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Dorothy Comingore

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Occupation
  
Actress

Years active
  
1934–1952


Name
  
Dorothy Comingore

Role
  
Film actress

Dorothy Comingore Dorothy Comingore Classic Cinema Gold

Full Name
  
Margaret Louise Comingore

Born
  
August 24, 1913 (
1913-08-24
)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.

Other names
  
Kay WintersLinda Winters

Died
  
December 30, 1971, Stonington, Connecticut, United States

Spouse
  
John Crowe (m. 1958–1971), Theodore Strauss (m. 1945–1952), Richard J. Collins (m. 1939–1945)

Movies
  
Citizen Kane, The Big Night, Prison Train, The Hairy Ape, Any Number Can Play

Similar People
  
Orson Welles, Jules White, Joseph Losey, Tay Garnett, Mervyn LeRoy

Citizen Kane : Susan Alexander Kane (Dorothy Comingore) singing the Barber of Seville


Mary Louise Comingore, best known professionally as Dorothy Comingore (August 24, 1913 – December 30, 1971), was an American film actress. She is best known for starring as Susan Alexander Kane in Citizen Kane (1941), the critically acclaimed debut film of Orson Welles. In earlier films she was credited as Linda Winters, and she had appeared on the stage as Kay Winters. Her career ended when she was caught up in the Hollywood blacklist. She declined to answer questions when she was called before the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1952.

Contents

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Early years

Dorothy Comingore Dorothy Comingore Classic Cinema Gold

Margaret Louise Comingore was born in Los Angeles, California and was described as "a one-time Oakland school girl." She attended the University of California, Berkeley. Her father was an electrotyper; her sister Lucille operated a nightclub in San Francisco.

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From 1934 to 1940, Comingore was billed in her stage appearances as Kay Winters and then Linda Winters as a film actress.

Film

Dorothy Comingore Dorothy Comingore authentic Autograph

Dorothy Comingore was discovered by Charles Chaplin when she was acting in a small playhouse in Carmel. Whether Chaplin played any role in her career is questionable. In 1938, Comingore denied being Chaplin's protégé and indicated that press reports had exaggerated the limited contact that she had with Chaplin and one of his assistants.

Comingore played bit parts in Hollywood movies until Orson Welles cast her as Susan Alexander, the second wife of press tycoon Charles Foster Kane, in his debut feature film Citizen Kane (1941). Her performance garnered rave reviews: “(She) is put through a range of emotions that would try any actress one could name,” wrote The Hollywood Reporter.

After seeing Dorothy on the big screen, every studio in town wanted to borrow her. But RKO refused. She then fell so ill a doctor ordered bed rest. But when she didn’t show up for work, the studio suspended her. Dorothy had hoped to star in Sister Carrie, Jane Eyre, or some other classy production, but upon returning to work found nothing to do. "I must have said the wrong thing at the right time," she told friends, "and I’d like to know what it is."

Hearst’s yellow ink had stained her reputation. According to documents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Dorothy had landed on a government watch list for the crime of "distributing Communist literature to negroes." It’s true that Dorothy had canvassed Watts, stumping door-to-door for actor Albert Dekker, a state Assembly candidate. (He won.) And yes, she had worked with musician Lead Belly and singer Paul Robeson to try and desegregate whites-only USO clubs. (They succeeded.) And she had indeed urged voters, soldiers, and Baptist teetotalers to support "union solidarity" whenever possible. At a time when Hollywood workers were organizing themselves, she became a marked woman. A few years later, the US House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC) became a permanent fixture, and Dorothy’s FBI file had grown thick. HUAC’s stated mission was to investigate "subversive activities in the entertainment industry," but Richard [Collins, her husband], Dorothy, and thousands of others believed it was out to strangle free speech and organized labor.

The star also had acquired a powerful enemy - the 78-year-old Hearst. The media mogul so hated Dorothy's portrayal of his mistress, 44-year-old Marion Davies, that he used his chain of newspapers and radio stations to smear the young woman. Hearst's columnists Hedda Hopper and Walter Winchell publicly accused Dorothy of belonging to the "Party" (the Communist Party), and borrowed Orwellian "newspeak" to malign her. As it was, Dorothy never was a dues-paying "commie".

Comingore's supposed Communist connections played a role in a legal battle for custody of her two children with Richard J. Collins. She also said that her 1953 arrest on a prostitution charge was "all a part of my being an 'unfriendly witness.'"

