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By 1903, at age twenty-four, she had moved to the east coast and landed her first role on Broadway. A gifted stage actress with the ability to convey deep emotion whether it be dramatic or comedic, she found continued success and would ultimately appear in more than forty Broadway
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One of her greatest personal successes was in a play called The Phantom Rival in which she emoted opposite a man left with only one arm. She became a name actress, appearing on postcards of the era and photographed and written about in the publications of the day. In 1915, she starred in two Jesse Lasky silent films, The Fighting Hope and Blackbirds,
In the meantime, she continued to make a mark onstage. Steadily employed either on Broadway or on tour throughout the late 1910s and 1920s, she had another notable success in A. A. Milne's Mr. Pim Passes By in 1921. She appeared in his play Ariadne in 1925 and in Noel Coward's Hay Fever later that same year. In 1926, she played a role in The Silver Cord, a show that would later be made into a motion picture and it was one of her most memorable characterizations.
Following that, there were several more plays on Broadway (including a revival of Mr. Pim in 1927) until she was summoned to Hollywood during the advent of sound films in 1929.
Crews found herself engaged at coaching silent stars in the new ways of sound film-making, with one of her charges being no less than Miss Gloria Swanson. She then played the wife of Lewis Stone and the mother of Robert Young in 1932's New Morals for the Old, a film that examined the change in generational mores when Crews' children engage in either premarital or adulterous affairs. She played a smothering mother to Slim Summerville in 1933's Out All Night.
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Even if one didn't know a soul amongst the acting ensemble, it's still a rip-snortingly captivating viewing experience and Crews is utterly unforgettable. As the scheming, manipulative, barely-veiled incestuous mother, she gives a performance
If you are ever fortunate enough to come across this 74-minute gem, do yourself a favor and check it out. The dynamics of the story and the acting are simply jaw-dropping. Crews outrageously dominates her offspring, kisses them inappropriately, slights their female counterparts and just generally runs roughshod over the household, all the while iced with a thin veneer of vulnerability and pity.
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Crews worked in a variety of films be they comedic, dramatic or even murder mysteries such as Blind Adventure. Then there was Rafter Romance, a sort of variation on The Shop Around the Corner, in which Ginger Rogers and Norman Foster play two people, working opposite shifts, who live in the same apartment (one from 8:00am to 8:00pm and the other the opposite) and yet don't know each other! They, incensed at one another's living habits, proceed to despise each other and play pranks against themselves while simultaneously
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She played Barbara Stanwyck's grandmother in Ever in My Heart, a tear-jerker about the effect of WWI upon German's living in America. In If I Were Free, she was reunited with Irene Dunne as the mother of Clive Brook, a man who loves Dunne in spite of the fact that both of them are married to others. This time, she wasn't quite the gorgon she had been in The Silver Cord, though she was not without frustration over and concern for her son.
Crews, now a thickened, chubby-faced sort of biddy, had an inimitable voice that served her well in all of her roles. She had a breathy, exasperated way of speaking that lent a flourish, sometimes giddy, sometimes horrified, to her lines. At this stage in her career, she was working against some of Holywood's all-time famous names. 1934 brought Lightning Strikes Twice, a comedy about mistaken identity which featured Crews as Ben Lyon's kooky aunt and which also starred the notorious Thelma Todd.
1935 brought Escapade with William Powell and Luise Rainer as well as The Melody Lingers On,
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Another of the big names Crews worked with was Greta Garbo in the widly popular Camille.
In '37, she worked with Marlene Dietrich, Herbert Marshall and Melvyn Douglas in Angel, playing Grand Duchess Anna Dmitrievna, a nightclub owner who inadvertently causes married Dietrich to become involved with another man. The next year she played in The Sisters with Errol Flynn and Bette Davis as well as Dr. Rhythm
1939, a year that has continually been named as one of the film industry's all-time best, saw Laura Hope Crews appearing in seven (!) different productions. She helped round out the cast of stars in Idiot's Delight, which featured Clark Gable and Norma Shearer, was a stage mother to a burgeoning opera star in Bing Crosby's The Star Maker, popped up in the B-western Reno, with Richard Dix and had a small role in Robert Taylor and Greer Garson's romantic comedy Remember?, which no one did.
She also played a society matron in The Rains Came, with Tyrone Power and Myrna Loy (that one climaxing with a wonderful earthquake and flood.) There was even an uncredited bit in Charles Laughton's famed rendition of
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David O'. Selznick's obsessive project, one that would both build his reputation and haunt him forever after, became one of the most enduring motion pictures of all time. Crews' participation in it is limited, but she surfaces every now and then. In a lengthy movie
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As the maiden relative, just as likely to faint over an inappropriate word as she is over a cannonball hitting the street
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When 20th Century Fox couldn't come to terms with lending their child sensation Shirley Temple to MGM to star in The Wizard of Oz, they concocted their own colorful
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As the 1940s dawned, Crews found herself still in demand, but not in as prestigious works as she'd been toiling in previously. She was yet another wealthy matriarch in Girl From Avenue A, a Jane Withers comedy, and once again a disapproving one (of Dennis O'Keefe) in I'm Nobody's Sweetheart Now, the story of a college football player in love with a nightclub singer who's politically-inclined family worries about its reputation.
Things turn a turn for the better when she played Miriam Hopkin's mom in the biographical film Lady with Red Hair, the story of a Chicago divorcee, Mrs. Leslie Carter, who was transformed into a Broadway sensation. (Oddly enough, in 1935, the real Mrs. Carter had appeared in Becky Sharp, the first full-length Technicolor film, the star of which was Miriam Hopkins!)
One Foot in Heaven, an episodic film about the lives of a minister and his devout family, had Crews as a spiteful and malicious enemy of the minster's son. The other stars were Fredric March and Martha Scott, as the minister and his wife, and Gene Lockart as Crews' husband. She closed out 1941 with a small role as Apple Annie in the Fred MacMurrary-Mary Martin comedy New York Town, a virtually forgotten film nowadays. She had a bit part in the crowded film The Man Who Came to Dinner, starring Monty Woolley and Bette Davis, among others, never knowing that it would be her cinematic swan song.
Laura Hope Crews, regardless of the many amusing and entertaining film roles she assayed (and there were nearly 40 despite her late start!), always considered herself a stage actress. In 1942, at age sixty-two, she headed back to the Great White Way for a final stint, this time as a replacement for Josephine Hull in Arsenic and Old Lace. She was performing in this production when a kidney ailment began to get the best of her.
When she passed away, the world lost not only one of stage's great talents, but also one those magical, inimitable character performers whose work accented so many terrific Hollywood movies over the years. Her presence in any movie meant that there was going to be at least one chuckle and, if not, she was still going to collect the viewers attention on some level. Astonishingly, though she worked in all those Broadway plays, she was never once so much as nominated
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