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Louise Closser Hale

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Full Name
  
Louise Closser

Role
  
Actress

Name
  
Louise Hale

Years active
  
1919-1933

Cause of death
  
heat prostration


Louise Closser Hale image2findagravecomphotos250photos201419149

Born
  
October 13, 1872 (
1872-10-13
)
Springfield, Massachusetts, U.S.

Occupation
  
Actress, author, playwright

Died
  
July 26, 1933, Los Angeles, California, United States

Spouse
  
Walter Hale (m. 1899–1917)

Books
  
An American's London, We Discover the Old Dominion, We Discover New England, The Actress

Parents
  
Joseph A. Closser, Louise M. Closser

Movies
  
Shanghai Express, Platinum Blonde, Dinner at Eight, No More Orchids, The Man Who Played G

Similar People
  
John G Adolfi, Josef von Sternberg, Clarence Brown, Frank Capra, George Cukor

Louise Closser Hale (October 13, 1872 – July 26, 1933) was an American actress, playwright and novelist.

Contents

Louise Closser was born in Chicago, Illinois. Her father was Joseph A. Closser (1844–1887), a wealthy grain dealer and her mother was Louise M. Closser (1847–1932). She studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City, and at Emerson College of Oratory in Boston.

She made her theatrical debut in Detroit in an 1894 production of In Old Kentucky. Her first theatrical success came in 1903, when she appeared in a Broadway production of George Bernard Shaw's Candida. In 1907, she made her London debut in Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch. She was equally famous on New York and London stages, she was known to the world of literature for such novels as Home Talent and An American's London, as well as to the theater for a play called Mother's Millions, which she co-authored.

In 1899, Closser married artist and actor Walter Hale, whose name she used for her stage career, and who illustrated a number of her travel books. She collaborated with him in the preparation of many travel works. They traveled all over the world. She was a correspondent for Harper's during World War I.

Aged 57, following her husband's death from cancer in 1917, she left the stage for Hollywood. She had a parallel career as an author and playwright, starting in the first decade of the 20th century.

Death

She experienced an apoplectic stroke while shopping in Hollywood, California in 1933. She was rushed to Monte Sano Hospital. She suffered another stroke the next day and died, aged 60. She had just recently finished filming Dinner at Eight.

In her will, Mrs. Hale requested an Episcopalian funeral service as simple and as inexpensive as possible. She directed that at the close of the service her body be cremated and that "no friend or kin accompany the body further than the church door." In her will, Mrs Hale said, "If I live in the memory of my friends, I shall have lived long enough."

Family

Hale had no children, but two sisters, writer Myla Jo Closser (1880–1962) of New York City, and Belle Closser Wilson (1870–1955) of Indianapolis, survived her. She left her estate to relatives and charities. Her body was cremated and the ashes were interred in Hollywood Forever Cemetery.

Filmography

Actress
1933
Duck Soup as
Reception Guest (uncredited)
1933
Dinner at Eight as
Hattie Loomis
1933
Another Language as
Mom
1933
Storm at Daybreak as
Militza Brooska
1933
The Barbarian as
Powers
1933
The White Sister as
Mina
1933
Today We Live as
Applegate
1932
Rasputin and the Empress as
Lazy Spoiled Woman (uncredited)
1932
The Son-Daughter as
Toy Yah
1932
No More Orchids as
Grandma Holt
1932
Faithless as
First Landlady
1932
Movie Crazy as
Mrs. Kitterman
1932
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm as
Aunt Miranda
1932
New Morals for Old as
Mrs. Warburton
1932
Letty Lynton as
Miranda, Letty's Maid
1932
Sky Bride as
Mrs. (Ma) Smith
1932
The Man Who Played God as
Florence Royle
1932
Shanghai Express as
Mrs. Haggerty
1931
Platinum Blonde as
Mrs. Schuyler
1931
Devotion as
Mrs. Emmet Mortimer
1931
Rebound as
Mrs. Jaffrey
1931
Daddy Long Legs as
Miss Pritchard
1931
Born to Love as
Lady Ponsonby
1930
The Princess and the Plumber as
Miss Eden
1930
Captain Applejack as
Aunt Agatha
1930
Dangerous Nan McGrew as
Mrs. Benson
1930
Big Boy as
Mother
1929
Paris as
Cora Sabbot
1929
The Outlaw in-Law (Short) as
The Mother-in-Law
1929
The Hole in the Wall as
Mrs. Ramsay
1919
Winning His Wife (Short)
Soundtrack
1933
Storm at Daybreak (performer: "Roses From the South")
Archive Footage
2007
Anna May Wong, Frosted Yellow Willows: Her Life, Times and Legend (Documentary) as
Mrs. Haggerty (clip from Shanghai Express (1932)) (uncredited)
1964
The Big Parade of Comedy (Documentary) as
Hattie Loomis in 'Dinner at Eight' (uncredited)

References

Louise Closser Hale Wikipedia


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