Zanesville, Ohio Signal, Madge Evans Has Role With James Cagney, July 16, 1933, Page 12.
  • Filmography

    Actress
    1958
    The Investigator (TV Series)
    - Episode #1.6 (1958)
    1956
    The Alcoa Hour (TV Series) as
    Agnes Spencer
    - The Girl in Chapter One (1956) - Agnes Spencer
    1955
    Matinee Theatre (TV Series)
    - Coming of Age (1955)
    1954
    Studio One (TV Series) as
    Ann
    - The Magic Monday (1954) - Ann
    - Fear Is No Stranger (1954)
    1954
    Justice (TV Series)
    - The Desperate One (1954)
    1953
    The Motorola Television Hour (TV Series)
    - At Ease (1953)
    1953
    Medallion Theatre (TV Series)
    - The Trouble Train (1953)
    1953
    Armstrong Circle Theatre (TV Series) as
    Mrs. Douglass
    - Judgment (1953) - Mrs. Douglass
    1953
    Lux Video Theatre (TV Series) as
    Sylvia
    - This Is Jimmy Merrill (1953) - Sylvia
    1952
    Mrs. Thanksgiving (TV Movie)
    1951
    Cameo Theatre (TV Series)
    - Deception (1951)
    1951
    Pulitzer Prize Playhouse (TV Series)
    - Alison's House (1951)
    1949
    The Philco Television Playhouse (TV Series) as
    Elinor Dashwood / Elizabeth Bennet
    - Sense and Sensibility (1950) - Elinor Dashwood
    - Pride and Prejudice (1949) - Elizabeth Bennet
    1938
    Army Girl as
    Julie Armstrong
    1938
    Sinners in Paradise as
    Anne Wesson
    1937
    The Thirteenth Chair as
    Nell O'Neill
    1937
    Espionage as
    Patricia Booth
    1936
    Pennies from Heaven as
    Susan Sprague
    1936
    Piccadilly Jim as
    Ann Chester
    1936
    Moonlight Murder as
    Toni Adams
    1936
    Exclusive Story as
    Ann Devlin
    1935
    Transatlantic Tunnel as
    Ruth McAllan
    1935
    Men Without Names as
    Helen Sherwood
    1935
    Calm Yourself as
    Rosalind Rockwell
    1935
    Age of Indiscretion as
    Maxine Bennett
    1935
    David Copperfield as
    Agnes
    1934
    Helldorado as
    Glenda Wynant
    1934
    What Every Woman Knows as
    Lady Sybil Tenterden
    1934
    Death on the Diamond as
    Frances Clark
    1934
    Paris Interlude as
    Julie
    1934
    Grand Canary as
    Lady Mary Fielding
    1934
    Stand Up and Cheer! as
    Mary Adams
    1934
    The Show-Off as
    Amy Fisher Piper
    1934
    Fugitive Lovers as
    Letty Morris
    1933
    Day of Reckoning as
    Dorothy Day
    1933
    Beauty for Sale as
    Letty Lawson
    1933
    Broadway to Hollywood as
    Anne Ainsley
    1933
    Dinner at Eight as
    Paula Jordan
    1933
    The Mayor of Hell as
    Dorothy
    1933
    The Nuisance as
    Dorothy Mason
    1933
    Made on Broadway as
    Claire Bidwell
    1933
    Hell Below as
    Joan Standish
    1933
    Hallelujah I'm a Bum as
    June Marcher
    1932
    Fast Life as
    Shirley Jameson
    1932
    Huddle as
    Rosalie Stone
    1932
    Are You Listening? as
    Laura O'Neil
    1932
    The Greeks Had a Word for Them as
    Polaire Quinn
    1932
    Lovers Courageous as
    Mary Blayne
    1931
    West of Broadway as
    Anne
    1931
    Heartbreak as
    Countess Vima Walden
    1931
    Guilty Hands as
    Barbara 'Babs' Grant
    1931
    Sporting Blood as
    Miss 'Missy' Ruby
    1931
    Son of India as
    Janice
    1931
    Good Times (Short)
    1930
    Envy (Short) as
    Helen
    1930
    The Gob (Short)
    1930
    The Bard of Broadway (Short) as
    Finishing School Student
    1930
    Many Happy Returns (Short) as
    Daughter
    1924
    Classmates as
    Sylvia, Her Niece
    1923
    On the Banks of the Wabash as
    Lisbeth
    1921
