Joan Crawford filmography
The Joan Crawford filmography lists the film appearances of American actress Joan Crawford who starred in numerous motion pictures throughout a lengthy career that spanned nearly five decades.
She made her film debut in Lady of the Night (1925), as a body double for film star Norma Shearer. She appeared in several other films before she made her major breakthrough playing Lon Chaney's love interest in the 1927 horror film, The Unknown. Her major success in Our Dancing Daughters (1928) made her a popular flapper of the late 1920s. Her first sound film, Untamed (1929), was a critical and box office success.
Crawford would become a highly popular actress throughout the 1930s, as a leading lady for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. She starred in a series of "rags-to-riches" films that were extremely popular during the Depression-era, most especially with women. Her popularity rivaled fellow MGM actresses, including Greta Garbo, Norma Shearer, and Jean Harlow. She appeared in eight movies with Clark Gable, including romantic drama Possessed (1931), musical film Dancing Lady (1933), romantic comedy Love on the Run (1936), and romantic drama Strange Cargo (1940) among others. In 1937, she was proclaimed the first "Queen of the Movies" by Life magazine, but her popularity soon waned. In May 1938, after her films The Bride Wore Red (1937) and Mannequin (1938) proved to be expensive failures, Crawford—along with Greta Garbo, Katharine Hepburn, Fred Astaire, and Kay Francis and many others—was labeled "Box Office Poison", an actor whose "box office draw is nil".
Crawford managed to make a comeback in the comedy The Women (1939) opposite an all-star female cast. On July 1, 1943, Crawford left MGM and signed an exclusive contract with Warner Brothers, where she became a rival of Bette Davis. After a slow start with the studio, she received critical and commercial acclaim for her performance in drama Mildred Pierce (1945). The film earned her an Academy Award for Best Actress. From 1946 to 1952, Crawford appeared in a series of critical and box office successes, including the musical drama Humoresque (1946); film noirs Possessed (1947, for which she received a second Academy Award nomination) and Flamingo Road (1949); drama The Damned Don't Cry (1950); and romantic comedy Goodbye, My Fancy (1951), among others. She received a third and final Academy Award nomination for her performance in the thriller Sudden Fear (1952).
In 1953, Crawford starred in the musical Torch Song, her final film role for MGM. Her next film Johnny Guitar (1954), although not a major hit, is one of Crawford’s most popular films among her fans. During the latter half of the 1950s, Crawford starred in a series of B movies, including romantic dramas Female on the Beach (1955) and Autumn Leaves (1956). In 1962, Crawford was teamed with Bette Davis in a film adaptation of What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? The thriller film was a box office hit and briefly revived Crawford's career. Her final film performance was in the British science-fiction film, Trog (1970).
Feature films
Silent films
‡ denotes lost film
Sound features
Short films
Year | Title | Role | Director | Production Company |
---|---|---|---|---|
1925 | MGM Studio Tour | Herself[2] | — | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Miss MGM | Miss MGM[1] | — | ||
1929 | Hollywood Snapshots #11 | Herself | — | Columbia Pictures |
1931 | The Slippery Pearls | Herself | William C. McGann | Paramount Pictures |
1932 | Screen Snapshots | Herself | Ralph Staub | Columbia Pictures |
1947 | The Jimmy Fund | Herself | — | — |
1958 | Hollywood Mothers and Fathers | Herself | — | Columbia Pictures |
1972 | A Very Special Child | Narrator | — | American Cancer Society |
Archival Footage
Year | Title | Role | Director | Production Company |
---|---|---|---|---|
1964 | Four Days in November | Herself | Mel Stuart | United Artists |
MGM's Big Parade of Comedy[5] | Herself[6] | Robert Youngson | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer | |
1974 | That's Entertainment! | Herself[6] | Jack Haley Jr. | |
