American actress (1910–1983)
Gladys Blake
Born (1910-05-12 ) May 12, 1910Died May 21, 1983(1983-05-21) (aged 73) Occupation Actress Years active 1933–1952 Spouse Lee Gresham
Gladys Blake (born Gladys Timmons ; May 12, 1910 – May 21, 1983) was an American character actress from the 1930s to the 1950s.[ 1]
Biography
Blake was born on January 12, 1910, in Luray, Virginia . Her mother, Ada Timmons, died when Gladys was less than a year old.[ 2]
At fourteen, she entered the theater world in a stock company, before moving on to vaudeville . In vaudeville, she met her husband, Lee Gresham, and the two formed an act together. While performing in Los Angeles, they were noticed by producer Edward Small , which led to her beginning in the film industry.[ 2]
Blake made her film debut in a small role in I Have Lived (1933), directed by Richard Thorpe .[ 3] She had her first featured role later that same year in Rainbow over Broadway , which Thorpe also directed.[ 4]
Over her 20-year career, she appeared in over 100 films.[ 5] She was noted for playing very talkative supporting roles.[ 6]
Appearing mostly in supporting or bit parts, she was occasionally given a featured role, as in Lucky Night (1939), which starred Myrna Loy and Robert Taylor ;[ 7] or Woman of the Year (1942), which starred Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn , in which she played Flo Peters, the wife of a friend of Tracy's character.[ 8] Even more rarely she would be given the lead in a film, such as in Racing Blood (1936).[ 9] In the early 1940s, she played the recurring role of "Maisie" in several of the Dr. Kildare films starring Lew Ayres , Lionel Barrymore , and Laraine Day .[ 10] [ 11] [ 12]
Other notable films in which she appeared include: Ship Ahoy (1942), starring Eleanor Powell and Red Skelton ;[ 13] the Abbott and Costello film, Who Done It? ;[ 14] the 1943 version of Phantom of the Opera , starring Claude Raines ;[ 15] The Naughty Nineties , again with Abbott and Costello;[ 16] On the Town ;[ 17] The Yellow Cab Man , starring Red Skelton;[ 18] and the 1952 epic, The Greatest Show on Earth .[ 19]
Blake's final role was in 1952's This Woman is Dangerous , starring Joan Crawford and Dennis Morgan , in which she plays a garrulous hairdresser.[ 20]
Blake died on May 21, 1983, aged 73, in Sacramento, California .[ 1]
Filmography
(Per AFI database)[ 5]
References
^ a b "Gladys Blake (actress) profile" . Omnilexica. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ a b "Gladys Blake biography" . MoviePictures.org. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "I Have Lived details" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "Rainbow over Broadway details" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ a b "Gladys Blake profile" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "Gladys Blake biography" . AllMovie.com. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "Lucky Night details" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "Woman of the Year details" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "Racing Blood details" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "Dr. Kildare's Crisis details" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "Dr. Kildare's Wedding Day details" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "The People vs. Dr. Kildare details" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "Ship Ahoy details" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "Who Done It? details" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "Phantom of the Opera details" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "The Naughty Nineties details" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "On the Town details" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "The Yellow Cab Man details" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "The Greatest Show on Earth details" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
^ "This Woman Is Dangerous details" . American Film Institute. Retrieved January 10, 2015 .
External links