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Marie Prevost
b. November 8, 1898 in Sarnia, Ontario
d. January 23, 1937 in Hollywood, California



<Marie Prevost - Northernstars Collection>   <Marie Prevost - Northernstars Collection>   <Marie Prevost - Northernstars Collection>  
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It is a sad commentary that fame sometimes brings cruelty decades after a death. The death was that of Canadian-born silent movie star Marie Prevost in 1937. The cruelty is how she is remembered. Some 40 years after Prevost died, singer-songwriter Nick Lowe penned a tune titled "Marie Prevost," which includes the lines: "She was a winner... Who became the <Marie Prevost - Northernstars Collection>doggie's dinner." Unfortunately, with quite some exaggeration, that is what happened, but there are some facts that were left out of the song.

Marie Prevost started out in life as Mary Bickford Dunn in Sarnia, Ontario. When still a child she moved with her parents first to Denver, Colorado, and then later to Los Angeles, California. It was a fateful decision. Had the family stayed in Sarnia, or Denver, chances are Mary Bickford Dunn would have remained unknown. But then we would have been robbed of one of the great beauties from the silent era.

Prevost worked as a stenographer, but prompted by comments about her stunning good looks, knocked on a few doors and was hired at Mack Sennett's Keystone Studios. While Sennett is usually credited with creating a frenetic kind of film comedy exemplified by the Keystone Kops, it is usually forgotten that he tried to inject some glamour into the movie biz with his Bathing Beauties. Prevost, now re-named Marie, would start out as one of those beauties. She was just 18 years old and working for one of <Marie Prevost - Northernstars Collection>the most famous companies in Hollywood. But Prevost wasn't destined to remain part of the crowd. Her looks, often described as "perky" could not be overlooked. By time she was 21 years old she had played lead in a number of Keystone shorts and, like many of the people who worked for Sennett, was hired by another studio.

At Universal, she almost immediately became a huge star of the silent screen. An embodiment of the so-called Jazz Age in films like 1921's Moonlight Follies and The Married Flapper, released in 1922. But her stay at Universal would be short and she soon signed acontract to work for Warner Bros., starting in 1922. While she would only stay with that studio for four years, she would make some of her best movies and would ignite the screen with her overt sexuality. At Warner, Prevost began to make the first of what would turn out to be a 10-film liaison with leading man Monte Blue. Three of her best films would bedirected by one of the greatest directors of the era, Germany's Ernst Lubitsch. Lubitsch was a master of the Hollywood sex farce, and Prevost was one of the stars of his breakthrough film The Marriage Circle in 1924. In the<Marie Prevost - Northernstars Collection> film she plays a very flirtatious Mizzi, who attempts to seduce a happily married doctor, played by Monte Blue, who is away from his wife at thetime. The highjinks between them are terrific, and the film didn't need sound to have people rolling in the aisles, as they used to say.

Prevost worked again with Lubitsch in 1924's Three Women, and a year later in Kiss Me Again. The balance of that decade saw her turn out one good film after another even after she left Warner Bros. to sign with the now-unknown Producers Distributing Corporation. Much like theway she had been teamed with Monty Blue, here she would make six films with Harrison Ford, including Up in Mable's Room. The image below is a detail of the glass promotional slide for the 1926 film, on <Marie Prevost - Northernstars Collection>the right. But as the decade drew to a close, the first talking pictures were being released. Many actors could nottame their exuberant physical gestures to perform in a more subtle manner now that sound would carry so much of the message. Some, simply didn't have a good voice now that they could be heard. Neither of this things applied to Prevost. It was a combination of unforeseen events not touched on in Nick Lowe's song, and largely forgotten in the details of her tragic death.

The first event in Prevost's downturn began when her mother was killed in car accident. Virtually inconsolable, she began to drink heavily to ease her pain. Also, the Great Depression had <Marie Prevost - Northernstars Collection>started and just when it mattered, Prevost found herself without a contract at a major studio. Added to that was the fact her 1929 film, The Godless Girl, directed by Cecil B.DeMille by the way, was a flop at the box office. And, if all that wasn't enough, her drinking had caused her to put on weight and now in her early 30s, her career was in serious trouble.

That said, Prevost continued to turn out strong performances in most of her films through 1930. Of particular note was herrole as Joan Crawford's prison pal in Paid, as well as hersuperb work as a wisecracking crony of Barbara Stanwyck in Ladies of Leisure. But two years later things had changed. She made only four films in 1932 and the last of these had seen her marquee billing slip from star to a supporting role in Three Wise Girls. In the next three years she would appear in only nine films, many of them made for small studios on small budgets. She was by now extremely heavy and in an attempt to regain her former status she began to diet. In truth, she stopped eating.

And that's how she died. Prevost starved herself to death. And the part about the dog is true. Trapped in her master's home without food or water, survival instincts were too strong and so her pet stayed alive by using the only food available. Instead of being remembered as one of the brightest stars in the early days of Hollywood, Marie Prevost is usually remembered, when she is remembered at all, because of her tragic death and gruesome end.

Go to Marie Prevost's Filmography




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