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Mae Busch
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Mae Busch (born Annie May Busch; 18 June 1891 – 20 April 1946)[1][2][3] was an Australian-born actress who worked in both silent and sound films in early Hollywood. In the latter part of her career she appeared in many Laurel and Hardy comedies, frequently playing Hardy's shrewish wife.
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Busch was born in Melbourne, Victoria to popular Australian vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay and Frederick William Busch.[4][5] Her mother had been active since 1883 under the stage names Dora Devere and then Dora Busch; she toured India with Hudson's Surprise Party and toured New Zealand twice.[6] They continued to tour with various companies with short breaks when their two children were born, Dorothy in 1889 (who lived for only four months) and Annie May in 1891. Following a concert tour of New Zealand, the family left for the United States via Tahiti.[7] They departed on 8 August 1896 and arrived in San Francisco at the end of 1896 or in early 1897.
While her parents were touring the United States, six-year-old Annie May was placed in a convent school in New Jersey. At age 12, she joined her parents as the Busch Devere Trio, which was active from 1903 until 1912. As Mae Busch, she performed with her mother in Guy Fletch Bragdon's The Fixer to good reviews, and in 1911, they featured in Tom Reeves' Big Show Burlesque. Mae's big break came in March 1912 when she replaced Lillian Lorraine as the lead female in Over the River with Eddie Foy.[8]
Career
[edit]Silent film era
[edit]
Mae's first film appearances are reputed to be in The Agitator and The Water Nymph, both released in 1912. There is some doubt about Mae's being in these films, as the production of both films in California appears to clash with Busch's commitments in New York.[citation needed] In 1915, she began working at Keystone Studios, where she appeared in comedy two-reelers. Her dalliance with studio chief Mack Sennett famously ended his engagement to actress Mabel Normand—who had actually been Busch's mentor and friend—when Normand walked in on the pair. According to an unverifiable claim by Minta Durfee, Busch, who was known for pinpoint throwing accuracy, inflicted a serious head injury on Normand by striking her with a vase.[citation needed]
At the pinnacle of her film career, Busch was known as the "versatile vamp". She starred in such feature films as The Devil's Pass Key (1920) and Foolish Wives (1922), both directed by Erich von Stroheim, and in The Unholy Three (1925), with Lon Chaney. She soon walked out on her contract at Metro–Goldwyn–Mayer and had a nervous breakdown.[9] She regained her health and resumed working at both major and minor studios; her best opportunity was a starring role in Universal's 1927 drama Perch of the Devil, with Busch cast against type as a sympathetic young bride confronted by a rival. The film's climax was a spectacular flood sequence; this footage from Perch of the Devil was reused in later Universal productions for more than a decade.
Work with Laurel and Hardy
[edit]In 1926, producer Hal Roach began casting "name" dramatic stars in his short comedies: Priscilla Dean, Theda Bara, Herbert Rawlinson, Agnes Ayres, and Lionel Barrymore among them. Mae Busch joined Roach's "All Stars" for a leading role in Love 'em and Weep (1927), which began her long association with Laurel and Hardy. The short received good distribution and resulted in Busch resuming her feature-film career, including a return to MGM for the 1928 Lon Chaney feature While the City Sleeps.
In 1929, many stars of silent films faced an uncertain future, with their talents less in demand as talking pictures caught on. When a short-subject assignment came along, Busch grabbed it. It was again for the Hal Roach studio in the Laurel & Hardy comedy Unaccustomed as We Are (1929). It was the team's first "all-talking" comedy, and stage-trained Mae Busch handled her dialogue well as Hardy's put-upon wife. She appeared in 12 more Laurel and Hardy comedies, often displaying her versatility. She alternated between shrewish, gold-digging floozies (Chickens Come Home, Come Clean), Oliver Hardy's volatile wife (Sons of the Desert, Their First Mistake), and more sympathetic roles (Them Thar Hills, Tit for Tat, The Fixer Uppers). Her last role in a Laurel and Hardy film was in The Bohemian Girl, again as Hardy's combative spouse, released in 1936.
Later roles and legacy
[edit]The same year, she was featured in the low-budget serial The Clutching Hand, but it did not advance her career. From then, her film roles were often uncredited. Overall, she had roles in approximately 130 movies from 1912 to 1946. Jackie Gleason later mentioned her name on his TV show as "the ever-popular Mae Busch".
In 2014 The Grim Game, the believed-lost 1919 film that was the first feature to star Harry Houdini, was discovered and restored by Rick Schmidlin for Turner Classic Movies.[10] Busch appears, credited as Bush.
