• Name: Claudette Colbert
  • Date of Birth: September 13, 1903
  • Place of Birth: Paris, France
Mini-bio: Paris-born actress Claudette Colbert was brought to New York at the age of seven by her banker father. She planned an art career after high school graduation, studying at the Art Student's League. Att... read moreending a party with actress Anne Morrison, the 18-year-old was offered a three-line bit in Morrison's new play The Wild Westcotts. That ended her art aspirations, and Colbert embarked on a stage career in 1925, scoring her first big critical success in the 1926 Broadway production of The Barker, in which she played a duplicitous snake charmer. One year later, the actress made her first film at Long Island's Astoria studio, For the Love of Mike (1927), but the film was unsuccessful and she enjoyed neither the experience nor her young director, Frank Capra. So back she went to Broadway, returning to films during the talkie revolution in The Hole in the Wall (1929), which was also the movie-speaking debut of Edward G. Robinson. Once again, Colbert disliked film acting; but audiences responded to her beauty and cultured voice, so she forsook the stage for Hollywood. Colbert's popularity (and salary) skyrocketed after she was cast as "the wickedest woman in history," Nero's unscrupulous wife Poppaea, in the Biblical epic The Sign of the Cross (1932). Colbert expanded her range as a street-smart smuggler's daughter in I Cover the Waterfront and in the pioneering screwball comedy Three-Cornered Moon (both 1933), but it was for a role she nearly refused that the actress secured her box-office stature. Virtually every other actress in Hollywood had turned down the role of spoiled heiress Ellie Andrews in Columbia's It Happened One Night (1934), and when director Frank Capra approached an unenthusiastic Colbert, she wearily agreed to appear in the film on the conditions that she be paid twice her normal salary and that the film be completed before she was scheduled to go on vacation in four weeks. Colbert considered the experience one of the worst in her life -- until the 1935 Academy Awards ceremony, in which It Happened One Night won in virtually all major categories, including a Best Actress Oscar for her. Colbert spent the next decade alternating between comedy and drama, frequently in the company of her most popular co-star, Fred MacMurray. She gained a reputation of giving 110 percent of her energies while acting, which compensated for her occasional imperviousness and her insistence that only one side of her face be photographed (which frequently necessitated redesigning movie sets just to accommodate her phobia about her "bad side"). Colbert remained a top money-making star until her last big hit, The Egg and I (1947), after which she lost some footing, partly because of producers' unwillingness to meet her demands that (under doctor's orders) she could only film a short time each day (her doctor was her husband). She hoped to jump-start her career in the role of Margo Channing in All About Eve, but those plans were squelched when she injured her back and had to relinquish the character to Bette Davis. Traveling the usual "fading star" route, Colbert made films in Europe and a budget Western in the U.S. before returning triumphantly to Broadway, first in 1956's Janus, then in the long-running 1958 comedy Marriage Go Round. The actress also appeared on television, although reportedly had trouble adjusting to live productions. In 1961, she returned to Hollywood as Troy Donahue's mother in Parrish. It would be her last film appearance until the 1987 TV movie, The Two Mrs. Grenvilles -- in which she far outclassed her material. Still a prominent figure in the Hollywood hierarchy, Colbert retired to her lavish home in California, where she frequently entertained her old friends Ronald and Nancy Reagan. Claudette Colbert died in 1996 in Bridgetown, Barbados, at the age of 92. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
Post it anywhere Link it anywhere

