Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Irene Purcell

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Irene Purcell

Role
  
Film actress

Children
  
Karen Johnson Boyd



Full Name
  
Irene Mary Purcell

Born
  
August 7, 1896 (
1896-08-07
)
Whiting, Indiana, US

Died
  
July 9, 1972, Racine, Wisconsin, United States

Spouse
  
Herbert Fisk Johnson, Jr. (m. 1941–1972)

Movies
  
Just a Gigolo, The Man in Possession, The Crooked Circle, Bachelor's Affairs

Similar People
  
Herbert Fisk Johnson, Samuel Curtis Johnson, Jack Conway, Sam Wood, Alfred L Werker

Irene Mary Purcell (August 7, 1896 – July 9, 1972) was an American film and stage actress, who appeared mostly in comedies, and later married Herbert Fisk Johnson, Jr., the wealthy grandson of the founder of S. C. Johnson & Son.

Contents

Career

She appeared opposite William Haines in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's romantic comedy film Just a Gigolo (1931), directed by Jack Conway and adapted from the 1930 play Dancing Partner, by David Belasco. The same year, she played the lead role in Sam Wood's romantic comedy The Man in Possession, adapted from H. M. Harwood's play of the same name. She was paired opposite Reginald Owen and Robert Montgomery. Purcell starred alongside Buster Keaton and Jimmy Durante in the comedy The Passionate Plumber (1932), directed by Edward Sedgwick. A French-language version of the latter film, Le Plombier amoureux, was filmed by MGM at the same time.

In The Passionate Plumber she played a socialite, who enlists a plumber to act as her lover, to make her partner jealous. It was based on the play Dans sa candeur naïve by Jacques Deval. It was the second screen adaptation of the play, following the 1928 silent film The Cardboard Lover. James L. Neibaur wrote in his book The Fall of Buster Keaton that "the entire production seems off-balance". Despite not so favorable reviews, the film was a commercial success. The New York Times wrote that Purcell "fits the mood of the comedy nicely". She was a part of a June 9, 1935 Lux Radio Theatre broadcast, based on the 1930 play Candle-Light. Her notable Broadway appearances were in Jean Furguson Black's comedy Penny Wise (1937), J. Frank Davis' The Ladder (1926), Elmer Harris' comedy The Great Necker (1928), Dillard Long's comedy A Good Woman, Poor Thing (1933), Lynn Starling's comedy The First Apple (1933), Frederic and Fanny Hatton's comedy Dancing Partner (1930), and Martin Flavin's Cross Roads (1929).

Purcell was a trustee of Ripon College and member of Governor's Council on the Arts (Wisconsin). She also served as an adviser to Johnson Foundation.

Personal life

Irene Purcell Irene Purcell 1902 1972 Find A Grave Memorial

On October 4, 1941, she married Herbert Fisk Johnson, Jr., president of S. C. Johnson & Son, at his apartment in Chicago. The couple had met for the first time in 1938 in Australia. Post-marriage they lived at Wingspread designed by architect Frank Lloyd Wright. She died in Racine, Wisconsin in 1972.


Irene Purcell Pictures of Irene Purcell Pictures Of Celebrities

Irene Purcell Fancy That And a Book Review Thousand Islands Life Magazine

Filmography

Actress
1932
Le plombier amoureux
1932
The Crooked Circle as
Thelma Parker
1932
Bachelor's Affairs as
Jane Remington
1932
Westward Passage as
Baroness Diane von Stael
1932
The Passionate Plumber as
Patricia Jardine
1931
The Man in Possession as
Crystal Wetherby
1931
Just a Gigolo as
Roxana Hartley
1929
Just One Word (Short)

References

Irene Purcell Wikipedia