Personal life and death
[edit]
Busch was married three times: to actor Francis McDonald (1915–22), to John Earl Cassell (1926–29), and to civil engineer Thomas C. Tate (1936–her death).
Busch died on 20 April 1946 at age 54 at a San Fernando Valley sanitarium, where she had been ill for five months with colon cancer.[5][a][11]
For her contributions to the film industry, Busch was inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1960 with a motion pictures star located at 7021 Hollywood Boulevard.[12]
In the 1970s, it was discovered that her ashes had remained unclaimed and were in vaultage at Chapel of the Pines Crematory. The Way Out West Tent, a Los Angeles chapter of The Sons of the Desert, the Laurel and Hardy appreciation society, paid for their removal from vaultage and placement in a publicly accessible niche at Chapel of the Pines.[13] The memorial plaque incorrectly lists her year of birth as 1901.[14]
Selected filmography
[edit]| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1912 | The Water Nymph | (uncredited?) | Short subject Alternative title: The Beach Flirt |
| 1915 | Mabel and Fatty's Married Life | (uncredited) | Short subject |
| 1919 | The Grim Game | Ethel Delmead | Credited as Mae Bush |
| 1920 | Her Husband's Friends | Clarice | |
| The Devil's Pass Key | La Belle Odera | Lost film | |
| 1921 | A Parisian Scandal | Mamselle Sari | Lost film |
| 1922 | Foolish Wives | Princess Vera Petchnikoff | |
| Brothers Under the Skin | Flo Bulger | Incomplete | |
| Only a Shop Girl | Josie Jerome | Lost film | |
| 1923 | Souls for Sale | Robina Teele | |
| The Christian | Glory Quayle | ||
| 1924 | Name the Man | Bessie Collister | |
| Nellie, the Beautiful Cloak Model | Polly Joy | ||
| Bread | Jeanette Sturgis | Lost film | |
| Broken Barriers | Irene Kirby | Lost film | |
| Married Flirts | Jill Wetherell | Lost film | |
| The Triflers | Marjorie Stockton | ||
| 1925 | The Unholy Three | Rosie O'Grady | |
| 1925 | Camille of the Barbary Coast | Camille | |
| 1926 | Fools of Fashion | Enid Alden | |
| The Miracle of Life | Janet Howell | ||
| The Nutcracker | Martha Slipaway | ||
| 1927 | Love 'em and Weep | Old flame | Short subject |
| Husband Hunters | Marie Devere | ||
| Perch of the Devil | Ida Hook | ||
| Tongues of Scandal | Helen Hanby | ||
| 1928 | While the City Sleeps | Bessie | |
| 1929 | Alibi | Daisy Thomas | |
| Unaccustomed As We Are | Mrs. Hardy | Short subject | |
| A Man's Man | Violet | ||
| 1930 | Young Desire | May Roberts | |
| 1931 | Chickens Come Home | Ollie's Old Time Flame | Short subject Uncredited |
| Fly My Kite | Dan's new wife | Short subject | |
| Come Clean | Kate | Short subject | |
| 1932 | Their First Mistake | Mrs. Arabella Hardy | Short subject |
| Doctor X | Cathouse Madame | ||
| 1933 | Blondie Johnson | Mae | |
| Lilly Turner | Hazel | ||
| Cheating Blondes | Mrs. Jennie Carter | ||
| Sons of the Desert | Mrs. Lottie Hardy | Alternative title: Fraternally Yours | |
| Dance Girl Dance | Lou Kendall | ||
| 1934 | Oliver the Eighth | Widow | Short subject Alternative title: The Private Life of Oliver the Eighth |
| The Road to Ruin | Mrs. Monroe | Uncredited | |
| Going Bye-Bye! | Butch's girlfriend | Short subject | |
| Them Thar Hills | Mrs. Hall | Short subject | |
| The Live Ghost | Maisie the Vamp, Blonde Floozy | Short subject | |
| 1935 | Tit for Tat | Mrs. Hall, Grocer's wife | |
| The Fixer Uppers | Madame Pierre Gustave | Short subject | |
| 1936 | The Bohemian Girl | Mrs. Hardy | |
| The Amazing Exploits of the Clutching Hand | Mrs. Gironda | 15-episode serial | |
| 1938 | Daughter of Shanghai | Lil | Uncredited Alternative title: Daughter of the Orient |
| The Buccaneer | Bit Role | Uncredited | |
| Marie Antoinette | Madame La Motte | Uncredited | |
| 1940 | Women Without Names | Rose | |
| 1941 | Ziegfeld Girl | Jenny | |
| 1942 | The Mad Monster | Susan | |
| 1946 | The Blue Dahlia | Jenny – Maid | Uncredited |
| The Bride Wore Boots | Woman | Uncredited | |
| 1947 | Ladies' Man | Woman in Automat | Uncredited |
References
[edit]- Notes
- ^ The headline mistakenly listed her age as 44.
