Isabel Jewell | |
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![]() Jewell in 1933 byClarence Sinclair Bull | |
Born | (1907-07-19)July 19, 1907 Shoshoni, Wyoming, U.S. |
Died | April 5, 1972(1972-04-05) (aged 64) Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Other names | Isabel Jewel Isobel Jewell |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1932–1972 |
Spouses |
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Isabel Jewell (July 19, 1907 – April 5, 1972) was an American actress, who rose to prominence in the 1930s and early 1940s. Some of her more famous films wereCeiling Zero,Marked Woman,A Tale of Two Cities, andGone with the Wind.
Born inShoshoni, Wyoming[1] on July 19, 1907,[1] Jewell was the daughter of Emory Lee Jewell and Livia A. Willoughby Jewell.[1] Her father was "a prominent...doctor and medical researcher."[2] She was educated atSt. Mary's Academy in Minnesota and at Hamilton College in Kentucky.[1]
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After years in theatre stock companies, including an 87-week stint in Lincoln, Nebraska, she got a part on Broadway inUp Pops the Devil (1930).[3] She received glowing critical reviews forBlessed Event (1932) as well.[4]
Jewell's film debut came inBlessed Event (1932).[1] She had been brought to Hollywood by Warner Brothers for the film version ofUp Pops the Devil. Jewell gained other supporting roles, appearing in a variety of films in the early 1930s. She played stereotypical gangsters' women in such films asManhattan Melodrama (1934) andMarked Woman (1937). She was well-received playing against type asthe seamstress sentenced to death on the guillotine withSydney Carton (Ronald Colman inA Tale of Two Cities (1935). Her most significant role was Sally Bates inShe Had to Choose. Jewell's films includedGone with the Wind (1939) (in the role of "that white trash, Emmy Slattery"),Northwest Passage (1940),High Sierra (1941), and the low-budgetThe Leopard Man (1943).
By the end of the 1940s, her roles had reduced in significance to the degree that her performances often were uncredited, e.g.The Snake Pit. She performed in radio dramas in the 1950s, includingThis Is Your FBI.
In February 1965, she played Madame Ahr, a member of a bank-robbing circus troupe, in an episode ofGunsmoke entitled "Circus Trick."
In 1972, Jewell appeared oppositeEdie Sedgwick in the filmCiao! Manhattan. Her final film was theB movieSweet Kill (1973), the directorial debut ofCurtis Hanson.
Jewell was aDemocrat who supportedAdlai Stevenson's campaign during the1952 presidential election.[5] She was also a practicingEpiscopalian.[6]
Jewell's first marriage (which "was not generally known during Jewell's lifetime...[nor] mentioned in the press during her heyday in American films") occurred when she wed Lovell "Cowboy" Underwood when she was 19.[1] In the mid to late 1930s, Jewell was seen at nightclubs with actorWilliam Hopper.[7] In 1936, she was engaged to actorOwen Crump,[8] marrying in 1939 and divorcing in 1941.[9][unreliable source?] In 1941, Jewell married actorPaul Marion, who was then aprivate in the United States Army. They separated in 1943,[1] and were divorced on May 12, 1944.[10]
Jewell died in Los Angeles, California on April 5, 1972, aged 64, from suicide after taking an overdose ofbarbiturates.[1][11] Her ashes were scattered in the Pacific Ocean.[11]
In 1960, Jewell was recognized with a star on theHollywood Walk of Fame for her contribution to motion pictures. The star is located at 1560 Vine Street.[12][13]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1931 | The Week End Mystery | Miss Keith | Short |
1932 | Blessed Event | Dorothy Lane | Uncredited |
1933 | The Crime of the Century | Bridge Player | Uncredited |
1933 | Bondage | Beulah | |
