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Hope Hampton

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Occupation
  
Actress, Producer

Years active
  
1918-1938


Name
  
Hope Hampton

Role
  
Actress

Hope Hampton wwwdoctormacrocomImagesHampton20HopeAnnexA

Full Name
  
Mae Elizabeth Hampton

Born
  
February 19, 1897 (
1897-02-19
)
Houston, Texas

Children
  
at least one child, circa 1920

Died
  
January 23, 1982, New York City, New York, United States

Spouse
  
Jules Brulatour (m. 1923–1946)

Movies
  
The Light in the Dark, Fifty-Fifty, The Gold Diggers, The Bait, Lawful Larceny, The Price of a Party

Similar People
  
Jules Brulatour, Dorothy Gibson, Henri Diamant‑Berger, Maurice Tourneur, Clarence Brown

Movie legends hope hampton


Hope Hampton (Mae Elizabeth Hampton) (February 19, 1897 - January 23, 1982) was an American silent motion picture actress and producer, who was noted for her seemingly effortless incarnation of siren and flapper types in silent-picture roles during the 1920s. She also at one time was an aspiring opera singer.

Contents

Hope Hampton Hope Hampton

Hope Hampton-My Life


Early life

Hope Hampton FileHope Hampton Jul 1920 MPjpg Wikimedia Commons

Texas-born, Philadelphia-bred beauty-contest winner Hampton, was discovered by U.S. silent cinema pioneer Jules Brulatour while working as an extra for director Maurice Tourneur. She made her screen debut in 1920's A Modern Salome, and went on to feature prominently in several Brulatour-financed films. Her last starring role was in The Road to Reno (1938) with Randolph Scott and Glenda Farrell. In 1923, Hampton wed her manager Brulatour, and they remained married until his death in 1946.

Later life

Hope Hampton Silence is Platinum Miss Hope Hampton

After retiring from motion pictures at the dawn of sound, Hampton turned to opera and made her debut with the Philadelphia Opera in Manon. The idea that she ever toured with the Metropolitan Opera is belied by a look at the company's online archives. She returned to the screen in The Road to Reno (1938), a film directed by her husband. Later she was known as The Duchess of Park Avenue, a leading member of New York's social set.

Hope Hampton Silence is Platinum Miss Hope Hampton

In 1978, she was crowned Queen of the Beaux Arts Ball. She presided with King Arthur Tracy.

She died of a heart attack at the age of 84.

Personal life

Hampton and Brulatour took a honeymoon trip to Egypt, there a Sheikh offered Brulatour £10,000 British pounds to buy his wife. Brulatour smiled at the Sheikh and told him that Mrs. Brulatour's jewels were worth more than that.

Filmography

Actress
1961
Hey, Let's Twist! as
Hope Hampton
1938
The Road to Reno as
Linda Halliday
1927
The Call of the Sea (Short) as
The Mermaid
1927
Springtime of Love (Short) as
Clothilde
1926
The Unfair Sex as
Shirley Chamberlain
1925
Lover's Island as
Clemmy Dawson
1925
Marionettes (Short) as
Colombine
1925
Fifty-Fifty as
Ginette
1924
The Price of a Party as
Grace Barrows
1924
The Truth About Women as
Hilda Carr
1923
Does It Pay? as
Doris Clark
1923
The Gold Diggers as
Jerry La Mar
1923
Hollywood as
Hope Hampton
1923
Lawful Larceny as
Marion Dorsey
1922
From Farm to Fame (Short) as
Hope Hampton
1922
The Light in the Dark as
Bessie MacGregor
1921
Stardust as
Lily Becker
1921
Love's Penalty as
Janis Clayton
1921
The Bait as
Joan Granger
1920
A Modern Salome as
Virginia Hastings
1918
Woman
Producer
1922
The Light in the Dark (producer)
1921
Love's Penalty (producer - uncredited)
1921
The Bait (producer)
Soundtrack
1938
The Road to Reno (performer: "I Gave My Heart Away", "Tonight Is the Night")
Self
-
Maurice Tourneur, tisseur de rêve (Documentary) (post-production)
1978
V.I.P.-Schaukel (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- Episode #8.2 (1978) - Self
1954
The Stork Club (TV Series) as
Self
- Robert Clary, Betty Clooney, The Chordettes, John Forsythe, Hope Hampton (1954) - Self
1929
Hope Hampton in the Fourth Act of 'Manon' (Short) as
Self - Vocalist
1927
Paris Fashions in Colour Displayed by Hope Hampton (Documentary short) as
Self
1927
Hope Hampton Displaying Creations Parisienne in Colour (Documentary short) as
Self
1926
Hope Hampton Displaying Paris Originations in Color (Documentary short) as
Self
1926
Parisian Inspirations in Colour Display by Hope Hampton (Documentary short) as
Self
1926
Colourful Fashions from Paris (Short) as
Self
1925
Parisian Modes in Colour (Documentary short) as
Self
1922
Kodachrome Two-Color Test Shots No. III (Documentary short)
1920
Screen Snapshots, Series 1, No. 5 (Documentary short) as
Self
1920
Screen Snapshots, Series 1, No. 2 (Documentary short) as
Self
1912
Max boxeur par amour (Short) as
Self (uncredited)
Archive Footage
1992
Twist (Documentary) as
Self (uncredited)
1942
Screen Snapshots Series 22, No 10 (Short) as
Self

References

Hope Hampton Wikipedia