- Citations
- ^ Springer, John S.; Hamilton, Jack D. (1974). They Had Faces Then. Citadel Press. ISBN 978-0-8065-0300-4.
- ^ Gehring, Wes D. (1990). Laurel and Hardy. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-25172-6.
- ^ Smith, Ronald L. (1993). Comic Support. Carol Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-8065-1399-7.
- ^ "Births". The Age. 20 June 1891. p. 5.
- ^ a b "Death Claims Mae Busch, 44". The Los Angeles Times. 22 April 1946. p. A1.
- ^ "Otago Witness". New Zealand. 24 January 1895. p. 37.
- ^ "Auckland Star". 8 August 1896.
- ^ "New York Herald". 28 March 1912.
- ^ Maltin 1973, p. 112
- ^ King, Susan (26 March 2015). "Classic Hollywood: Once Thought Lost, Harry Houdini's 'Grim Game' Film Reappears". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ State of California. County of Los Angeles. Death Certificate for Mae Busch, 1946. District 1801, Registrar's No. 7081.
- ^ "Hollywood Walk of Fame – Mae Busch". walkoffame.com. Hollywood Chamber of Commerce. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
- ^ "Mae Busch". Way Out West Tent.
- ^ "Mae Busch". 5 August 2019.
- Bibliography
- Maltin, Leonard (1973). The Laurel and Hardy Book. New York: Curtis. OCLC 4817569.
External links
[edit]- Works by or about Mae Busch at the Internet Archive
- Mae Busch at IMDb
- Mae Busch at Find a Grave
- Mae Busch at Virtual History
- Mae Busch at the Way Out West Tent
Mae Busch
View on GrokipediaEarly life
Family background and childhood
Mae Busch was born Annie May Busch on June 18, 1891, in Melbourne, Australia, to vaudeville performers Elizabeth Maria Lay, a singer, and Frederick William Busch, a musician.[2] The family's deep roots in music and theater immersed her in an artistic environment from infancy, with her parents' professions as performers shaping her initial encounters with stage life.[2] In 1896, at around five years old, the Busch family emigrated to the United States, arriving in San Francisco before moving eastward to New Jersey. There, young Annie was enrolled at St. Elizabeth's Convent School to receive a formal education while her parents pursued their touring vaudeville commitments.[6][7] Her early years were marked by the nomadic lifestyle of a vaudeville family, exposing her to rehearsals, travel, and informal performances that sparked her interest in entertainment long before her formal entry into the profession.[2]Vaudeville and stage debut
Mae Busch entered the professional performing world at the age of 12, joining her parents—her father, Frederick William Busch, a musician, and her mother, Elizabeth "Dora" Busch, a singer and performer—to form the Busch Devere Trio in 1903.[2] The family act specialized in musical comedy routines, with young Mae contributing as a child actress and singer, performing sketches that blended song, dance, and light dramatic elements across major U.S. vaudeville circuits, including venues in New York and Chicago.[8] This troupe remained active until 1912, providing Busch with intensive on-stage training in timing, audience interaction, and adaptability to varied performance demands.[9] Through her years in the Busch Devere Trio, Busch developed core comedic and dramatic abilities that defined her early persona as a versatile stage performer.[4] The act's emphasis on musical interludes and humorous vignettes allowed her to cultivate skills in physical comedy and character portrayal, often drawing on her expressive features to shift seamlessly between playful innocence and spirited banter.[10] Her family's vaudeville roots, rooted in Australian theater traditions before their 1896 relocation to the United States, laid the foundation for this multifaceted style, enabling her to engage audiences with a range that foreshadowed her later theatrical successes.[2] Busch's transition from vaudeville to legitimate theater culminated in her Broadway debut in March 1912, when she replaced Lillian Lorraine in the lead role of the musical comedy Over the River, starring alongside veteran performer Eddie Foy.[11] Introduced to producer Charles Dillingham through a recommendation from actress Elsie Janis, Busch auditioned during rehearsals and impressed with her poise and vocal talents, securing the part of the daughter in this family-oriented production that ran at the Fulton Theatre.[11] This breakthrough role marked her emergence as a capable comedienne on the New York stage, highlighting the comedic flair honed in vaudeville while opening doors to more prominent theatrical opportunities.[3]Film career
Silent era beginnings and rise
