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{{Infobox actor
{{Infobox actor
| birthname = Violet Mary Klotz
| birthname = Violet Mary Klotz
| image = Lady Killer.JPG
| image = Mae Clarke in Fast Workers.jpg
| caption = "Lady Killer" 1933
| caption = "Fast Workers" 1933
| birthdate = {{birth date|1910|08|16}}
| birthdate = {{birth date|1910|08|16}}
| birthplace = [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadelphia]], [[Pennsylvania]], United States
| birthplace = [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadelphia]], [[Pennsylvania]], United States

Revision as of 19:07, 21 March 2010

Mae Clarke
"Fast Workers" 1933
Born
Violet Mary Klotz
Years active1929-1970
Spouse(s)Lewis Brice (1928-divorced)
Stevens Bancroft (1937-divorced)
Herbert Langdon (1946-divorced)

Mae Clarke (August 16, 1910 – April 29, 1992) was an American film actress.

Mae Clarke was born Violet Mary Klotz in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[1] She started her career as a dancer, sharing a room with Barbara Stanwyck, and subsequently starred in many films for Universal Studios, including the original screen version of The Front Page (1931) and the first sound version of Frankenstein (1931) with Boris Karloff. Clarke played the role of Henry Frankenstein's fiancee in Frankenstein, who was attacked by the Monster (Karloff) on her wedding day. The Public Enemy, released that same year, contained one of cinema's most famous (and frequently parodied) scenes, in which James Cagney pushed a half grapefruit into Clarke's face, then went out and picked up Jean Harlow. The film was so popular that it ran 24 hours a day at a theatre in Times Square upon its initial release, and Clarke's ex-husband had the grapefruit scene timed and would frequently buy a ticket, enter the theatre to enjoy that sequence, then leave the theatre.[2]

She appeared as Myra Deauville, in the 1931 pre-Code version of Waterloo Bridge. In the film, she portrays a young American woman who is forced by circumstance into a life of prostitution in World War I London. Both the film and Clarke's performance were well received by the critics.

She also appeared in the modest pre-code Universal film Night World (1932), with Lew Ayres, Boris Karloff, and Hedda Hopper.

By the mid-1930s though, Clarke was no longer a leading lady and was only featured in small or bit parts through to the 1960s.

Personal life

She was married and divorced three times, to Lewis Brice, Stevens Bancroft and Herbert Langdon. She did not have children.

Clarke died on April 29, 1992, at age 81, from cancer, in Woodland Hills, California. She is buried in Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery.

Selected filmography

Features

Short Subjects

  • Screen Snapshots (1932)
  • Screen Snapshots Series 16, No. 7 (1937)

See also

  • Clarke, Mae. Featured Player - An Oral Autobiography of Mae Clarke. Edited With An Introduction by James Curtis. Santa Barbara/Lanham: Santa Teresa Press/Scarecrow Press, 1996.
  • Halliwell's Filmgoers Companion

References

  1. ^ Mae Clarke at AllMovie
  2. ^ a story told in James Cagney's autobiography, Cagney by Cagney

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