Vixens, Floozies and Molls
28 Actresses of Late 1920s and 1930s Hollywood
$39.95
In stock
About the Book
The floozy, the gangster’s moll, the nasty debutante: Most Hollywood actresses played at least one of these bad girls in the 1930s. Since censorship customarily demanded that goodness prevail, vixens were in mainly supporting roles—but the actresses who played them were often colorful scene stealers.
These characters and the women who played them first began to appear in film in 1915 when Theda Bara played home-wrecker Elsie Drummond in The Vixen. Movie theaters filled and the industry focused on heaving bosoms and ceaseless lust. Bara never shed the vamp image. The type evolved into the flapper, the gangster’s moll, the “dame,” and the “bad girl.” This work covers the lives and careers of 28 actresses, providing details about their lives and giving complete filmographies of their careers.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Hans J. Wollstein
Format: softcover (7 x 10)
Pages: 284
Bibliographic Info: 56 photos, filmographies, bibliography, index
Copyright Date: 2005 [1999]
pISBN: 978-0-7864-2260-9
eISBN: 978-1-4766-1181-5
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments v
Introduction 1
1: Hollywood’s Other Women 5
2: Olga Baclanova 9
3: Binnie Barnes 19
4: Evelyn Brent 31
5: Dorothy Burgess 49
6: Juliette Compton 57
7: Katherine DeMille 65
8: Claire Dodd 73
9: Mary Duncan 81
10: Josephine Dunn 87
11: Noel Francis 95
12: Wynne Gibson 103
13: Bernadene Hayes 113
14: Beulah Hutton 119
15: Rita La Roy 123
16: Nina Mae McKinney 131
17: Sari Maritza 139
18: Natalie Moorhead 147
19: Ester Muir 155
20: Ona Munson 161
21: Vivienne Osborne 169
22: Gail Patrick 177
23: Dorothy Revier 187
24: Gail Sondergaard 197
25: Lilyan Tashman 211
26: Verree Teasdale 225
27: Helen Vinson 233
28: Thelma White 241
29: Anna May Wong 247
Bibliography 261
Index 263
Book Reviews & Awards
“lively descriptions”—Choice; “provides career essays on a group of actresses who were responsible for some unique characterizations”—Classic Images; “a fascinating survey of 28 actresses of the late 1920s and 1930s Hollywood…essential”—Midwest Book Review; “contains well-researched quotations…entertaining and informative…highly recommended”—Colorado Libraries; “well researched…plenty of information about the careers and private lives of the actresses”—Film Review; “provides key biographical information on these floozies…a pleasant read”—Film & History.