Mae Busch made her entry into cinema in 1912, with uncertain early credits including the short The Agitator, a Western produced by American Film Manufacturing Company in which she co-starred with J. Warren Kerrigan.[3][12] She reportedly appeared in The Water Nymph the same year but suffered a diving injury during production, prompting a return to stage work in New York.[12] By 1915, Busch had transitioned fully to film, signing with Keystone Studios under Mack Sennett, where her vaudeville background proved invaluable for adapting to the demands of screen performance.[13] At Keystone, Busch appeared in more than 20 comedy shorts, often in supporting roles alongside performers like Charley Chase and Chester Conklin, contributing to the studio's signature slapstick style.[14][15] Her early film work extended beyond comedies to include dramatic parts in features like The Devil's Pass Key (1920), directed by Erich von Stroheim, allowing her to portray a range of characters from seductive vamps to more nuanced figures.[13] By 1920, she had amassed dozens of silent credits, building a reputation for versatility in both short subjects and longer narratives. Busch's breakthrough came in 1922 with her role as the scheming Princess Vera Petchnikoff in Stroheim's lavish production Foolish Wives, a critical and commercial success that positioned her as a dramatic leading lady capable of complex, morally ambiguous portrayals.[15] The film's opulent depiction of European high society and Busch's performance as a fraudulent aristocrat marked a shift toward more prestigious assignments, including The Unholy Three (1925) opposite Lon Chaney.[13] The grueling pace of silent-era production took its toll, culminating in a nervous breakdown in 1926 after she walked out on her Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract amid personal and professional exhaustion.[16] This led to a brief retirement from the screen. Busch returned in 1927 with the lead role of Ida Hook in Perch of the Devil, a Universal drama adapted from Gertrude Atherton's novel, signaling her resilience amid the industry's transitions.[17] Across her silent career, spanning approximately 80 titles, Busch demonstrated remarkable range, evolving from vampish seductresses in comedies to empathetic leads in dramas.[3]Collaboration with Laurel and Hardy
Mae Busch joined Hal Roach Studios in 1927, initially appearing in silent shorts that laid the groundwork for her comedic talents before the studio's shift to sound production.[4] Her transition to early talkies positioned her prominently in the evolving landscape of comedy films at Roach, where she soon became a key supporting player.[1] From 1929 to 1936, Busch appeared in 13 Laurel and Hardy shorts and features, frequently portraying Oliver Hardy's nagging or exasperated wife, such as Mrs. Hardy or Lottie, which became her signature role in the duo's domestic scenarios.[18] These appearances included standout entries like Unaccustomed as We Are (1929), the pair's first sound film, where she played the irate Mrs. Hardy throwing out Ollie and Stan; Sons of the Desert (1933), in which her sharp-tongued Lottie Hardy confronted her husband's convention antics; and The Bohemian Girl (1936), her final collaboration, featuring her as the combative Mrs. Hardy amid gypsy escapades.[19][20] In these films, Busch's precise comedic timing and expressive delivery amplified the duo's slapstick by providing a recurring foil in heated marital exchanges.[4] Busch's portrayals enriched the series' domestic humor dynamic, often escalating conflicts through her character's verbal barbs and physical reactions, contributing memorable scenes that highlighted the contrast with Laurel and Hardy's bumbling innocence.[1] Her work across these productions, spanning over two dozen key sequences, solidified her as an indispensable element in the Roach-era Laurel and Hardy formula.[18] The association concluded in 1936 following changes in her contract with Hal Roach Studios.[1]Later sound films and decline
Following the height of her collaborations with Laurel and Hardy in the early 1930s, Mae Busch shifted to a series of supporting and increasingly uncredited roles in sound films during the late 1930s and 1940s. She appeared in over 50 such productions across multiple studios, often portraying comic relief characters like gossipy society women, maids, or tough working-class figures. Notable examples include her turn as Mme. La Motte in MGM's lavish historical drama Marie Antoinette (1938), where she provided brief but memorable support amid the opulent production, and her role as the chaperone in Paramount's musical comedy The Big Broadcast of 1938. These parts highlighted her versatility in blending sharp wit with physical comedy, though they marked a departure from lead or prominent supporting status.