Jazz Age movie star Marion Davies is the featured star of the month for January 2023 on Turner Classic Movies, with her top films being shown on Tuesday nights.
Mostly unknown to modern moviegoers, Davis was the number one female box office star in Hollywood. She started her film career in 1917 and made dozens of films in the 1920s and 1930s, mostly in comedic roles.
Here are the scheduled films for the Marion Davies tribute.
Jan. 3
8:00 PM The Bride’s Play (‘21)
9:30 PM Beauty’s Worth (‘22)
11:00 PM When Knighthood Was in Flower (‘22)
1:15 AM Little Old New York (‘23)
3:15 AM Beverly of Graustark (‘26)
4:45 AM The Red Mill (‘26)
Jan. 10
8:00 PM The Patsy (‘28)
9:30 PM Show People (‘28)
11:00 PM Marianne (‘29)
1:00 AM The Florodora Girl (‘30)
2:30 AM Not So Dumb (‘30)
4:00 AM The Hollywood Revue (‘29)
Jan. 17
8:00 PM The Bachelor Father (‘31)
9:45 PM Five and Ten (‘31)
11:30 PM Blondie of the Follies (‘32)
1:15 AM Polly of the Circus (‘32)
2:45 AM Going Hollywood (‘33)
4:15 AM Operator 13 (‘34)
Jan. 24
8:00 PM Peg O’ My Heart (‘33)
9:45 PM Page Miss Glory (‘35)
11:30 PM Cain and Mabel (‘36)
1:15 AM Hearts Divided (‘36)
2:45 AM Ever Since Eve (‘37)
For more information see: TCM Star of the Month: Marion Davies
TCM Schedules
For TCM schedules and more information see the links below.
TCM Highlights for January 2023
TCM Alphabetical List of January 2023 Films
TCM Facebook Page (latest posts are below).
Below is a retrospective from PBS on Davis and Hearst.
Marion Davies 1897 – 1961
Marion Davies (born Marion Cecilia Douras;[a] January 3, 1897 – September 22, 1961) was an American actress, producer, screenwriter, and philanthropist. Educated in a religious convent, Davies fled the school to pursue a career as a chorus girl. As a teenager, she appeared in several Broadway musicals and one film, Runaway Romany (1917). She soon became a featured performer in the Ziegfeld Follies. While performing in the 1916 Follies, the nineteen-year-old Marion met the fifty-three-year-old newspaper tycoon, William Randolph Hearst, and became his mistress. Hearst took over management of Davies’ career and promoted her as a film actress.
Hearst financed Davies’ pictures and promoted her career extensively in his newspapers and Hearst newsreels. He founded Cosmopolitan Pictures to produce her films. By 1924, Davies was the number one female box office star in Hollywood because of the popularity of When Knighthood Was in Flower and Little Old New York, which were among the biggest box-office hits of their respective years. During the zenith of the Jazz Age, Davies became renowned as the hostess of lavish soirees for Hollywood actors and political elites. However, in 1924, her name became linked with scandal when film producer Thomas Ince died at a party aboard Hearst’s yacht.
Following the decline of her film career during the Great Depression, Davies struggled with alcoholism. She retired from the screen in 1937 to devote herself to an ailing Hearst and charitable work. In Hearst’s declining years, Davies remained his steadfast companion until his death in 1951. Eleven weeks after Hearst’s death, she married sea captain Horace Brown. Their marriage lasted until Davies’ death at 64 from malignant osteomyelitis (bone cancer) of the jaw in 1961.
By the time of her death, her popular association with the character of Susan Alexander Kane in the film Citizen Kane (1941) already overshadowed Davies’ legacy as a talented actress. The title character’s second wife—an untalented singer whom he tries to promote—was widely assumed to be based upon Davies. However, many commentators, including writer-director Orson Welles, defended Davies’ record as a gifted actress and comedienne to whom Hearst’s patronage did more harm than good. In his final years, Welles attempted to correct the widespread misconceptions the film had created about Davies’ popularity and talents as an actress.
Portions of this article courtesy of Wikipedia.
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