According to Peter Bogdanovich in his DVD commentary on Citizen Kane, she impaired her subsequent career by turning down too many roles that she felt were uninteresting. She appeared in the film version of the Eugene O'Neill play The Hairy Ape (1944) with William Bendix, Susan Hayward and John Loder. Comingore's last movie appearance was in a supporting role in The Big Night (1951) starring John Drew Barrymore. Her career ended in 1951, when she was caught up in the Hollywood blacklist.

The following year she was called to appear before the House Un-American Activities Committee about her alleged Communist connections, and she declined to answer on constitutional grounds. Soon after she was accused of heavy drinking in custody hearings for her children, and on March 19, 1953, she was arrested for prostitution in West Hollywood. The arrest is believed by many to have been part of a revenge scheme by police offended by her mocking the HUAC.

Comingore was one of the contributors to Citizen Kane who were personally interviewed by Dr. Howard Suber of the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television. His research was used by Pauline Kael for her 1971 essay, "Raising Kane". A copy of the interview is in the collection of the Lilly Library at Indiana University Bloomington.

Personal life

Comingore was married to Richard Meltzer. She also married screenwriter Richard J. Collins, with whom she had a daughter, Judith, and a son, Michael. They were divorced in 1946. Her other husbands were screenwriter Theodore Strauss and John Crowe, who was not in the entertainment business, from 1958 until her death in 1971.

Comingore struggled with alcoholism during her later life, to the extent that it caused her to lose custody of her two children with Richard J. Collins.

Death

Comingore died December 30, 1971, from a pulmonary disease in Stonington, Connecticut, at the age of 58. She had also broken her back years prior and subsequently restricted her movements, mostly confined to her seaside apartment. She was survived by her husband, a son, and a daughter.

Filmography

Actress
1952
The Doctor (TV Series)
- The Red Wig (1952)
1952
Rebound (TV Series) as
Dotty
- The Losers (1952) - Dotty
1951
The Big Night as
Julie Rostina
1951
Fireside Theatre (TV Series) as
Rita
- Handcuffed (1951) - Rita
1949
Any Number Can Play as
Mrs. Purcell
1944
The Hairy Ape as
Helen Parker
1941
Citizen Kane as
Susan Alexander Kane
1940
Rockin' Thru the Rockies (Short) as
Daisy (as Linda Winters)
1940
The Heckler (Short) as
Ole's Girlfriend (uncredited)
1940
Pioneers of the Frontier as
Joan Darcey (as Linda Winters)
1940
Convicted Woman as
Inmate (uncredited)
1940
Cafe Hostess as
Tricks (as Linda Winters)
1939
The Awful Goof (Short) as
Charley's Fiancee (as Linda Winters)
1939
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington as
Woman at Station (uncredited)
1939
Scandal Sheet as
Marjorie Lawe (as Linda Winters)
1939
Oily to Bed, Oily to Rise (Short) as
June Jenkins (uncredited)
1939
Golden Boy as
Fight Spectator (uncredited)
1939
Five Little Peppers and How They Grew as
Nurse (uncredited)
1939
Coast Guard as
Nurse (uncredited)
1939
Good Girls Go to Paris as
Tearoom Hostess (uncredited)
1939
Outside These Walls as
Secretary (uncredited)
1939
North of the Yukon as
Jean Duncan (as Linda Winters)
1939
Romance of the Redwoods as
Bit Role (uncredited)
1939
Blondie Meets the Boss as
Francine Rogers (as Linda Winters)
1938
Trade Winds as
Ann (as Linda Winters)
1938
Comet Over Broadway as
Mrs. McDermott (as Linda Winters)
1938
Prison Train as
Louise Terris (as Linda Winters)
1938
Campus Cinderella (Short) as
Co-Ed (uncredited)
Soundtrack
1941
Citizen Kane (performer: "Una voce poco fa", "Aria from 'Salammbo'" - uncredited)
Self
1940
Citizen Kane Trailer (Documentary short) as
Dorothy Comingore
Archive Footage
2014
Magician: The Astonishing Life and Work of Orson Welles (Documentary) as
Susan Alexander Kane (clip from Citizen Kane (1941)) (uncredited)
1988
The South Bank Show (TV Series documentary) as
Susan Alexander Kane
- John Houseman (1988) - Susan Alexander Kane

References

Dorothy Comingore Wikipedia