[21][1] In the 1940s, Busch continued with bit parts in a diverse range of genres, including Westerns, musicals, and film noir, at studios such as RKO and Paramount. She played Jenny, a wardrobe mistress, in MGM's Ziegfeld Girl (1941), a backstage drama featuring Judy Garland and Lana Turner, and took on the role of Susan in the low-budget horror film The Mad Monster (1942), her last credited appearance. Later uncredited work included Vera in the Betty Hutton comedy The Stork Club (1945) and Jenny the maid in the Raymond Chandler-adapted thriller The Blue Dahlia (1946), alongside her final screen role as an uncredited extra in The Bride Wore Boots that same year. These sporadic engagements demonstrated her adaptability to evolving industry demands, even as opportunities dwindled.[21] Busch's career decline in this period stemmed from typecasting in shrewish or battle-ax personas established during her Laurel and Hardy era, compounded by her age—nearing 50 by the early 1940s—and broader Hollywood shifts toward younger talent and specialized sound techniques. Despite these challenges, she contributed to nearly 130 films overall, maintaining a presence through sheer professionalism until health issues curtailed her work. Her final uncredited appearance came just months before her death in 1946.[1][21]Personal life
Marriages and relationships
Mae Busch's first marriage was to actor Francis McDonald on December 12, 1915; the union lasted until their divorce on November 24, 1923.[12] McDonald, a prominent figure in early silent films, shared Busch's burgeoning Hollywood environment during this period.[22] The couple had no children.[23] Her second marriage, to salesman John Earl Cassell, occurred on June 30, 1926, and ended in divorce on September 12, 1929.[12] This brief partnership coincided with Busch's career transition from silent films to the sound era.[10] Like her first, it produced no children.[23] Busch's third and final marriage was to civil engineer Thomas C. Tate on February 8, 1936, a stable and low-profile union that endured until her death in 1946.[12][3] Tate worked in civil engineering, providing a contrast to Busch's earlier marriages within the entertainment industry.[3] This marriage also resulted in no children.[23] Busch's marriages followed a pattern of relatively short durations, reflective of the transient relationships common in the Hollywood lifestyle of her era.[10] She had no children from any of her unions.[6] An unverified rumor from her early career social circles alleged an altercation with actress Mabel Normand, in which Busch reportedly struck Normand with a vase during a confrontation involving studio head Mack Sennett.[24]Financial struggles and health issues
In the 1940s, Mae Busch faced significant financial difficulties stemming from poor investments, the financial toll of her divorces, and the scarcity of steady acting work as her career waned.[6] She reportedly reflected on her situation by stating, "What became of my money? Well, I was not used to wealth when the studios began dumping it into my lap. The dollars slipped through my fingers like sand and then came three bad marriages."[6] These marital dissolutions exacerbated her economic instability, leaving her in poverty during her later years.[6] To receive support amid her hardships, Busch resided at the Motion Picture Country Home in Woodland Hills, California, a facility established for indigent retirees from the film industry.[5] Her health challenges compounded these struggles; she experienced a nervous breakdown in 1926, indicative of ongoing stress-related issues that persisted into her final decade.[13] In late 1945, Busch was diagnosed with rectal cancer, which necessitated a five-month stay in a sanitarium for treatment.[5] She succumbed to pneumonia, a complication of the cancer, on April 19, 1946, at the age of 54, while at the Motion Picture Country Home in the San Fernando Valley.[3][16] Following her cremation, her ashes remained unclaimed and stored in a cardboard box at the facility for decades.[21] It was not until the 1970s that members of the Way Out West Tent, a chapter of the Sons of the Desert fan organization, discovered the oversight, claimed the ashes, and arranged for their placement in a niche at the Chapel of the Pines Crematory in Los Angeles.[21]Legacy
Honors and rediscovery
