This Flash movie requires a newer version of the Flash plug-in. Please upgrade your Flash plug-in by visiting www.macromedia.com
Movie Database
(Over 150,000 titles)
Site
Sign In register

Biography for Lola Albright

Biography
Complete Filmography
with Synopsis
User Reviews
Fan Sites
All Photos and Archives
The Helicopter Spies (1968)
The Money Jungle (1968)
as Peggy Lido
The Impossible Years (1968)
as Alice Kingsley
Where Were You When the Lights Went Out? (1968)
as Roberta Lane
The Way West (1967)
as Rebecca Evans
Lord Love a Duck (1966)
as Marie Greene
Joy House (1964)
as Barbara
Kid Galahad (1962)
as Dolly Fletcher
A Cold Wind in August (1961)
as Iris Hartford
Seven Guns to Mesa (1958)
as Julie
More >>
Contribute an image Contribute a video Contribute information Write a review
This Flash movie requires a newer version of the Flash plug-in. Please upgrade your Flash plug-in by visiting www.macromedia.com
 LOLA ALBRIGHT
AKA: Lois Jean Albright;
Born: 1925-07-20
Birth place: Akron, Ohio, USA
Profession: model, actor, receptionist, switchboard operator, stenographer
Rate & Comment on this performer

Biography

A charming but often miscast leading actress, with a tough style reminiscent of Barbara Stanwyck, Lola Albright was shown at her best in "A Cold Wind in August" (1961). She won the Best Actress award at the 1966 Berlin Film Festival for her performance in "Lord Love a Duck" as Tuesday Weld's mother who turns suicidal when she thinks she has ruined her daughter's life. Albright was also known to TV viewers as Edie Hart, the girlfriend of Craig Stevens' "Peter Gunn" (NBC, 1958-60; ABC 1960-61).

Albright was a switchboard operator, stenographer and photographer's model while doing bit dramatic roles to learn her craft. She made her film debut with a small part in "The Pirate" (1948), with Judy Garland and Gene Kelly. She was seen with Garland and Fred Astaire in "Easter Parade" (also 1948) but won her first real notices as the wife of a boxing match manipulator who becomes involved with a fighter (Kirk Douglas) in "Champion" (1948). Some of her roles were unchallenging, such as in "The Tender Trap" (1955), where Albright was merely one of the women in Frank Sinatra's life. Yet, for all the programmers, there were shots such as "A Cold Wind in August", in which Albright again won critical acclaim, this time for playing an aging stripper. Albright's film career petered out around 1968, the year she played David Niven's wife and the mother of a nubile teen-age daughter in "The Impossible Years".

Unlike other film actors who were slow to take the plunge into TV, Albright was actively working in the medium from 1951, when she guest-starred in two episodes of "Lux Video Theatre". Throughout the 50s, she appeared made numerous guest appearances, including several during the 1955-56 TV season as a love interest on "The Bob Cummings Show". Albright was on "Peter Gunn" for its entire three-season run and, in 1965, replaced an ailing Dorothy Malone for part of the season on "Peyton Place" (ABC). She continued appearing on episodics, particularly those of Universal TV, into the early 80s. She never really clicked in TV-movies, appearing in only three: the thrillers "How I Spent My Summer Vacation" (NBC, 1967) and "Terraces" (NBC, 1977) and the melodramatic "Delta County, U.S.A." (ABC, 1977).



Family

FATHER: John Paul Albright. Evangelical singer.

MOTHER: Marion Alma Albright. Evangelical singer.



Companion

HUSBAND: Jack Carson. Actor. Met when they appeared together in "The Good Humor Man"; began relationship in 1950; married on August 1, 1952; divorced in October 1958.

HUSBAND: Bill Chadney. Pianist, restaurateur. Married on May 19, 1961; separated c. 1967; reconciled; separated again in the early 1970; divorced in 1974.



Milestone

Raised in Akron, Ohio

In the early 1940s worked as receptionist at Akron radio station, occasionally performing in bit parts

1943: Began working regularly as radio performer; then worked as model

1947: Signed to a contract by MGM

1948: Film debut in a bit part in "The Pirate"

1948: Had first real screen role in the musical "Easter Parade"

1949: Had breakthrough role in "Champion"

1950: Cast opposite future husband Jack Carson in "The Good Humor Man"

1951: Began working in television, making appearances on "Pantomime Quiz" and "Lux Studio Theatre"

1954: Appeared in "Invitation to Marriage" on TV's "Fireside Theatre"

1955 - 1956: Played recurring role on TV's "The Bob Cummings Show"

TV series debut as regular, Edie Hart, girlfriend to "Peter Gunn"

1962: Starred with Elvis Presley in "Kid Galahad"

1966: Won the Silver Bear Best Actress Award at the Berlin Film Festival for "Lord Love a Duck"

1966: Briefly replaced an ill Dorothy Malone as Constance Mackenzie in the ABC primetime serial "Peyton Place"

1967: Made TV-movie debut, "How I Spent My Summer Vacation"

1968: Last feature films to date, "The Impossible Years", "The Money Jungle" and "Where Were You When the Lights Went Out?"

In the 1970s and 1980s, made guest appearances on many TV shows like "Medical Center", "Kojak", "Switch" and "Quincy, M.E."



Education

King Grammar School - Akron, Ohio West High School - Akron, Ohio


Citizenship

United States

Upcoming Titles Playing on TCM for Lola Albright
Tender Trap, The
Feb 15, 06:00PM
Email me a reminder >>
More>>
No reviews currently exist for Lola Albright
Post a Review>>
You can also post on TCM's Message Boards >>
TCMDB Homepage