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Madame Sul Te Wan

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Full Name
  
Nellie Crawford

Name
  
Madame Sul-Te-Wan

Cause of death
  
Stroke

Role
  
Film actress


Occupation
  
Actress

Years active
  
1915–1958

Ex-spouse
  
Robert Reed Conley

Madame Sul-Te-Wan wwwblackpastorgfilesblackpastimagessulTeWa


Born
  
September 12, 1873 (
1873-09-12
)

Other names
  
Sul-Te-WanMadame SultewanMadame Wan

Died
  
February 1, 1959, Woodland Hills, California, United States

Parents
  
Silas Crawford, Cleo De Londa

Movies
  
Intolerance, Queen Kelly, Sarah and Son, The Narrow Street

Similar People
  
Erich von Stroheim, Billy Bitzer, D W Griffith, Gloria Swanson, Raoul Walsh

Children
  
Onest Conley, Odel Conley

Our Faded History: Madame Sul Te Wan


Madame Sul-Te-Wan (born Nellie Crawford; March 7, 1873 – February 1, 1959) was an American stage, film and television actress. The daughter of freed slaves, she began her career in entertainment touring the East Coast with various theatrical companies and moved to California to become a member of the fledgling film community. She became known as a character actress, appeared in high-profile films such as The Birth of a Nation (1915) and Intolerance (1916), and easily navigated the transition to the sound films.

Contents

Her career spanned over five decades, and, in 1986, she was inducted into the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame. Sul-Te-Wan was the first African American actor, male or female, to sign a film contract and be a featured performer.

Madame Sul-Te-Wan Saturday Open Thread LesserKnown AfricanAmerican Actors

Early life

Madame Sul-Te-Wan Our Faded History Madame Sul Te Wan YouTube

Nellie Crawford was born in Louisville, Kentucky, USA to freed slaves Cleon De Londa and Silas Crawford. Her father left the family early in her life, and her mother became a laundress who found employment working for Louisville stage actresses. Young Nellie became enchanted by watching the young actresses rehearse when she delivered laundry for her mother. When she was older she moved to Cincinnati, Ohio, joined a theatrical company called Three Black Cloaks, and began billing herself as Creole Nell. She also formed her own theatrical companies and toured the East Coast. After moving to California, Madame Sul-Te-Wan began her acting career in uncredited roles in director D. W. Griffith's controversial 1915 drama Birth of a Nation and the colossal 1916 epic Intolerance. Sul-Te-Wan had allegedly written Griffith a letter of introduction after hearing that Griffith was shooting a film in her Kentucky hometown.

In the early 1900s, Sul-Te-Wan married Robert Reed Conley. They had three sons, but Conley abandoned his family when the third one was only three weeks old. Two of her sons, Odel and Onest Conley, would become actors and appear in several films during their careers, occasionally in films featuring their mother.

Early film career

Following her roles for Griffith, Madame Sul-Te-Wan followed up in 1916 with a role in the Anita Loos-penned drama The Children Pay with young actress Lillian Gish and in 1917 with Gish's sister Dorothy in the Edward Morrissey-directed drama Stage Struck.

Throughout the 1910s and 1920s, Madame Sul-Te-Wan would establish herself as a rather publicly recognizable character actress, most often appearing in "Mammy" roles alongside such popular actors of the silent film era as Tom Mix, Leatrice Joy, Matt Moore, Mildred Harris, Harry Carey, Robert Harron, and Mae Marsh. Some of her most memorable roles of the era were in the 1927 James W. Horne-directed Buster Keaton comedy College, and in the 1929 Erich von Stroheim-directed drama Queen Kelly, starring Gloria Swanson.

