Isabel Jewell
Isabel Jewell was born in Shoshoni, Wyoming, United States on July 19th, 1907 and is the Movie Actress. At the age of 64, Isabel Jewell biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 64 years old, Isabel Jewell has this physical status:
Isabel Jewell (July 19, 1907 – April 5, 1972) was an American actress who appeared in the 1930s and early 1940s.
Ceiling Zero, Marked Woman, A Tale of Two Cities, and Gone with the Wind were some of her most popular films.
Early life
Jewell was born in Shoshoni, Wyoming, on July 19, 1907. Emory Lee Jewell and Livia A. Willoughby Jewell were the granddaughters. Her father was "a well-known...doctor and medical researcher." She was educated at St. Mary's Academy in Minnesota and Kentucky's Hamilton College.
Personal life
Jewell's first marriage (which "was not widely known during Jewell's lifetime] occurred when she wed Lovell "Cowboy" Underwood when she was 19 years old).
Jewell appeared at nightclubs with actor William Hopper from the mid to late 1930s. She married Owen Crump, who died in 1941, in 1936 to enable her next marriage.
Jewell married actor Paul Marion, who was then a private in the Army in 1941. They married in 1943 and were divorced on May 12, 1944.
During the 1952 presidential race, Jewell was a Democrat who endorsed Adlai Stevenson's campaign. She was also an Episcopalian.
Career
She worked in theater stock companies for years, including an 87-week stint in Lincoln, Nebraska, before landing on Broadway in Up Pops the Devil (1930). She has received rave reviews for Blessed Event (1932) as well.
In Blessed Event (1932), Jewell's debut appeared. Warner Brothers brought her up to Hollywood for the movie version of Up Pops the Devil. Jewell gained experience in a number of early 1930s films. In films such as Manhattan Melodrama (1934) and Marked Woman (1937), she played stereotypical gangsters' women. As the seamstress sentenced to death on the guillotine with Sydney Carton, she was well-received playing against type (Ronald Colman in A Tale of Two Cities (1935). Sally Bates in She Had to Choose was her most notable role. Gone with the Wind (1939) (in the role of "that white garbage, Emmy Slattery)), Northwest Passage (1940), High Sierra (1941), and the low-budget The Leopard Man (1943) were among Jewell's films.
She had diminished in importance by the time, e.g., when her appearances were often uncredited by the 1940s. The Snake Pit. In the 1950s, she appeared on radio dramas, including This Is Your FBI.
In an episode of Gunsmoke titled "Circus Trick," she played Madame Ahr, a member of a bank robbing circus troupe in February 1965.
In 1972, Jewell appeared in the film Ciao! Manhattan is a small town in the United States. Curtis Hanson's last film, Sweet Kill (1973), was her directorial debut.