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Madge Evans
Birthday:
July 1
Birth Name:
Margherita Evans
Height:
164 cm
Biography
Well, I've just about decided to try once more turning a cold shoulder to tears, before I give myself up and become typically American for all time. I don't want to be a pal. I don't want to be a sort of female George M. Cohan. I want to get me a long jade green cigarette holder, drooping eyelids, and drooling earrings and a personality to match.
Well, I've just about decided to try once more turning a cold shoulder to tears, before I give myself up and become typically American for all time. I don't want to be a pal. I don't want to be a sort of female George M. Cohan. I want to get me a long jade green cigarette holder, drooping eyelids, and drooling earrings and a personality to match.
Gee, it's tough to be normal in Hollywood!
Gee, it's tough to be normal in Hollywood!
I am supposed to be completely normal. I am the Typical American Girl. I became a Typical American Girl by accident-the accident of a few early picture parts depicting her ... That's my role and I'm stuck with it. Maybe I'd like to be known as a mysterious silent woman, a provocative creature of languor and possible secret sorrows. Nobody cares. Maybe I've a...
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I am supposed to be completely normal. I am the Typical American Girl. I became a Typical American Girl by accident-the accident of a few early picture parts depicting her ... That's my role and I'm stuck with it. Maybe I'd like to be known as a mysterious silent woman, a provocative creature of languor and possible secret sorrows. Nobody cares. Maybe I've all the instincts of a madcap. Who would believe it?
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Madge Evans
Lovely Madge Evans was the perennial nice girl in films of the 1930's. By then, she had been in front of the camera for many years, starting with Fairy Soap commercials at the age of two (she sat on a bar of soap holding a bunch of violets with the tag line reading "have you a little fairy in your home?"). 'Baby Madge' also lent her name to a children's hat company. In 1914, aged five, she was picked out by talent scouts to appear in the William Farnum movie The Sign of the Cross (1914), followed by The Seven Sisters (1915) with Marguerite Clark.By the end of the following year, she had amassed some twenty film credits, appearing with such noted contemporary stars as Pauline Frederick or Alice Brady. All of her early films were made on the East Coast, at studios in Ft.Lee, New Jersey. In 1917 (aged eight), Madge made her Broadway debut in 'Peter Ibbetson' with John Barrymore and Lionel Barrymore. She resumed her stage career in 1926 as an ingenue with 'Daisy Mayme' and the following year appeared with Billie Burke in Noël Coward's costume drama 'The Marquise' (1927).Her pleasing looks and personality soon attracted the attention of Hollywood and she was eventually signed by MGM in 1931. During the next decade, she appeared in several A-grade productions, notably as Lionel Barrymore's daughter in MGM's Les invités de huit heures (1933) and as the dependable Agnes Wickfield in one of the best-ever filmed versions of David Copperfield (1935). She co-starred opposite James Cagney in the gangster movie Le Bataillon des sans-amour (1933), Spencer Tracy in The Show-Off (1934) and listened to Bing Crosby crooning the title song in La chanson à deux sous (1936). Madge received praise for her performance as the star of Beauty for Sale (1933) and The New York Times review of January 13 1934 described her acting in Les amants fugitifs (1934) (opposite Robert Montgomery ) as 'spontaneous and captivating'. Many of her 'typical American girl' roles did not allow her to express aspects of the greater acting range she undoubtedly possessed. Too often she was cast as the 'nice girl' - and those rarely make much of a dramatic impact. On the few occasions she was assigned the role of 'other woman' , such as the Helen Hayes-starrer What Every Woman Knows (1934), audiences found her character difficult to believe and disassociate from her all-round wholesome image. When her contract with MGM expired in 1937, Madge wound down her film career and, following her 1939 marriage, concentrated on being the wife of celebrated playwright Sidney Kingsley. She last appeared on stage in one of his plays, "The Patriots", in 1943.
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Madge Evans Filmography

Stand Up and Cheer!
Dinner at Eight
The Mayor of Hell
Hallelujah Im a Bum
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