Gladys Mary Smith was the daughter of
actors. Soon after the death of her father she began taking child’s
roles in productions in which her mother was playing. She made her first
stage appearance in a Toronto stock company at the age of five. At
eight she went on tour, and within 10 years she was playing on Broadway.
From 1906 the family adopted the name Pickford. She made her New York
debut in David Belasco’s The Warrens of Virginia in December
1907. At age 14 she had already learned more of stagecraft than many
older actors, and her winsome face, framed by a mass of golden curls,
made her appeal virtually irresistible.
Pickford began working as a motion-picture extra at D.W. Griffith’s Biograph Studio, starring in his 1909 film The Lonely Villa. By 1913 she had turned permanently to the screen, rising to first rank with Adolph Zukor’s
Famous Players Company. Her meteoric rise from an anonymous player to a
star with her own production company (Mary Pickford Studios, created by
Famous Players) was attributable not only to the phenomenal popularity
of her films but also to her dedication to her craft and her meticulous
care in creating quality entertainments. The ringleted ingenue with an
expression of sweet sincerity and invincible innocence that she played
in such silent films as Hearts Adrift (1914), Poor Little Rich Girl (1917), Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1917), and Johanna Enlists
(1918) enthralled audiences everywhere. She was known at first as the
“Biograph Girl with the Curls” and then as “Our Mary” when that much of
her name was revealed; with the release of Tess of the Storm Country
in 1914, she was firmly established as “America’s Sweetheart.” In 1917
First National Films paid her $350,000 for each of three films,
including the very successful Daddy Long Legs (1919).
In 1919 Pickford took the lead in organizing the United Artists Corporation with Griffith, Charlie Chaplin, and Douglas Fairbanks.
In 1920, after the dissolution of her first marriage (1911–19) to actor
Owen Moore, she married Fairbanks (divorced 1935). Pickford’s
popularity continued unabated in Pollyanna (1920), Little Lord Fauntleroy (1921), Little Annie Rooney (1925), My Best Girl (1927), Coquette (1929; her first talking picture, for which she won an Academy Award for best actress), The Taming of the Shrew (1929; her only film with Fairbanks), and Kiki (1931).
With Secrets
(1933), her 194th film, Pickford retired from the screen. Thereafter
she devoted herself to United Artists, of which she was first vice
president from 1935 and for which she produced several films. She also
wrote Why Not Try God (1934), The Demi-Widow (1935), and My Rendezvous with Life
(1935), and in the 1930s she appeared on radio. In 1937 she married
actor Charles (“Buddy”) Rogers. Her later years were spent on business
and civic and charitable activities, and she eventually became a recluse
at Pickfair, the lavish estate she had built with Fairbanks. Sunshine and Shadow, her autobiography, was published in 1955.
Saturday, 14 November 2015
Mary Pickford
07:49
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