Mary Pickford
Birthday:
Birthplace:
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Mary Pickford was Hollywood's first superstar. As "America's Sweetheart," she was the greatest screen icon of the silent era, virtually defining the role and influence of celebrity within the context of contemporary society. Born Gladys Smith on April 8, 1892, in Toronto, Ontario, she was thrust into show business while still a child following the death of her father, and she toured in a series of road companies under the billing "Baby Gladys." Upon winning a role in Broadway's The Warrens of Virginia, the 14-year-old was rechristened Mary Pickford by producer David Belasco, and a year later she flirted her way into extra work on D.W. Griffith's 1909 film The Lonely Villa. After earning five dollars for her day of work, Pickford met Griffith's request that she return the following morning with a demand to earn ten dollars daily; the next day she was back on the set, and swiftly emerged as one of the key players in the legendary director's stock company. Pickford soon arranged for an audition for her friend, Lillian Gish, and within months the two young women were among the most popular talents in the burgeoning film industry. Known to the public as "Little Mary" or "the Girl With Golden Hair," she starred in dozens of Biograph Studios films annually under Griffith's supervision, and ultimately left the theater completely behind to focus on movie work. As her stature and fame grew, Pickford began to take increasing control over her career; she often dictated the terms of her productions, and not even the likes of the prestigious Edwin S. Porter could override her decisions on how best to approach her performances. Her popularity extended well beyond North America; early films like 1909's The Little Darling were systematically copied in Russia and distributed throughout the European underground market, and although the loss of income suffered by Biograph was staggering, the piracy of her work made Pickford an international superstar.Pickford's massive popularity made her the motion picture industry's first real icon, and she parlayed her success into more and more lucrative financial rewards. At the insistence of her manager, mother Charlotte, she demanded frequent raises from her employers, and by 1913 she was also the first of the Biograph players to receive almost total creative control. However, believing herself overshadowed by the powerful messages of Griffith's work, in 1916 Pickford signed with Adolph Zukor's Famous Players Company, which in turn charged theaters a premium to screen her movies. Her deal with Zukor was unprecedented: Not only did she sign for an astounding 10,000 dollars a week, but she also netted a 30,000-dollar signing bonus, as well as a significant share of all profits from her films. Pickford honored the deal for less than a year before moving on to an even bigger payday -- a staggering agreement of 350,000 dollars per movie -- and by the age of 24, she was Hollywood's first millionaire. Ultimately, Pickford's fame grew to such unprecedented proportions that no studio in town could hope to afford her salary and accommodate her demands; when Charlie Chaplin, the only other star of a similar magnitude, found himself in the same situation they decided to join forces and form their own studio. United Artists was born in 1919, and also included among its founders swashbuckling actor Douglas Fairbanks, Pickford's husband. Together they were a virtual royal couple, with their lives at the massive Beverly Hills estate Pickfair achieving a kind of fairy-tale quality. At the peak of Pickford's success, however, she began to grow restless. Her standing as "America's Sweetheart" -- a winsome image perpetuated by films like 1914's Tess of the Storm Country, 1917's Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, and 1917's Poor Little Rich Girl -- began to straitjacket her creative ambitions, and after 1920's Pollyanna, which cast the 27-year-old as a girl 15 years her junior, she defiantly chopped off her long, angelic curls into a
Highest Rated Movies
Filmography
MOVIES
RATING | TITLE | CREDIT | BOX OFFICE | YEAR |
---|---|---|---|---|
No Score Yet | Why Be Good? Sexuality and Censorship in Early Cinema |
|
— | 2008 |
No Score Yet | The Rose Parade: Through the Years |
|
— | 1988 |
No Score Yet | 30 Years of Fun |
|
— | 1963 |
No Score Yet | Love Happy |
|
— | 1950 |
No Score Yet | Sleep, My Love |
|
— | 1947 |
80% | Little Iodine |
|
— | 1946 |
No Score Yet | The Gay Desperado |
|
— | 1936 |
No Score Yet | One Rainy Afternoon |
|
— | 1936 |
No Score Yet | Secrets |
|
— | 1933 |
No Score Yet | The Taming of the Shrew |
|
— | 1929 |
44% | Coquette |
|
— | 1929 |
91% | The Gaucho |
|
— | 1927 |
No Score Yet | My Best Girl |
|
— | 1927 |
No Score Yet | Potseluy Meri Pikford (The Kiss of Mary Pickford) |
|
— | 1927 |
No Score Yet | Sparrows |
|
— | 1926 |
60% | Little Annie Rooney |
|
— | 1925 |
No Score Yet | Dorothy Vernon Of Haddon Hall |
|
— | 1924 |
No Score Yet | Rosita |
|
— | 1923 |
100% | Hollywood |
|
— | 1923 |
100% | Tess of the Storm Country |
|
— | 1922 |
No Score Yet | Through the Back Door |
|
— | 1921 |
No Score Yet | Little Lord Fauntleroy |
|
— | 1921 |
No Score Yet | Through The Backdoor |
|
— | 1921 |
No Score Yet | The Love Light |
|
— | 1921 |
No Score Yet | Suds |
|
— | 1920 |
No Score Yet | Pollyanna |
|
— | 1920 |
No Score Yet | Daddy Long Legs |
|
— | 1919 |
No Score Yet | The Hoodlum (The Ragamuffin) |
|
— | 1919 |
No Score Yet | Heart O' the Hills |
|
— | 1919 |
No Score Yet | Amarilly of Clothes-line Alley |
|
— | 1918 |
89% | Stella Maris |
|
— | 1918 |
No Score Yet | The Little Princess |
|
— | 1917 |
No Score Yet | The Little American |
|
— | 1917 |
No Score Yet | A Romance of the Redwoods |
|
— | 1917 |
No Score Yet | The Poor Little Rich Girl |
|
— | 1917 |
No Score Yet | Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm |
|
— | 1917 |
No Score Yet | The Pride of the Clan |
|
— | 1917 |
No Score Yet | Cinderella |
|
— | 1914 |
No Score Yet | Behind the Scenes |
|
— | 1914 |
No Score Yet | What the Daisy Said |
|
— | 1910 |
No Score Yet | In Old Kentucky |
|
— | 1909 |
No Score Yet | The Renunciation |
|
— | 1909 |
No Score Yet | The Lonely Villa |
|
— | 1909 |
No Score Yet | The Broken Locket |
|
— | 1909 |
Quotes from Mary Pickford's Characters
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