In recognition of her extensive contributions to the motion picture industry across both silent and sound eras, Mae Busch was posthumously awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1960, located at 7021 Hollywood Boulevard.[1] Busch's legacy experienced a notable revival in the 1970s through the efforts of the Sons of the Desert, the international Laurel and Hardy appreciation society, particularly its Way Out West Tent chapter in Los Angeles. Members discovered that her ashes had remained unclaimed since her death in 1946 and arranged for their interment at the Chapel of the Pines Crematory, complete with a commemorative plaque, as part of broader archival initiatives to honor supporting players from the comedy duo's films. In 2024, the society raised funds to secure a private niche for her ashes and install a new, accurate nameplate at the crematory.[5][25] A significant rediscovery in 2014 brought renewed attention to Busch's early dramatic work when footage from the long-lost 1919 silent film The Grim Game, a Harry Houdini feature in which she portrayed the showgirl Ethel Delmead, was located and restored with funding from Turner Classic Movies. The restoration, led by film historian Rick Schmidlin, preserved approximately 71 minutes of the original runtime and premiered on TCM in 2015, highlighting Busch's versatility beyond comedy in her pre-vamp roles.[26][27] Scholars and film enthusiasts have since recognized Busch for her pioneering role as a female comedian who adeptly transitioned from silent-era vamps to sound-film battle-axes, influencing subsequent character actresses in Hollywood comedy. Her enduring placement in film history as a bridge between these eras is underscored by her participation in over 130 credited films, many of which continue to be studied for their depiction of strong, multifaceted female supporting roles.Selected filmography
Mae Busch's film career spanned from 1912 to 1946, encompassing over 130 credits, with roles ranging from leading lady in silent dramas to comedic supporting parts in sound shorts and features. The following table presents a curated selection of 24 significant films, organized chronologically, emphasizing her early silent work, collaborations with notable directors, Laurel and Hardy appearances, and later roles; disputed early credits, such as those from Keystone Studios, are noted where applicable.[18]| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1912 | The Agitator | Unspecified (possible debut) | Short; American Film Manufacturing Company[12] |
| 1912 | The Water Nymph | Unspecified | Short; Keystone Studios; early credit, possibly disputed[1] |
| 1915 | Fatty and Mabel's Married Life | Tall woman | Short; Keystone Studios; early Keystone comedy[28] |
| 1915 | Ambrose's Sour Grapes | Ambrose's wife | Short; Keystone Studios[18] |
| 1919 | The Grim Game | Ethel Delmead | Feature; directed by Irvin Willat; Houdini vehicle |
| 1920 | The Devil's Pass Key | La Belle Odera | Feature; directed by Erich von Stroheim; Universal Pictures |
| 1922 | Foolish Wives | Mrs. Vera von Sternberg | Feature; directed by Erich von Stroheim; Universal Pictures[29] |
| 1923 | Souls for Sale | Robina Teele | Feature; directed by Rupert Hughes; Goldwyn Pictures |
| 1925 | The Unholy Three | Rosie O'Grady | Feature; directed by Tod Browning; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer[30] |
| 1927 | Perch of the Devil | Ida Hook | Feature lead; directed by King Baggot; Universal Pictures[31] |
| 1927 | Love 'Em and Weep | Mrs. Smirnoff | Short; Hal Roach Studios; first Laurel and Hardy association[18] |
| 1929 | Unaccustomed as We Are | Mrs. Hardy | Short; Hal Roach Studios; first sound Laurel and Hardy film |
| 1931 | Chickens Come Home | Mrs. Hardy | Short; Hal Roach Studios; Laurel and Hardy |
| 1931 | Come Clean | Mrs. Hardy | Short; Hal Roach Studios; Laurel and Hardy[32] |
| 1932 | Their First Mistake | Mrs. Hardy | Short; Hal Roach Studios; Laurel and Hardy[18] |
| 1932 | Doctor X | Cathouse Madame | Feature; directed by Michael Curtiz; Warner Bros. |
| 1933 | Blondie Johnson | Mae | Feature; directed by Ray Enright; Warner Bros. |
| 1933 | Sons of the Desert | Mrs. Lottie Hardy | Feature; directed by William A. Seiter; Hal Roach Studios; Laurel and Hardy |
| 1934 | Them Thar Hills | Mrs. Hardy | Short; Hal Roach Studios; Laurel and Hardy[33] |
| 1936 | The Bohemian Girl | Mrs. Hardy | Feature; directed by James W. Horne and Charles R. Rogers; Hal Roach Studios; Laurel and Hardy[20] |
| 1938 | Marie Antoinette | Mme. La Motte | Feature; uncredited; directed by W.S. Van Dyke; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
| 1941 | Ziegfeld Girl | Jenny | Feature; directed by Robert Z. Leonard; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
| 1946 | The Blue Dahlia | Jenny the maid | Feature; uncredited; directed by George Marshall; Paramount Pictures |
| 1946 | The Bride Wore Boots | Woman at auction | Feature; final role, uncredited; directed by Sidney Lanfield; Paramount Pictures[34] |