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Famous Like Me > Actress > Y > Loretta Young

Profile of Loretta Young on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Loretta Young  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 6th January 1913
   
Place of Birth: Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
   
Profession: Actress
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia
Loretta Young in 1935

Loretta Young (January 6, 1913 – August 12, 2000) was an American actress.

Born Gretchen Michaela Young in Salt Lake City, Utah, she moved with her family to Hollywood when she was three years old. Her sisters, Polly Ann Young and Elizabeth Jane Young (screen name Sally Blane), appeared in child parts in movies, and young Gretchen did the same. Her first role was at age 4 in the silent film The Primrose Ring. The movie's star, Mae Murray, so fell in love with little Gretchen that she asked to adopt her. Even though her mother said no, Gretchen was allowed to live with Murray for two years. Her half-sister Georgianna (daughter of her mother and stepfather George Belzer) eventually married Mexican actor Ricardo Montalban.

She was billed as Gretchen Young in her next film, also in 1917, Sirens of the Sea. It was not until 1928 that she first had her Loretta Young billing, in The Whip Woman. The next year, she was anointed one of the WAMPAS Baby Stars.

In 1930, Young, then only 17, ran off with 26-year-old actor Grant Withers and married him in Yuma, Arizona. (They had acted together in The Second Floor Mystery.) The marriage was annulled the next year, just as their second movie together, ironically called Too Young to Marry, came out.

In 1934, Young had an affair with Clark Gable and became pregnant. She and her mother moved to Europe, returning with a daughter. They told the whole world that the little girl had been adopted. The daughter herself, known as Judy Lewis (she took Young's second husband's last name), did not know the true story until she herself was an adult.

Young made several movies, working on as many as seven or eight a year. But although she was receiving fan and critical appreciation, it wasn't until 1947 that she received her first Oscar nomination -- and win -- for The Farmer's Daughter. The same year she starred in The Bishop's Wife, a perennial favorite that still airs on television during the Christmas season.

Hosting The Loretta Young Show

In 1949, she received another Academy Award nomination, for Come to the Stable. In 1953 she made her last movie, It Happens Every Thursday. Moving to television, she hosted and starred in the well-received anthology series The Loretta Young Show. Her trademark at the beginning of each show was to appear dramatically in a doorway, dressed in the latest of high fashion evening gowns.

She died of ovarian cancer in 2000 at the age of 87 at her half-sister Georgianna's home in Santa Monica, California, and was interred in the Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California.

Young has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, one for motion pictures at 6104 Hollywood Blvd. and one for television at 6141 Hollywood Blvd.

Filmography

  • The Primrose Ring (1917)
  • Sirens of the Sea (1917)
  • The Only Way (1919)
  • White and Unmarried (1921)
  • The Shiek (1921)
  • Naughty But Nice (1927)
  • Her Wild Oat (1927)
  • The Whip Woman (1928)
  • Laugh, Clown, Laugh (1928)
  • The Magnificent Flirt (1928)
  • The Head Man (1928)
  • Scarlet Seas (1928)
  • Seven Footprints to Satan (1929)
  • The Squall (1929)
  • The Girl in the Glass Cage (1929)
  • Fast Life (1929)
  • The Careless Age (1929)
  • The Forward Pass (1929)
  • The Show of Shows (1929)
  • Warner Bros. Jubilee Dinner (1930) (short subject)
  • Loose Ankles (1930)
  • The Man from Blankleys (1930)
  • Show Girl in Hollywood (1930) (Cameo)
  • The Second Floor Mystery (1930)
  • Road to Paradise (1930)
  • Kismet (1930)
  • The Truth About Youth (1930)
  • The Devil to Pay! (1930)
  • How I Play Golf, by Bobby Jones No. 8: 'The Brassie' (1931) (short subject)
  • Beau Ideal (1931)
  • The Right of Way (1931)
  • The Slippery Pearls (1931) (short subject)
  • Three Girls Lost (1931)
  • Too Young to Marry (1931)
  • Big Business Girl (1931)
  • I Like Your Nerve (1931)
  • The Ruling Voice (1931)
  • Platinum Blonde (1931)
  • Taxi! (1932)
  • The Hatchet Man (1932)
  • Play-Girl (1932)
  • Week-end Marriage (1932)
  • Life Begins (1932)
  • They Call It Sin (1932)
  • Employees' Entrance (1933)
  • Grand Slam (1933)
  • Zoo in Budapest (1933)
  • The Life of Jimmy Dolan (1933)
  • Heroes for Sale (1933)
  • Midnight Mary (1933)
  • She Had to Say Yes (1933)
  • The Devil's In Love (1933)
  • Man's Castle (1933)
  • The House of Rothschild (1934)
  • Born to Be Bad (1934)
  • Bulldog Drummond Strikes Back (1934)
  • Caravan (1934)
  • The White Parade (1934)
  • Clive of India (1935)
  • Shanghai (1935)
  • The Call of the Wild (1935)
  • The Crusades (1935)
  • Hollywood Extra Girl (1935) (short subject)
  • The Unguarded Hour (1936)
  • Private Number (1936)
  • Ramona (1936)
  • Ladies In Love (1936)
  • Love Is News (1937)
  • Cafe Metropole (1937)
  • Love Under Fire (1937)
  • Wife, Doctor and Nurse (1937)
  • Second Honeymoon (1937)
  • Four Men and a Prayer (1938)
  • Three Blind Mice (1938)
  • Suez (1938)
  • Kentucky (1938)
  • Wife, Husband and Friend (1938)
  • The Story of Alexander Graham Bell (1939)
  • Eternally Yours (1939)
  • The Doctor Takes a Wife (1940)
  • He Stayed for Breakfast (1940)
  • The Lady from Cheyenne (1941)
  • The Men in Her Life (1941)
  • Bedtime Story (1941)
  • A Night to Remember (1943)
  • China (1943)
  • Show Business at War (1943) (short subject)
  • Ladies Courageous (1944)
  • And Now Tomorrow (1944)
  • Along Came Jones (1945)
  • The Stranger (1946)
  • The Perfect Marriage (1947)
  • The Farmer's Daughter (1947)
  • The Bishop's Wife (1947)
  • Rachel and the Stranger (1948)
  • The Accused (1949)
  • Mother Is a Freshman (1949)
  • Come to the Stable (1949)
  • Key to the City (1950)
  • You Can Change the World (1951) (short subject)
  • Cause for Alarm! (1951)
  • Half Angel (1951)
  • Screen Snapshots: Hollywood Awards (1951) (short subject)
  • Paula (1952)
  • Because of You (1952)
  • It Happens Every Thursday (1953)

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Loretta Young