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Louise Currie

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Louise Currie

Known For

Acting

Gender

Female

Birthday

Apr 7, 1913 (113 years old)

Place of Birth

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA

Biography

a B movie and serial actress of the 1940s. Born Louise Gunter in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, she attended Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, New York. Moving to Hollywood, Currie enrolled in Max Reinhardt's drama school. “At the time, I was not necessarily a movie fan, but once I came to California, of course, that’s what California’s all about, the movie industry.” Attracting the interest of movie scouts while appearing in one of the school’s stage productions, Currie surprised them by expressing no desire at that point to enter movies. She wanted to wait until she graduated, and was better equipped as an actress, before she decided her next career move. When she was ready, she signed with agent Sue Carol. After she made a movie at Columbia, Harry Cohn wanted to put her under contract, but Currie would have none of it – she thought it “would maybe be more interesting to freelance.” She stated in 1999 that that was “more fun for me because I was able to pick and choose and do what I wanted, rather than all the little contract players who had to do exactly as they were told and go into films that they didn’t want or like. So, I had my independence, and I chose to do it that way.” The not-overly-ambitious Currie worked steadily during the next few years, with small, uncredited parts in As and leads in Poverty Row flicks. She found herself in a bunch of Westerns – her bullwhip-carrying role in GUN TOWN was her favorite – and also as the heroine in Bela Lugosi’s THE APE MAN. She was again menaced by Bela in VOODOO MAN. Her most enduring and fondly remembered credit is ADVENTURES OF CAPTAIN MARVEL, considered by many the greatest cliffhanger of all time; two years later, she acted for 12 episodes opposite another serial marvel: THE MASKED MARVEL. Currie enjoyed the fast-paced shooting schedules of her B movies and serials: “Fortunately, I had enough training that I could do my scenes and not mess them up, not muff the lines. And I thought that was more stimulating and interesting than pictures like CITIZEN KANE [in which she played a reporter], where you just sat on a set for endless hours, doing nothing – which to me was just a trial and a bore. So I sort of enjoyed the activity, and the fact that you could do something quickly and do it well, and have it finished... But I’m sure that most of the people that started with big A productions would never have understood that, or been able to cope with it!” 

Known For

Acting
2016Lugosi: The Forgotten King of HorrorSelf
1997Lugosi: Hollywood's DraculaSelf
1966Sakima and the Masked MarvelAlice Hamilton
1951Queen for a DaySecretary
1949And Baby Makes ThreeMiss Quigley
1947BacklashMarian Gordon
1947Second ChanceJoan Summers
1947The Chinese RingPeggy Cartwright
1947The Crimson KeyHeidi
1947Three on a TicketHelen Brimstead
1946Wild WestFlorabelle Bannister
1946Gun TownBuckskin Jane Sawyer
1944Million Dollar KidLouise Cortland
1944Voodoo ManStella Saunders
1944Forty ThievesKatherine Reynolds
1944Christmas HolidayStewardess (uncredited)
1943His Wedding ScareSusie - the New Bride
1943The Ape ManBillie Mason
1943The Masked MarvelAlice Hamilton
1943A Blitz on the FritzMrs. Egbert Slipp
1943Around the WorldWAAC
1942Stardust on the SageNancy Drew
1942Tireman, Spare My TiresFay Springer
1942The Bashful BachelorMarjorie
1941Dude CowboyGail Sargent
1941Double TroubleMiss Mink
1941Citizen KaneReporter at Xanadu (uncredited)
1941The Pinto KidBetty Ainsley
1941Adventures of Captain MarvelBetty Wallace
1941Look Who's LaughingJane (uncredited)
1940Billy the Kid OutlawedMolly Fitzgerald
1940The Green Hornet Strikes Again!Bordine's Girlfriend
1940Billy the Kid's Gun JusticeAnn Roberts
1940You'll Find OutMarion (uncredited)
1937Make Way for TomorrowNightclub Patron (uncredited)