Claudette Colbert Wiki Profile

EasyEdit tools are temporarily disabled for maintenance.
Welcome to Cladette Coplberts wiki page


flixster.actor.pane.364611127 - flixster
Claudette Colbert mini-bio
:
(born Sept. 13, 1903, Paris, France—died July 30, 1996, Cobblers Cove, Barbados) American stage and motion picture actress known for her trademark bangs, her velvety, purring voice, her confident, intelligent style, and her subtle, graceful acting. Colbert moved with her family to New York City about 1910. While studying fashion design, she landed a small role in the Broadway play The Wild Westcotts (1923) after meeting the playwright at a party. She had begun using the name Claudette instead of Lily in high school, and for her stage name she added her paternal grandmother's maiden name, Colbert. Although The Westcotts had only a short run, Colbert decided to make acting her career. Other Broadway and touring productions followed, and she achieved stardom in The Barker (1927), playing a carnival snake charmer opposite Norman Foster, to whom she was married from 1928 to 1934. (Her marriage to Joel Pressman lasted from 1935 until his death in 1968.) While still starring in The Barker, Colbert made her film debut in the silent movie For The Love of Mike (1927). Miserable and unhappy because she was unable to take advantage of one of her greatest assets, her voice, she returned to the stage determined never to make another film. In 1929, however, she was persuaded to make her first talking picture, The Hole in the Wall, and thereafter worked solely on screen for more than 20 years.Most of Colbert's early movies were undistinguished, although her performances were admired. One of her first memorable roles was in Cecil B. DeMille's The Sign of the Cross (1932). As Poppaea, “the wickedest woman in the world,” she slinked about in revealing costumes, vamped costar Fredric March, and in one famous scene took a bath in what was said to be asses' milk. She caused a sensation and two years later reinforced her sex symbol status in DeMille's flamboyant Cleopatra, playing the title role with tongue-in-cheek charm.Colbert's breakthrough came in 1934. She not only starred as Cleopatra but had two big successes with the melodrama Imitation of Life and the classic screwball comedy It Happened One Night. Colbert had been initially reluctant to appear in the lightweight comedy, but her sparkling performance as a runaway heiress became her most famous and won her an Academy Award. One of the highest-paid film stars of the 1930s and '40s, she continued to demonstrate her expert comic timing in such sophisticated comedies as The Gilded Lily (1935), Midnight (1939), and The Palm Beach Story (1942). She also had notable dramatic roles in films such as Private Worlds (1935), Since You Went Away (1944), and Three Came Home (1950). The characters Colbert created were relaxed and charming, even when embroiled in outlandish situations; she imbued them, seemingly effortlessly, with intelligence, style, warmth, and humour. The actress was also personally noted for these qualities, as well as for her professionalism (despite her much-publicized insistence that she be photographed only from the left).Colbert, who grew up speaking both French and English, appeared in several European films in the 1950s. But whether domestic or foreign, most of these films were undistinguished. She returned to the stage in 1951 in Westport, Connecticut, with Noël Coward's Island Fling and to Broadway in 1956 with Janus. Her other theatrical appearances included The Marriage-Go-Round (1958), The Irregular Verb to Love (1963), The Kingfisher (1978), andflixster.actor.pane.364611127 - flixster Aren't We All? (1985). Colbert continued to act on stage and on television, appearing with Coward in Blithe Spirit (1956) and on the television miniseries The Two Mrs. Grenvilles (1987), her last major project. In 1989 she was honoured with a Kennedy Center award for lifetime achievement.

VITAL STATS

Claudette Colbert Information:
Eye color:
Height:
Nickname(s):
Notable feature(s):
Education:
Family:
Resides in:
Religious affiliations:
Political affiliation:
Personal interests/hobbies:
Charities/Causes:
Other:
This page on Claudette Colbert is
a Work
In Progress!
More additions ar coming soon!
Thank you,
Occamsrazor



Claudette Colbert Movies

Claudette Colbert Movies
Claudette Colbert at LocateTV.com

Facts

No facts approved yet. Be the first

Claudette Colbert Trivia

  • Which two actresses played the Macendonian Queen of Egypt Cleopatra.  Answer »
  • who is this?   Answer »
  • Claudette Colbert was his co-star in "It Happened One Night".  Answer »
  • Claudette Colbert plays a runaway heiress and Clark Gable an Ex-reporter.  Answer »

Actor Quizzes

Claudette Colbert Quizzes

No quizzes for Claudette Colbert. Want to create one?