Dolores Costello
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Dolores Costello (September 17, 1905 – March 1, 1979)[1] was an American film actress who achieved her greatest success during the era of silent movies. She was nicknamed "The Goddess of the Silent Screen". She was the mother of John Drew Barrymore, and grandmother of Drew Barrymore.
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[edit] Early years
Costello was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the daughter of actors Maurice Costello and the former Mae Altschuk. Dolores and her younger sister Helene made their first film appearances in the years 1909-1915 as child actresses for the Vitagraph Film Company. They played supporting roles in several films starring their father, who was a popular matinee idol at the time. Dolores Costello's earliest listed credit on the IMDb is in the role of a fairy in a 1909 adaptation of Shakespeare's's A Midsummer Night's Dream.
[edit] Star at Warner Bros.
The two sisters appeared on Broadway together and their success resulted in contracts with Warner Brothers Studios. In 1926, after several small parts in feature films, Dolores Costello starred opposite John Barrymore in The Sea Beast, a loose adatation of Herman Melville's Moby-Dick. Warner Bros. soon began starring her in her own vehicles. Meanwhile, she and Barrymore became romantically involved and, after a two year affair, married in 1928.
Within a few years of achieving stardom, the delicately beautiful blonde-haired actress had become a successful and highly regarded film personality in her own right, and as a young adult her career developed to the degree that in 1926 she was named a WAMPAS Baby Star, and had acquired the nickname "The Goddess of the Silver Screen."
Warners alternated Costello between films with cotemporary settings and elaborate costume dramas. In 1928 she was re-teamed with John Barrymore in When a Man Loves, an adatation of Manon Lescaut. In 1929 she co-starred with George O'Brien in Noah's Ark, a part-talkie epic directed by Michael Curtiz.
[edit] Sound films
Costello spoke with a lisp (something that her granddaughter, Drew Barrymore has seemed to inherit), and found it difficult to make the transition to talking pictures, but after two years of voice coaching she was comfortable speaking before a microphone. One of her early sound film appearances was with her sister Helene in Warner Bros.'s all-star extravaganza The Show of Shows (1929). Her acting career, however, became less a priority for her following the birth of her first child and she retired from the screen in 1931 to devote time to her family. However her marriage to John Barrymore proved to be a difficult one due to his increasing alcoholism, and they divorced in 1935.
Costello resumed her career a year later and achieved some successes, most notably in Little Lord Fauntleroy (1936), and The Magnificent Ambersons (1942). She retired permenately from acting following her appearance in This is the Army (1943), again under the direction of Michael Curtiz.
[edit] Later years
Costello spend the remaining years of her life in semi-seclusion managing an avocado farm.
Shortly before her death, she agreed to be interviewed for the documentary series Hollywood discussing her film career. She died from emphysema in Fallbrook, California in 1979 and was interred in the Calvary Cemetery, East Los Angeles. Her interview scenes were broadcast posthumously in 1980.
Dolores Costello has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her contributions to Motion Pictures, at 1645 Vine Street.
[edit] Filmography
[edit] Child roles
Dolores Costello appeared as a child actress in many films made between 1909 and 1915. Among them are:
- 1909: A Midsummer Night's Dream
- 1910: The Telephone
- 1911: Consuming Love, or St. Valentine's Day in Greenaway Land A Geranium; The Child Crusoes; His Sister's Children; A Reformed Santa Claus; Some Good in All
- 1912: Captain Jenks' Dilemma; The Meeting of the Ways; For the Honor of the Family; She Never Knew; Lulu's Doctor; The Troublesome Step-Daughters; The Money Kings; A Juvenile Love Affair; Wanted ... a Grandmother; Vultures and Doves; Her Grandchild; Captain Barnacle's Legacy; Bobby's Father; The Irony of Fate; The Toymaker; Ida's Christmas
- 1913: A Birthday Gift; The Hindoo Charm; In the Shadow; Fellow Voyagers
- 1914: Some Steamer Scooping; Etta of the Footlights; Too Much Burglar
- 1915: The Evil Men Do
[edit] Adult roles
Year | Title | Role(s) |
---|---|---|
1923 | The Glimpses of the Moon | Bit Part |
Lawful Larceny | Nora the maid | |
1925 | Greater Than a Crown | Isabel Frances |
Princess of Lividia | ||
Bobbed Hair | Bit part | |
1926 | Mannequin | Joan Herrick |
The Sea Beast | Esther Harper | |
Bride of the Storm | Faith Fitzhugh | |
The Little Irish Girl | Dot Walker | |
The Third Degree | Annie Daly | |
1927 | When a Man Loves | Manon Lescaut |
A Million Bid | Dorothy Gordon | |
Old San Francisco | Dolores Vasquez | |
The Heart of Maryland | Maryland Calvert | |
The College Widow | Jane Witherspoon | |
1928 | Tenderloin | Rose Shannon |
Glorious Betsy | Betsy Patterson | |
Noah's Ark | Mary/Miriam | |
1929 | The Redeeming Sin | Joan Billaire |
Glad Rag Doll | Annabel Lee | |
Madonna of Avenue A | Maria Morton | |
Hearts in Exile | Vera Zuanova | |
‘The Show of Shows | Meet My Sister number | |
1930 | Second Choice | Vallery Grove |
1931 | Expensive Women | Constance 'Connie' Newton |
1936 | Little Lord Fauntleroy | 'Dearest' Erroll |
Yours for the Asking | Lucille Sutton | |
1938 | The Beloved Brat | Helen Cosgrove |
Breaking the Ice | Martha Martin | |
1939 | King of the Turf | Eve Barnes |
Whispering Enemies | Laura Crandall | |
Outside These Walls | Margaret Bronson | |
1942 | The Magnificent Ambersons | Isabel |
1943 | This Is the Army | Mrs. Davidson |
[edit] Reference
- ^ Motion Picture Performers. A bibliography of magazine and periodical articles, 1900-1969. Compiled by Mel Schuster. Metuchen: Scarecrow Press, 1971.