Film Noir Femme Fatale Joan Bennett 1945 Wild Cat Glamour Photograph
Item History & Price
Not just a talent on the screen, Bennett also acted on th...e stage and television carving out a career for herself lasting from the silent era and well into the sound era; first as a winsome blonde ingénue, then as a sensuous brunette femme fatale, and finally as a warm-hearted wife and mother on TV's "Dark Shadows."
Photograph measures 8" x 10" on a glossy single weight paper stock with handwritten notations and previous collector's ink stamp on verso.
Guaranteed to be 100% vintage and original from Grapefruit Moon Gallery.
More about Joan Bennett:
Personable, extremely pretty and prolific star of a wide range of films in the 1930s and 40s. Bennett began her film career as a demure blonde ingenue (e.g. in George Cukor's "Little Women" 1933, William K. Howard's breathtaking "The Trial of Vivienne Ware" 1932). Raoul Walsh's delightful "Me and My Gal" (1932), though, did give her an offbeat chance to indulge in sharp wisecracking. Early on her acting abilities seemed a bit modest, but Bennett's warm speaking voice and quietly piquant charm gave her considerable appeal as a screen personality.
Gregory LaCava's pioneering study of mental health problems, "Private Worlds" (1935), gave Bennett an unusually good acting opportunity, and the sensitivity and vulnerability she brought to the role showed the increasing resonance she was bringing to her screen work. If she never did possess the acting bravura of Hollywood's most intense dramatic divas, Joan Bennett was nonetheless intriguing, likable and highly watchable, her sometimes aloof, serene presence highly effective at suggesting muffled passion. In 1938 she followed the trend of going brunette and parting one's hair in the middle (inspired by Hedy Lamarr's strong first Hollywood impression), and the look stuck. "Trade Winds" (1938) was an enjoyable Tay Garnett romp, and "The Housekeeper's Daughter" (1939) gave Bennett a good Hal Roach comedy, but she soon developed into a sultry, brunette fixture who proved outstanding in several 1940s films noirs. Sometimes sympathetic, sometimes a femme fatale, Bennett acted in a quartet of Fritz Lang thrillers, "Manhunt" (1941), "Woman in the Window" (1944), "Scarlet Street" (1945) and "Secret Beyond the Door" (1948), which represent some of her best work in film.
Bennett also appeared in a wide variety of other films during this time, ranging from the semi-musical period drama, "Nob Hill" (1945) to the interesting Hemingway adaptation "The Macomber Affair" (1947), which traded in on her more seductive noir roles. As middle age approached, Bennett shifted to the role of witty and nurturing mother in Vincente Minnelli's comedies "Father of the Bride" (1950) and "Father's Little Dividend" (1951). She was also especially fine as a mother whose family is jeopardized in Max Ophuls's unusual noir, "The Reckless Moment" (1949).
Her career was short-circuited in 1951 after her husband, producer Walter Wanger, shot her agent, Jennings Lang, accusing the latter of being a "homewrecker." She was offered few film roles after that (Douglas Sirk's "There's Always Tomorrow" 1956, in which she supported Barbara Stanwyck and Fred MacMurray), though she returned to the stage in several national tours. Later in life Bennett could be seen in a leading role on TV on the highly enjoyable cult Gothic soap opera, "Dark Shadows" (1966-71) and her last film appearance was in Dario Argento's cult horror film, "Suspiria" (1976).
Daughter of famed stage (and occasionally screen) actor Richard Bennett, sister of fellow film star Constance Bennett, and also sister of actress Barbara Bennett; she was married to Wanger (her second husband) from 1940 to 1965.
Biography From: TCM | Turner Classic Movies