
Margaret Sullavan
Personal Info
Known for
Acting
Gender
Female
Birthday
1909-05-16
Day of Death
1960-01-01 (50 years old)
Place of Birth
Norfolk, Virginia, USA
Margaret Sullavan
Biography
Margaret Brooke Sullavan (May 16, 1909 – January 1, 1960) was an American actress. Sullavan started her career on the stage in 1929. In 1933 she caught the attention of movie director John M. Stahl and had her debut on the screen that same year in Only Yesterday.
Margaret Sullavan preferred working on the stage and did only 16 movies. She retired from the screen in the early forties, but returned in 1950 to make her last movie, No Sad Songs For Me (1950), in which she plays a woman who is dying of cancer. For the rest of her career she would only appear on the stage.
Sullavan was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance in Three Comrades (1938). She died of an overdose of barbiturates on January 1, New Year's Day, 1960, at the age of 50.
Description above from the Wikipedia article Margaret Sullavan, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Known For
Acting
(1988)
James Stewart: A Wonderful Life
as Self (archive footage)
(1961)
Hollywood: The Selznick Years
as 'Rebecca' screen test (archive footage) (uncredited)
(1950)
No Sad Songs for Me
as Mary Scott
(1943)
Cry 'Havoc'
as Lieutenant Smith
(1942)
Joan Crawford's Home Movies
as Self
(1941)
Appointment for Love
as Jane Alexander
(1941)
Back Street
as Ray Smith
(1941)
So Ends Our Night
as Ruth Holland
(1940)
The Shop Around the Corner
as Klara Novak
(1940)
The Mortal Storm
as Freya Roth
(1938)
Three Comrades
as Patricia Hollmann
(1938)
The Shining Hour
as Judy Linden
(1938)
The Shopworn Angel
as Daisy Heath
(1936)
The Moon's Our Home
as Cherry Chester / Sarah Brown
(1936)
Next Time We Love
as Cicely Hunt Tyler
(1935)
The Good Fairy
as Luisa
(1935)
So Red the Rose
as Valette Bedford
(1934)
Little Man, What Now?
as Lammchen
(1933)
Only Yesterday
as Mary Lane