Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

Actors Whose Careers Were Not Fully Realized

Nathan Dodge

One Too Many
Messages
1,051
Location
Near Miami
Judy Holliday comes to mind. An Oscar winner for Born Yesterday (1950) but only a handful of movies afterwards. She died of cancer in 1965, age 43.

Who're yours?
 
Mine would be...

Carole Landis. Quite a beauty and a pretty good actress, who never got a real break in the movies. She had a rough personal life and killed herself in 1948 after Rex Harrison -- with whom she was having an affair -- snubbed her. (Some claimed it was murder.)

Dolores Moran. Another absolute stunner. Howard Hawks effectively ruined her career, with some really sordid, nasty fallout at the studio I read about in a biography. However, the movie that nailed her coffin shut in Hollywood, "To Have and Have Not," gave us Lauren Bacall (who Hawks was also quite upset with, since he discovered her and then she fell in love with Bogart.)

Priscilla Lane. You'll remember her as Cary Grant's fiancee/wife in "Arsenic and Old Lace," but her career never really took off. She was funny, pretty, and could sing too.
 

dhermann1

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,154
Location
Da Bronx, NY, USA
Robert Newton. He was the DEFINITIVE Long John Silver, but he was a lot of other interesting characters as well. The bottle ruined him, as it did so many.
 

KY Gentleman

One Too Many
Messages
1,881
Location
Kentucky
Laird Cregar. His portrayal in "The Lodger" was very good, also in "Hangover Square". He died after weight loss surgery but had a promising career ahead of him.
Freddie Prinz also could have had a very bright career, he was so young when he comitted suicide.
 

mike

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,000
Location
HOME - NYC
I guess it also depends if you mean they were celebrated for a time and have since been forgotten. That is often the case in stars of yesteryear. A terrific example is if you look at some of the contemporaries of Chaplin/Pickford/Fairbanks in the teens. An unbelievable amount of "stars" came and went well before 1920. I consider it like the Permian Age that preceded the first Dinosaurs. :eek:
 

Miss Golightly

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,312
Location
Dublin, Ireland
Montgomery Clift - one of the greatest actors ever.

He made some fantastic movies during his brief career - The Heiress, A Place in the Sun, The Misfits, Judgement at Nuremberg and From Here to Eternity (for which he should have won the Oscar - not Frank Sinatra) and died at the age of 46.
 

Lady Day

I'll Lock Up
Bartender
Messages
9,087
Location
Crummy town, USA
freddi.jpg


Fredi Washington

Fredi Washington was a very fair-skinned woman with light eyes, even though she was actually a black woman through and through. This often made her equally disliked by both black and white film fans. But she still got a chance to show her talent in films. Her first film performance was with Duke Ellington in a musical short, "Black and Tan", as a dancer. In Hollywood she was urged to pass for white by studio heads, who said they would make her a bigger star than Norma Shearer, Joan Crawford, Constance Bennett and Greta Garbo. Fredi refused. Her best-known role was as Peola in the film Imitation of Life (1934). She appeared with Paul Robeson in The Emperor Jones (1933) and in a few other films with her skin darkened. Her best work was on the stage, her best stage performance being in "Mamba's Daughters" with Ethel Waters. Fredi never made it to the top like her contemporaries Ethel Waters, Josephine Baker and Nina Mae McKinney because she didn't look black enough. But Fredi had what it took, and it is evident in the few films that she did do.

I always loved her preformance in Imitation fo life, and tried to find more of her work, but there just isnt very much.

LD
 

mike

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,000
Location
HOME - NYC
dhermann1 said:
You'd really have to include the great John Barrymore in this list. Again, the bottle.

I think he was fully realized, just on the stage rather than on film.
 

SamMarlowPI

One Too Many
Messages
1,761
Location
Minnesota
priscilla lane kinda retired early...so know knows...but i wish she would've stuck around because she was gorgeous...and not a bad actress...
 

Chasseur

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,494
Location
Hawaii
Robert Walker. What a great performance in "Strangers on a Train" and then he dies right afterward....
 

Naphtali

Practically Family
Messages
767
Location
Seeley Lake, Montana
"Not fully realized" to me means a good actor who has made unusually poor script choices. Rutger Hauer leaps to mind.

Among the life-shortened careers would be Edna May Oliver and Rags Ragland, Marie Dresser, John Belushi.
 

Dixon Cannon

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,157
Location
Sonoran Desert Hideaway
I always thought too, that Vic Morrow's career was never fully realized. His role in 'Blackboard Jungle' should have launched his career into superstardom. Unfortunately, 'Combat!' typecast him and he never regained his stride and full potential.

Old episodes of 'Combat!' though do show his screen intensity and he directed several episode that showed off his skill in telling a good story.

Who knows what might have come out of his 'Twilight Zone' performance but for the unfortunate accident.

-dixon cannon
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,766
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
A very funny young comedienne by the name of Marjorie White -- she turned up in supporting roles in dozens of films at Fox during the early talkie era, and then went on to freelancing at other studios -- only to lose her life in a car accident in 1934. A dynamic slapstick-oriented gal who could also sing and dance with the best of them -- consider her performances in "Sunny Side Up" and "Diplomaniacs" for hints of what might have been.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
109,306
Messages
3,078,460
Members
54,244
Latest member
seeldoger47
Top