1984 | Terror in the Aisles | Herself[6] | Andrew J. Kuehn | Universal Pictures |
1985 | That's Dancing! | Herself[6] | Jack Haley Jr. | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Uncompleted films
Year | Title | Role | Director | Production Company |
---|---|---|---|---|
1929 | Tide of Empire | Josephita | Allan Dwan | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
1930 | Great Day | Susie Totheridge | Harry Beaumont | |
The March of Time | Herself | Charles Reisner | ||
1964 | Hush… Hush, Sweet Charlotte | Miriam Deering (replaced by Olivia de Havilland due to illness) | Robert Aldrich | 20th Century Fox |
Television performances
Airdate | Title | Role | Episode Title | Director | Network |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
September 19, 1953 | The Revlon Mirror Theater | Margaret Hughes | "Because I Love Him" | Rod Amateau | CBS |
October 31, 1954 | General Electric Theater | Mary Andrews | "The Road to Edinburgh" | Rod Amateau | |
March 23, 1958 | General Electric Theater | Ruth Marshall | "Strange Witness" | Herschel Daugherty | |
January 4, 1959 | General Electric Theater | Ann Howard | "And One Was Loyal" | Herschel Daugherty | |
August 3, 1959 | The Joseph Cotten Show | Ruth Marshall | "Strange Witness" | Herschel Daugherty | |
December 3, 1959 | Zane Grey Theatre | Stella Faring | "Rebel Range" | Don Medford | |
January 12, 1961 | Zane Grey Theatre | Sarah and Melanie Hobbes | "One Must Die" | Lewis Allen | |
October 29, 1961 | The DuPont Show of the Week | Hostess | "The Ziegfeld Touch" | James Elson | NBC |
October 4, 1963 | Route 66 | Morgan Matheson Harper | "Same Picture, Different Frame" | Philip Leacock | CBS |
March 31, 1967 | The Man from U.N.C.L.E. | Amanda True | "The Five Daughters Affair: Part 1"[7] | Barry Shear | NBC |
February 26, 1968 | The Lucy Show | Herself | "Lucy and the Lost Star" | Jack Donohue | CBS |
October 25, 1968 | The Secret Storm | Joan Borman Kane #2[8] | [daytime soap opera] | Gloria Monty | |
October 28, 1968 | The Secret Storm | Joan Borman Kane #2[8] | [daytime soap opera] | Gloria Monty | |
October 29, 1968 | The Secret Storm | Joan Borman Kane #2[8] | [daytime soap opera] | Gloria Monty | |
October 30, 1968 | The Secret Storm | Joan Borman Kane #2[8] | [daytime soap opera] | Gloria Monty | |
November 6, 1969 | Garbo | Narrator (voice) | [made-for-TV documentary] | Fred Burnley | PBS |
November 8, 1969 | Night Gallery[9] | Claudia Menlo | "Eyes" | Steven Spielberg | NBC |
January 21, 1970 | The Virginian | Stephanie White | "Nightmare" | Robert Gist | |
January 30, 1970 | The Tim Conway Show | Herself (cameo) | "Pilot" | Alan Rafkin | CBS |
June 15, 1970 | Journey to the Unknown[10] | Hostess | [made-for-TV movie] | Michael Lindsay-Hogg | Syndication |
October 4, 1970 | The Tim Conway Comedy Hour | Herself | "Episode #1.3" | Bill Hobin | CBS |
January 30, 1971 | Journey to Murder[10] | Hostess | [made-for-TV movie] | Gerry O'Hara | Syndication |
September 30, 1972 | The Sixth Sense | Joan Fairchild | "Dear Joan: We're Going to Scare You to Death" | John Newland | ABC |
February 2, 1975 | Easter Island | Narrator (voice) | [made-for-TV documentary] | José Gómez-Sicre | PBS |
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 uncredited
- 1 2 3 credited as Lucille LeSueur
- ↑ With sound. In color. Singing, dancing, and part of an all-star cast performing the song "Singin' in the Rain".
- ↑ Pilot for Royal Bay unsold series (released theatrically)
- ↑ a.k.a. The Big Parade of Comedy
- 1 2 3 4 archival footage
- ↑ Different scenes were shot and turned into the theatrically released feature film The Karate Killers.
- 1 2 3 4 Temporary replacement for Christina Crawford
- ↑ Pilot for Night Gallery series
- 1 2 Culled from the series Journey to the Unknown
- Vincent Terrace, Experimental Television, Test Films, Pilots and Trial Series, 1925–1995. ISBN 0-7864-0178-8
- Lee Goldberg, Unsold Television Pilots, 1955–1988. ISBN 978-0-89950-373-8
- Joan Crawford Papers, Billy Rose Collection, Lincoln Center Library for the Performing Arts. http://www.nypl.org/archives/4282
- Bob Thomas, Joan Crawford. ISBN 0-297-77617-7
- Alexander Walker, Joan Crawford: The Ultimate Star. ISBN 0-06-015123-4