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Biography for Clara Bow

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Hoop-la (1933)
as Lou
Call Her Savage (1932)
as Nasa Springer
Kick In (1931)
as Molly Hewes
No Limit (1931)
as [Helen] Bunny [O'Day]
Her Wedding Night (1930)
as Norma Martin
Galas de la Paramount (1930)
as Actor
Love Among the Millionaires (1930)
as Pepper Whipple
True to the Navy (1930)
as Ruby Nolan
Paramount on Parade (1930)
as Actor
The Saturday Night Kid (1929)
as Mayme
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 CLARA BOW
AKA: Clara Gordon Bow;
Born: 1905-07-29
Birth place: Brooklyn, New York, USA
Death: 1965-09-26
Death cause: heart attack
Profession: actor
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Biography

One of the loveliest and most talented actresses of the late 1920s, Bow was largely unappreciated by critics, though adored by her fans. Clara Bow endured a Dickensian childhood (abusive father, psychotic mother) in Brooklyn, which she tried to escape by becoming an actress. Winning a beauty contest, Bow was doing bit parts by 1923. That year she was signed by producer B.P. Schulberg of Preferred, and worked nearly to death for the next two years, appearing in more than 20 films (many on loan-out). She learned her craft and became a familiar face to screen audiences.

Bow was signed by Paramount in 1926 and her star immediately rose with good roles in good films: as Alice Joyce's selfish daughter in "Dancing Mothers", a brilliant turn as a Klondike bride in "Mantrap", as Eddie Cantor's leading lady in "Kid Boots" (all 1926). Bow achieved her greatest notoriety with the lead role in "It" (1927), which earned her the tag of the "It" girl--a quintessential Jazz Age term which suggested modernity, independence and sexual liberation. Several more hits followed, displaying Bow's increasingly impressive talent: "Children of Divorce" (1927), "Wings" (1927), "Ladies of the Mob" (1928).

Clara Bow's career ended with the talkies, for several reasons, her Brooklyn accent being the least of them. She hated the discipline of talkies; a number of vehicles at Paramount, with whom she had several conflicts, were unworthy of her; fan magazines harangued her about her active love life; and her own emotional state was becoming fragile. After making a total of 11 talkies (the best being the bizarre 1932 "Call Her Savage"), Bow retired with husband Rex Bell to Nevada.



Family

SON: Rex Anthony Bell. Born in 1934.

SON: George Robert Bell. Born in 1938.



Companion

COMPANION: Gilbert Roland. Actor.

COMPANION: Victor Fleming. Director.

COMPANION: Gary Cooper. Actor. Had relationship in the late 1920s.

COMPANION: Bela Lugosi. Actor.

HUSBAND: Rex Bell. Actor, politician. Married in 1931; separated in the late 1930s; died on July 4, 1962 while campaigning.



Milestone

1922: Won fan magazine contest and made screen debut in "Beyond the Rainbow"; scenes cut from original version, restored for later release after Bow was a star

1922: First credited film appearance, "Down to the Sea in Ships"

1924: Signed by producer Bud Schulberg

1926: Signed by Paramount

1929: First talking film, "The Wild Party"

1931: Involved in law suit with secretary, resulting in scandal and termination of her Paramount contract

1933: Final film, "Hoopla"



Bibliography

"Clara Bow -- Runnin' Wild" David Stenn 1988



Citizenship

United States

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