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Frances Carson
Frances Carson
from Wikipedia

Frances Carson (April 1, 1895 – October 20, 1973) was an American actress on stage and in films, including three Alfred Hitchcock films.

Key Information

Early life

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Carson was from Philadelphia, and started acting and modeling professionally in her teens.[1][2]

Career

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Carson was an actress known for stage work in New York and London, and for film roles.[3][4] She performed on Broadway in shows including Poor Little Thing (1914) with her husband Eric Blind, The White Feather (1915), The Riddle: Woman (1918-1919), The Hottentot (1920),[5] The Bad Man (1920),[6][7] The Scarlet Man (1921), The Blue Lagoon (1921),[8] Two Married Men (1925), Potiphar's Wife (1928), The First Law (1929), Slightly Scandalous (1944), and The Visitor (1944).

In London, Carson appeared in Glamour (1922), The Love Habit (1923), R.U.R. (1923, with Basil Rathbone)[9] The Last Warning (1923), Havoc (1924), The Happy Hangman (1925), The Silver Fox (1925), Virginia's Husband (1926), Aloma: A Tale of the South Seas (1926–1927), These Internationals (1928), and The Barker (1928).[10][11] When she played Salome in Leonid Andreyev's Katerina in 1926, with John Gielgud, her revealing costume prompted a censor to insist that she wear a shawl on stage.[12] She also co-wrote a play, The Unknown Woman; it was produced in London in 1927.[13]

Her costumes were photographed and described in fashion columns.[2][14] Critic Giles P. Cain noted in 1917 that "Miss Carson has some decided marks of individuality of speech and manner that bespeak her realization of the fact that merely being natural on the stage is no sign of any very great merit."[15] Noël Coward mentioned seeing Carson dining with Irving Berlin and Elsie Janis at the Algonquin Hotel.[16] British Pathé made a short newsreel about Carson having her fingernails painted by artist Arthur Ferrier in 1924.[17] Also in 1924, she attended a séance with P. G. Wodehouse, Hannen Swaffer, and Donald Calthrop, and believed that she was contacted by her late husband on this occasion.[18]

Carson had roles in several films, including Java Head (1934), Foreign Correspondent (1940), Smilin' Through (1941), Two-Faced Woman (1941),[19] Saboteur (1942),[20] Framing Father (1942), Scattergood Rides High (1942),[21] and Shadow of a Doubt (1943).

Personal life

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Carson married British actor Eric Blind in 1913;[22][23] he died suddenly from pneumonia in 1916.[18] She was living with fellow actress Blanche Yurka in Los Angeles in 1940,[24] and died in 1973, aged 78 years.

References

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from Grokipedia
Frances Carson was an American actress known for her extensive career in theater and film during the first half of the 20th century, marked by a long run of Broadway appearances and memorable supporting roles in several films directed by Alfred Hitchcock. Born on April 1, 1895, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Carson made her Broadway debut in 1914 with Poor Little Thing and went on to build a substantial stage resume over the next three decades. Her Broadway credits included leading and featured roles in productions such as The Hottentot (1920), The Bad Man (1920), The Blue Lagoon (1921), Potiphar's Wife (1928), The First Law (1929), Slightly Scandalous (1944), and The Visitor (1944). She also performed in London theater, notably in Havoc at the Haymarket Theatre. Carson transitioned to film in the 1930s, appearing in supporting parts that often cast her as refined society women or dowagers, and she earned particular recognition for her work in three Alfred Hitchcock films: Foreign Correspondent (1940), Saboteur (1942), and Shadow of a Doubt (1943). Other film credits from this period included Java Head (1934), Two-Faced Woman (1941), and Smilin' Through (1941). She continued acting into the mid-1940s before retiring from the profession and died on October 20, 1973, in Los Angeles, California.

Early life

Early life and career beginnings

Frances Carson was born on April 1, 1895, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She was a native of Philadelphia and began her professional artistic career there as a teenager. A contemporary newspaper account from 1913 reported that Carson started her career four years earlier in Philadelphia, placing the beginning around 1909, with a season in an excellent stock company where she played many parts. Following that experience, she toured with various stars before being engaged by May Tully to provide leading support in the vaudeville sketch The Battle Cry of Freedom, which toured the Orpheum Circuit and marked her introduction to San Francisco audiences. In 1913, she married actor Eric Blind.