    The Little Match Girl (Short)
    1921
    Neighbor Nelly (Short)
    1920
    Heidi (Short) as
    Heidi
    1919
    Home Wanted as
    Madge Dow
    1919
    Three Green Eyes as
    Child
    1919
    The Love Defender as
    Dolly Meredith
    1918
    The Love Net as
    Patty Barnes
    1918
    The Power and the Glory as
    Deanie Consadine
    1918
    Heredity as
    Nedda Trevor as a Child
    1918
    Neighbors as
    Clarissa Leigh
    1918
    The Golden Wall as
    Madge Lathrop
    1918
    Stolen Orders as
    Ruth Le Page - as a child
    1918
    Vengeance as
    Young Nan as a Girl
    1918
    True Blue as
    Ruth as a Child
    1918
    Wanted: A Mother as
    Eileen Homer
    1918
    Woman and Wife
    1918
    The Gates of Gladness as
    Beth Leeds
    1917
    The Little Patriot as
    Undetermined Role
    1917
    Adventures of Carol as
    Carol Montgomery
    1917
    The Corner Grocer as
    Mary Brian, age 8
    1917
    The Burglar as
    Editha
    1917
    The Little Duchess as
    Geraldine Carmichael
    1917
    Beloved Adventuress as
    Francin - Age 7
    1917
    Maternity as
    Constance
    1917
    The Web of Desire as
    Marjorie
    1916
    The New South as
    Georgia Gwynne, as a girl
    1916
    Seventeen as
    Jane Baxter
    1916
    The Hidden Scar as
    Dot
    1916
    The Revolt as
    Nannie Stevens
    1916
    Husband and Wife as
    Bessie
    1916
    Sudden Riches as
    Little Emily
    1916
    The Devil's Toy as
    Betty
    1915
    The Little Church Around the Corner as
    The Child
    1915
    Zaza as
    Child (uncredited)
    1915
    The Master Hand as
    Jean as a Child
    1915
    The Seven Sisters as
    Clara
    1915
    From the Valley of the Missing as
    Child (uncredited)
    1915
    Alias Jimmy Valentine as
    Child Locked in Vault (uncredited)
    1914
    The Sign of the Cross as
    Little Christian Girl in Arena (uncredited)
    1914
    Shore Acres as
    Mildred
    Soundtrack
    1935
    Age of Indiscretion (performer: "Silent Night, Holy Night" (1818), "The First Noël" - uncredited)
    1933
    Day of Reckoning (performer: "Drink to Me Only with Thine Eyes" - uncredited)
    1933
    Broadway to Hollywood (performer: "The Honeysuckle and the Bee" (1901), "Poor Little G-String" (1930) - uncredited)
    Self
    1978
    The Film Society of Lincoln Center Tribute to George Cukor (TV Special) as
    Self
    1952
    Masquerade Party (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Episode dated 28 July 1952 (1952) - Self
    1951
    Your Show of Shows (TV Series) as
    Self - Guest Performer
    - Episode #3.17 (1951) - Self - Guest Performer
    1951
    The Kate Smith Evening Hour (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Episode #1.4 (1951) - Self
    1949
    We, the People (TV Series) as
    Self - Actress / Singer
    - Marie Wilson, Burgess Meredith, Madge Evans, Josephine Hull, Sidney Kingsley, Brock Pemberton, Connie Mack, Rabbi Theodore Lewis (1949) - Self - Actress / Singer
    1936
    Screen Snapshots Series 16, No. 1 (Documentary short) as
    Self
    1917
    The Volunteer as
    Self
    1915
    The Man Who Found Himself as
    Self - Cameo Appearance (uncredited)
    Archive Footage
    2015
    Hey Moe, Hey Dad! (TV Series documentary) as
    Various characters
    - A Stooge Is Born (2015) - Various characters (uncredited)
    1975
    Brother Can You Spare a Dime (Documentary)
    1969
    Hollywood: The Selznick Years (TV Movie documentary) as
    Actress 'Dinner at Eight' (uncredited)

    References

    Madge Evans Wikipedia