Madame Sul-Te-Wan transitioned into the talkie era with relative ease and continued to appear in high-profile films alongside such prominent film actors as Conrad Nagel, Barbara Stanwyck, Fay Wray, Richard Barthelmess, Jane Wyman, Luise Rainer, Melvyn Douglas, Lucille Ball, Veronica Lake and Claudette Colbert. However, as a black woman in the era of segregation, she was consistently limited to appearing in roles as minor characters who were usually convicts, "native women", or domestic servants, such as her role as a "Native Handmaiden" in the 1933 box-office hit King Kong. Despite the motion picture industry's limitations for African-American performers, Sul-Te-Wan worked consistently throughout the 1930s and 1940s.

In 1937, Sul-Te-Wan was cast in the memorable role of Tituba in the film Maid of Salem, a dramatic retelling of the events surrounding of the Salem Witch Trials of 1692. The film starred Claudette Colbert, Fred MacMurray, Gale Sondergaard, Pedro de Cordoba, and Louise Dresser and was rather financially successful. Sul-Te-Wan's performance garnered critical praise.

Later career

On September 12, 1953, a banquet was held at the Hollywood Playground Auditorium to honor Madame Sul-Te-Wan by motion picture actors and film personalities. Amongst the 200 guests who attended the event were Louise Beavers, Rex Ingram, Mae Marsh, Eugene Pallette and Maude Eburne.

In 1954, Sul-Te-Wan appeared in the Otto Preminger directed and almost entirely African-American cast musical drama Carmen Jones opposite Dorothy Dandridge, Harry Belafonte, Diahann Carroll, and Pearl Bailey as Dandridge's grandmother. The film marked a departure for Sul-Te-Wan, who after appearing onscreen for over four decades, was finally able to act in a role that was atypical of her "Mammy" roles. The pairing of Dandridge and Sul-Te-Wan in Carmen Jones spawned a still widely believed but erroneous rumor—that Sul-Te-Wan was Dandridge's actual grandmother (some allege that she is Dandridge's great-grandmother). However, there is no merit to the claim and the two women are unrelated.

At age 77, Sul-Te-Wan married for the second time, to French interior designer Antone Ebenthur. The marriage lasted three years. During the 1950s, while in her 80s, she continued to appear onscreen in a number of well-received films, albeit now mostly in smaller bit parts and often uncredited. Her last screen appearance came in the 1958 Anthony Quinn-directed adventure film The Buccaneer, starring Yul Brynner and Charlton Heston.

Death

On February 1, 1959, Madame Sul-Te-Wan died after suffering a stroke at the age of 85 at the Motion Picture Actors' Home in Woodland Hills, California. She was interred at the Pierce Brothers' Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery in North Hollywood, Los Angeles County, California.

Legacy and honors

Sul-Te-Wan was inducted in the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame in 1986.

Quotes

  • "We never did discover the origin of her name. No one was bold enough to ask." - Lillian Gish.
  • Filmography