Stage career

Broadway appearances

Frances Carson made her Broadway debut in 1914 with a role in Poor Little Thing, appearing alongside her husband Eric Blind. She continued with regular Broadway engagements during the 1910s and 1920s, appearing in The White Feather (1915), The Riddle: Woman (1918–1919), The Hottentot (1920), The Bad Man (1920), The Scarlet Man (1921), The Blue Lagoon (1921), Two Married Men (1925), Potiphar's Wife (1928), and The First Law (1929). Her stage costumes in productions during the 1910s and 1920s received attention in the fashion press of the era. After a long absence from Broadway, Carson returned in 1944 for appearances in Slightly Scandalous and The Visitor.

London theatre work

Frances Carson established a significant presence in London theatre during the 1920s, appearing in a variety of West End and other productions. Her credits from this period included Glamour (1922), The Love Habit (1923), R.U.R. (1923), The Last Warning (1923), Havoc (1924), The Happy Hangman (1925), The Silver Fox (1925), Virginia's Husband (1926), Aloma: A Tale of the South Seas (1926–1927), These Internationals (1928), and The Barker (1928). In R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots) by Karel Čapek, she played Helena Glory opposite Basil Rathbone as Harry Domain at the St. Martin's Theatre, where the production opened on April 24, 1923, and ran for 127 performances to enthusiastic reviews that praised her performance. She also appeared in Harry Walls's Havoc at the Haymarket Theatre, alongside actors including Leslie Faber and Ethel Griffies. A notable highlight was her title role in Leonid Andreyev's Katerina (also known as Katerina Ivanovna) at the Barnes Theatre, starting April 1, 1926, co-starring with John Gielgud. In a scene where her character posed as Salome, her revealing costume drew intervention from the British censor, who ordered her to cover herself with a shawl; Carson publicly refused, stating she would not comply with the demand. She co-wrote the play The Unknown Woman, produced in London in 1927. Carson's London engagements occasionally overlapped with her Broadway commitments during the same decade.

Film career

Entry into film and early roles

After an established stage career spanning Broadway and London theatre from the 1910s onward, Frances Carson made her transition to film in the 1930s. Her first credited screen role came in the British drama Java Head (1934), where she portrayed Kate Vollar. Directed by J. Walter Ruben and based on Joseph Hergesheimer's novel, the film starred Anna May Wong in the lead role and focused on themes of marriage, cultural conflict, and family scandal in a shipping magnate's household. Carson's supporting performance as Kate Vollar marked her entry into cinema, though her screen appearances remained limited in the years immediately following. This debut preceded her later work in American films starting in 1940.

Alfred Hitchcock collaborations

Frances Carson made three supporting appearances in films directed by Alfred Hitchcock during his early American period, representing her most prominent contributions to Hollywood cinema. These roles, though brief, placed her in some of the director's notable thrillers of the early 1940s. Her first collaboration with Hitchcock came in the espionage thriller Foreign Correspondent (1940), where she played the credited role of Mrs. Sprague. In Saboteur (1942), a wartime suspense film, she appeared as the credited Society Woman. Her third and final work with Hitchcock was an uncredited part as Mrs. Potter in the psychological thriller Shadow of a Doubt (1943). These Hitchcock credits remain her best-known screen work.

Later and supporting film roles

In the early 1940s, Frances Carson appeared in a series of small supporting and often uncredited roles in Hollywood films outside her collaborations with Alfred Hitchcock, which remained the highlights of her screen career. These parts typically involved minor characters and reflected the standard opportunities available to character actresses in the studio system during this period. In 1940, she had an uncredited appearance in Life with Henry. The following year brought credited roles as the Dowager in Smilin' Through (1941) and as Miss Dunbar in Two-Faced Woman (1941), alongside uncredited parts in Married Bachelor (1941) and H.M. Pulham, Esq. (1941). In 1942, she played Mrs. Errol in the short comedy Framing Father and Mrs. Dane in Scattergood Rides High. These assignments were generally modest in scale and frequently uncredited, illustrating her shift toward background work. Carson's non-Hitchcock film credits largely concluded by 1943, after which she made no further onscreen appearances.

Personal life

Marriage to Eric Blind

Frances Carson married British actor Eric Blind in 1913. The couple had professional overlap early in their careers, including a joint appearance on Broadway in the comedy Poor Little Thing, which opened on December 22, 1914, with Carson playing Suzanne and Blind cast as Mareze. Eric Blind died suddenly from pneumonia on December 31, 1916, in Reading Hospital, Pennsylvania, shortly after performing at the Academy of Music in Reading; Carson arrived too late to see him before his passing. This marked the end of their brief marriage, which had coincided with their shared stage work.

Death

Death

Frances Carson died on October 20, 1973, in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 78. No cause of death was publicly documented.

References

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