Louise Currie
Born
Louise Gunter

(1913-04-07)April 7, 1913
DiedSeptember 8, 2013(2013-09-08) (aged 100)[1][2]
Alma materSarah Lawrence College
OccupationActress
Years active1940–1956
Spouses
(m. 1934; div. 1940)
  • John Whitney
    (m. 1940; div. 19??)
John Good
(m. 1948; died 1996)
    Grover Asmus
    (m. 2002; died 2003)
    Children1

    Louise Currie (born Louise Gunter; April 7, 1913 – September 8, 2013) was an American film actress, active from 1940 into the early 1950s.

    Biography

    Louise Currie (center) beside Alan Ladd in a publicity photograph for Citizen Kane (1941), in which they both had uncredited roles as reporters
    Poster for The Masked Marvel (1943)
    Louise Currie and Béla Lugosi in The Ape Man (1943)

    Currie was born in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, the daughter of Charles W. Gunter, a banker,[3] and his wife, Louise (née Currie), whose maiden name she would take for her professional acting surname. She was prominent in society. While attending the Martha Washington Seminary, a finishing school for young women in Washington, D.C., she was chosen as one of the ten most beautiful society girls in the nation's capital.[4] She attended Sarah Lawrence College in New York, where she became interested in acting. She moved to Hollywood, California and attended Max Reinhardt's drama school, where she was spotted by talent scouts while taking part in the school's stage workshop. She declined to attempt screen tests until after graduation.[5]

    With the help of her agent, Sue Carol, wife to actor Alan Ladd, she began working with Monogram Pictures and Columbia Pictures. Most of her movies were B-movies and serials, in which she often portrayed the heroine. Her film career began in 1940, when she appeared first in Billy the Kid Outlawed and then as a society debutante, in the Kay Kyser musical You'll Find Out.[4] In 1941 she starred in the serial Adventures of Captain Marvel opposite Tom Tyler.

    Currie had an uncredited role in Citizen Kane (1941), as a reporter at Xanadu, which included Alan Ladd as another reporter in the same sequence. She was the last surviving Kane cast member.[6]

    From 1940–49 she had roles in 39 films, many of which were starring, including The Masked Marvel (1943). She made a few television appearances in the 1950s, retiring permanently from acting in 1956.

    Personal life

    Currie was first married to Robert A. Hefner Jr., but that marriage ended in divorce on January 29, 1940.[7] She married actor John Whitney (1918-1985) at the peak of her career, but the marriage ended in divorce. On May 4, 1948, she married character actor John Good.[8] He retired from acting, and the two opened a successful antique import-export business in Beverly Hills, remaining together until his death in December 1996.[9]

    Other

    In 1944, Currie starred opposite Hollywood legend Bela Lugosi in The Ape Man (1943) and Voodoo Man (1944). Along with actress Lucille Lund and others, she took part in the documentary film Lugosi: Hollywood's Dracula (1997), which detailed the life and acting career of Lugosi. In 2002, she married Grover Asmus, the widower of actress Donna Reed.

    On May 17, 2010, Currie appeared at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Beverly Hills to introduce a screening of a restored print of the first chapter of the 1941 serial, Adventures of Captain Marvel.[10] She made repeat appearances on May 24, 2010 and August 16, 2010.

    Filmography

    Year Title Role Notes
    1940Billy the Kid OutlawedMolly Fitzgerald
    1940You'll Find OutMarionUncredited
    1940The Green Hornet Strikes Again!Bordine's GirlfriendSerial, Uncredited
    1940Billy the Kid OutlawedMolly Fitzgerald
    1940Billy the Kid's Gun JusticeAnn Roberts
    1941The Reluctant DragonMinor RoleUncredited
    1941The Pinto KidBetty Ainsley
    1941Adventures of Captain MarvelBetty WallaceSerial
    1941Citizen KaneReporter at XanaduUncredited
    1941Hello, SuckerModelUncredited
    1941Tillie the ToilerOffice GirlUncredited
    1941Double TroubleMiss Mink
    1941Look Who's LaughingJane, Marge's FriendUncredited
    1941Dude CowboyGail Sargent
    1941Bedtime StoryHotel Telephone OperatorUncredited
    1942Call Out the MarinesGirl Too Tired to DanceUncredited
    1942The Bashful BachelorMarjorie
    1942Stardust on the SageNancy Drew
    1943The Ape ManBillie Mason
    1943The Masked MarvelAlice HamiltonSerial
    1943Around the WorldWAACUncredited
    1944Million Dollar KidLouise Cortland
    1944Voodoo ManSally
    1944Ali Baba and the Forty ThievesKatherine Reynolds
    1944Christmas HolidayStewardessUncredited
    1944Sensations of 1945English GirlUncredited
    1944Practically YoursUncredited
    1945Love LettersClara FoleyUncredited
    1946Gun TownBuckskin Jane Sawyer
    1946The Bachelor's DaughtersSalesgirlUncredited
    1946Her Sister's SecretDick's Blonde GirlfriendUncredited
    1946Wild WestFlorabelle Bannister
    1947BacklashMarian Gordon
    1947Three on a TicketHelen Brimstead
    1947The Crimson KeyHeidi
    1947Second ChanceJoan Summers
    1947The Chinese RingPeggy Cartwright
    1949And Baby Makes ThreeMiss Quigley - SecretaryUncredited
    1951Queen for a DaySecretary

    References

    1. Magers, Boyd (September 11, 2013). "News". Western Clippings. Retrieved September 11, 2013.
    2. Louise Currie obituary, Los Angeles Times, September 15, 2013; retrieved 2013-09-16.
    3. "Realism Note--Debs Play Debs". Ogden Standard-Examiner. Utah, Ogden. Associated Press. September 29, 1940. p. 15. Retrieved June 10, 2016 via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
    4. 1 2 "RKO Director Makes Ten Strike". Oakland Tribune, December 15, 1940
    5. Fitzgerald, Mike. "Louise Currie Interview". Western Clippings. Retrieved May 8, 2014.
    6. "'Citizen Kane' actress Louise Currie dead at 100". Wellesnet: The Orson Welles Web Resource. September 15, 2013. Retrieved January 19, 2016.
    7. "On Grounds of 'Dictatorial In-Laws' Wife Is Divorced". The Times. Indiana, Hammond. International News Service. January 29, 1940. p. 43. Retrieved June 10, 2016 via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
    8. "Actor, Actress Marry". Long Beach Independent. California, Long Beach. International News Service. May 5, 1948. p. 9. Retrieved June 10, 2016 via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
    9. John Good obituary, Variety, February 17–23, 1997.
    10. Actress Louise Currie. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, May 17, 2010; retrieved January 26, 2013.
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