    Actress
    1960
    Tarzan and the Trappers (TV Movie) as
    Witch Woman
    1958
    The Buccaneer as
    Good Luck Charm Vendor
    1957
    Band of Angels as
    Flower Vendor (uncredited)
    1957
    Something of Value as
    Midwife (uncredited)
    1955
    Medic (TV Series) as
    Grandma Jonson
    - All My Mothers, All My Fathers (1955) - Grandma Jonson (as Madame Sultewan)
    1954
    Carmen Jones as
    Hagar - Carmen's Grandmother (uncredited)
    1949
    The Story of Seabiscuit as
    Libby (uncredited)
    1949
    Mighty Joe Young as
    Kifa (uncredited)
    1943
    Revenge of the Zombies as
    Mammy Beulah
    1943
    Thank Your Lucky Stars as
    Bit in 'Ice Cold Katy' Number (uncredited)
    1942
    Mokey as
    Miss Cully - Old Black Woman (uncredited)
    1941
    Sullivan's Travels as
    Church Harmonium Player (uncredited)
    1941
    King of the Zombies as
    Tahama
    1940
    Love Thy Neighbor as
    Lady McBeth (uncredited)
    1940
    Maryland as
    Naomi (uncredited)
    1940
    Safari as
    Native Woman
    1939
    Torchy Blane.. Playing with Dynamite as
    Ruby - Black Convict Woman (uncredited)
    1939
    Tell No Tales as
    Jim Alley's Mother (uncredited)
    1938
    Kentucky as
    Lily
    1938
    The Affairs of Annabel as
    Benzedrina (uncredited)
    1938
    The Toy Wife as
    Eve - A Black Servant (uncredited)
    1938
    Island in the Sky as
    Scrubwoman (uncredited)
    1938
    In Old Chicago as
    Hattie (as Madame Sultewan)
    1937
    Maid of Salem as
    Tituba - A Slave
    1936
    Can This Be Dixie? as
    Bit (uncredited)
    1936
    San Francisco as
    Earthquake Survivor (uncredited)
    1935
    So Red the Rose as
    Slave (uncredited)
    1934
    Imitation of Life as
    Black Cook (uncredited)
    1934
    Black Moon as
    Ruva
    1934
    Operator 13 as
    Slave at Medicine Show (uncredited)
    1934
    A Modern Hero as
    Mme. Azais' Neighbor (uncredited)
    1933
    Big Time or Bust as
    Gussie - Betty's Maid (uncredited)
    1933
    King Kong as
    Native (uncredited)
    1933
    Ladies They Talk About as
    Prisoner Mustard (uncredited)
    1932
    Queen Kelly as
    Kali Sana - Aunt's Cook (uncredited)
    1932
    Jungle Mystery as
    Native Woman in Stockade (uncredited)
    1931
    Heaven on Earth as
    Voodoo Sue (as Madame Sul Te Wan)
    1931
    Pagan Lady as
    Carla the Servant (uncredited)
    1930
    The Thoroughbred as
    Sacharine
    1930
    Sarah and Son as
    Belloc's Maid (uncredited)
    1929
    Hallelujah as
    Church Member (uncredited)
    1929
    The Carnation Kid as
    The Maid (uncredited)
    1927
    Uncle Tom's Cabin as
    Slave at Wedding (uncredited)
    1927
    College as
    Cook (uncredited)
    1925
    The Golden Bed as
    Boarding House Maid (uncredited)
    1925
    The Narrow Street as
    Easter
    1924
    The Lightning Rider as
    Mammy
    1923
    The Southbound Limited (Short)
    1922
    Manslaughter as
    Prison Inmate (uncredited)
    1922
    The Son of a Sheik (Short)(as Madame Suterman)
    1922
    The Show (Short) as
    Maid (uncredited)
    1921
    Squirrel Food (Short) as
    Flirt
    1920
    Why Change Your Wife? as
    Sally's Maid (uncredited)
    1919
    His Musical Sneeze (Short) as
    Maid (uncredited)
    1918
    Who's Your Father? (Short) as
    Black Mother (uncredited)
    1918
    Old Wives for New as
    Viola's Maid (uncredited)
    1918
    Tarzan of the Apes as
    Esmeralda - Jane's Maid (uncredited)
    1917
    Stage Struck (uncredited)
    1916
    The Children Pay as
    Undetermined Secondary Role (uncredited)
    1916
    Intolerance as
    Girl at the Marriage Market (uncredited)
    1916
    Hoodoo Ann as
    Black Cindy (uncredited)
    1915
    The Birth of a Nation as
    Black Woman - Dr. Cameron's Taunter (uncredited)
    1915
    The Cause of It All (Short) as
    Mary - The Hotel Cook
    Soundtrack
    1941
    Sullivan's Travels (performer: "Let My People Go" - uncredited)
    Archive Footage
    1993
    American Masters (TV Series documentary) as
    Self
    - D.W. Griffith: Father of Film (1993) - Self
    1986
    Horrible Horror (Video) as
    Tahama, In clips from 'King of the Zombies'
    1919
    The Fall of Babylon as
    Girl of the Marriage Market (uncredited)

    References

    Madame Sul-Te-Wan Wikipedia