1933 | Beauty for Sale | Hortense | Credited as Isobel Jewell |
1933 | Bombshell | Lily, Junior's Girl Friend | Credited as Isobel Jewell |
1933 | Day of Reckoning | Kate Lovett | |
1933 | Design for Living | Plunkett's Stenographer | |
1933 | Advice to the Lovelorn | Rose | |
1933 | The Women in His Life | Catherine 'Cathy' Watson | |
1933 | Counsellor at Law | Bessie Green | |
1934 | Men in White | Scenes cut | |
1934 | Let's Be Ritzy | Betty | |
1934 | Manhattan Melodrama | Annabelle | |
1934 | Here Comes the Groom | Angy | |
1934 | She Had to Choose | Sally Bates | |
1934 | Evelyn Prentice | Judith Wilson | |
1935 | Shadow of Doubt | Inez 'Johnny' Johnson - singer | |
1935 | I've Been Around | Sally Van Loan | |
1935 | Times Square Lady | 'Babe' Sweeney | |
1935 | The Casino Murder Case | Amelia Llewellyn | |
1935 | Mad Love | Marianne | Scenes cut |
1935 | A Tale of Two Cities | Seamstress | |
1936 | Ceiling Zero | Lou Clarke | |
1936 | Dancing Feet | Mabel Henry | |
1936 | The Leathernecks Have Landed | Brooklyn | |
1936 | Big Brown Eyes | Bessie Blair | |
1936 | Small Town Girl | Emily 'Em' Brannan | |
1936 | 36 Hours to Kill | Jeanie Benson | |
1936 | The Man Who Lived Twice | Peggy Russell | |
1936 | Valiant Is the Word for Carrie | Lilli Eipper | |
1936 | Go West, Young Man | Gladys | |
1936 | Career Woman | Gracie Clay | |
1937 | Lost Horizon | Gloria Stone | |
1937 | Marked Woman | Emmy Lou Eagan | |
1937 | Love on Toast | Belle Huntley | |
1938 | Swing It, Sailor! | Myrtle Montrose | |
1938 | The Crowd Roars | Mrs. Martin | |
1939 | They Asked for It | Molly Herkimer | |
1939 | Missing Daughters | Peggy | |
1939 | Gone with the Wind | Emmy Slattery | |
1940 | 'Oh Johnny, How You Can Love | Gertie | |
1940 | 'Northwest Passage' (Book I -- Rogers' Rangers) | Jennie Coit | |
1940 | Irene | Jane McGee | |
1940 | Babies for Sale | Edith Drake | |
1940 | Scatterbrain | Esther Harrington | |
1940 | Marked Men | Linda Harkness | |
1940 | Little Men | Stella | |
1941 | High Sierra | Blonde | |
1941 | For Beauty's Sake | Amy Devore | |
1943 | The Leopard Man | Maria | |
1943 | The Seventh Victim | Frances Fallon | |
1943 | Danger! Women at Work | Marie | |
1943 | The Falcon and the Co-eds | Mary Phoebus | |
1944 | The Merry Monahans | Rose Monahan | |
1945 | Steppin' in Society | Jenny the Juke | |
1945 | Sensation Hunters | Mae | |
1946 | Badman's Territory | Belle Starr | |
1947 | Born to Kill | Laury Palmer | |
1947 | The Bishop's Wife | Hysterical mother | |
1948 | Michael O'Halloran | Mrs. Laura Nelson | |
1948 | The Snake Pit | Ward 33 Inmate | Uncredited |
1948 | Unfaithfully Yours | First Telephone Operator | Uncredited |
1948 | Belle Starr's Daughter | Belle Starr | |
1949 | The Story of Molly X | Mrs. Mack—Prison Laundry Matron | Uncredited |
1953 | Man in the Attic | Katy | |
1954 | Drum Beat | Lily White | |
1957 | Bernardine | Mrs. McDuff | |
1972 | Sweet Kill | Mrs. Cole | |
1972 | Ciao! Manhattan | Mummy |
Year | Series | Role | Episode |
---|---|---|---|
1952 | The Adventures of Kit Carson | Mary Barker | "The Trap" |
1952 | The Unexpected | Sister | "One for the Money" |
1952 | Mr. & Mrs. North | Anne Noble | "The Nobles" |
1952 | Fireside Theatre | "The Boxer and the Stranger" | |
1953 | Fireside Theatre | "The Twelfth Juror" | |
1955 | Treasury Men in Action | "The Case of the Lady in Hiding" | |
1956 | Dr. Christian | Mae | "Insurance Policy" |
1957 | Climax! | Actress | " Murder Has a Deadline" |
1961 | The Aquanauts | Miss Port | "The Defective Tank Adventure" |
1961 | Lock Up | "Planter's Death" | |
1962 | The Untouchables | Sophie | "The Night They Shot Santa Claus" |
1964 | Kraft Suspense Theatre | Mrs. Lyons | "The Gun" |
1965 | Gunsmoke | Mme. Ahr | "Circus Trick" |
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