Mae Marsh
Publicity photo of Marsh, 1916
Born
Mary Warne Marsh

(1894-11-09)November 9, 1894
DiedFebruary 13, 1968(1968-02-13) (aged 73)
Resting placePacific Crest Cemetery
Redondo Beach, California
OccupationActress
Years active19101964
Spouse
Louis Lee Arms
(m. 1918)
Children3
RelativesMarguerite Marsh
(sister)
Frances Marsh
(sister)
Oliver T. Marsh
(brother)

Mae Marsh (born Mary Warne Marsh;[1] November 9, 1894[2] February 13, 1968) was an American film actress whose career spanned over 50 years.

Early life

Mae Marsh was born Mary Warne Marsh in Madrid, New Mexico Territory, on November 9, 1894.[3] She was one of seven children of Mae T. (née Warne) and Stephen Charles Marsh. By 1900, the Marsh family had moved to El Paso, Texas, where Mary's father worked as a bartender.[4] Mae's father died in 1901, and the following year, her mother married William Hall, a native of Virginia. The family later moved to California, where Mae attended Convent of the Sacred Heart School in Hollywood as well as public school.[1]

A frequently told story of Marsh's childhood is "Her father, a railroad auditor, died when she was four. Her family moved to San Francisco, California, where her stepfather was killed in the great earthquake of 1906. Her great-aunt then took Mae and [her older sister] Marguerite to Los Angeles, hoping her show business background would open doors for jobs at various movie studios needing extras."[3]:113 However, her father, S. Charles Marsh, was a bartender, not a railroad auditor, and he was alive at least as late as June 1900, when Marsh was nearly six.[2] Her stepfather, oil-field inspector William Hall, could not have been killed in the 1906 earthquake, as he was alive, listed in the 1910 census, living with her mother and sisters.[5]

Marsh worked as a salesgirl and loitered around the Hollywood sets and locations while her older sister worked on a film, observing the progress of her sister's performance. She first started as an extra in various movies, and played her first substantial role in the film Ramona (1910) at the age of 15.

“I tagged my way into motion pictures,” Marsh recalled in The Silent Picture. “I used to follow my sister Marguerite to the old Biograph studio and then, one great day, Mr. Griffith noticed me, put me in a picture and I had my chance. I love my work and though new and very wonderful interests have entered my life, I still love it and couldn't think of giving it up.”[3]:114

Career rise

Marsh worked with D. W. Griffith in small roles at Biograph when they were filming in California and in New York. Her big break came when Mary Pickford, resident star of the Biograph lot and a married woman at that time, refused to play the bare-legged, grass-skirted role of Lily-White in Man's Genesis. Griffith announced that if Pickford would not play that part in Man's Genesis, she would not play the coveted title role in his next film, The Sands of Dee. The other actresses stood behind Pickford, each refusing in turn to play the part, citing the same objection.

Years later, Marsh recalled in an interview in The Silent Picture: “...and he called rehearsal, and we were all there and he said, ‘Well now, Miss Marsh, you can rehearse this.’ And Mary Pickford said ‘What!’ and Mr. Griffith said ‘Yes, Mary Pickford, if you don't do what I tell you I want you to do, I'm going to have someone else do The Sands of Dee. Mary Pickford didn't play Man's Genesis so Mae can play The Sands of Dee.’ Of course, I was thrilled, and she was very much hurt. And I thought, ‘Well it's all right with me. That is something.’ I was, you know, just a lamebrain.” [3]:117

Working with Mack Sennett and D. W. Griffith, she was a prolific actress, sometimes appearing in eight movies per year and often paired with fellow Sennett protégé Robert Harron in romantic roles.[6]

The Birth of a Nation (1915)

Marsh in The Birth of a Nation (1915)

Marsh, in the memoir Screen Acting (1921) recalled her performance as “ Little Sister” in the “cellar scene” in which Union cavalry invade the Cameron family plantation in The Birth of a Nation, an example of her “counter-dramatic” acting:[7]

It was a matter of some moment of how [my character] the Little Sister would be affected. I can hear your average director: “Roll your eyes” he would say, “Cry! Drop to your knees in terror!” In other words, it would be the same old stuff...

Mr. Griffith, when he came to the cellar scene, asked me if there had been a time in my life when I had been filled with terror:

“Yes.” I said.

“What did you do?” he inquired.

“I laughed,” I answered.

He saw the point immediately. “Good” he said, “let’s try it.”

It was the hysterical laugh of the little girl in the cellar…that was far more effective than rolling the eyes or weeping would have been.”[8]

Intolerance (1916)

Marsh in Intolerance (1916)

D. W. Griffith's cinematic handling of the courtroom episode in Intolerance, in particular his use of close-ups for “dramatic intensity,” are widely recognized.[9] According to film historian Paul O’Dell, “Mae Marsh gave to Intolerance one of her most memorable” portrayals,[10] identifying her role as the “Dear One” as integral to the film's success:

Much more mention should be made of the performance of Mae Marsh, which in this scene reaches one of its many peaks. Sir Alexander Korda included her performance as one of the most outstanding pieces of acting in the silent film era, and June Berry rated her playing of the Dear One as only second to Falconetti’s Joan of Arc (1928).[11]

Mae Marsh, in her 1923 memoir Screen Acting, comments on her struggle to fully deliver the sequence: “The hardest dramatic work I ever did was the courtroom scene in Intolerance. We retook the scenes on four different occasions. Each time I gave to the limit of my vitality and ability. I put everything into my portrayal that was in me...”[11]

March signed a lucrative contract with Samuel Goldwyn worth $2,500 per week after Intolerance, but none of the films she made with him were particularly successful. After her marriage to Lee Arms, a publicity agent for Goldwyn, in 1918, her film output decreased to about one per year.

She starred in the 1918 film Fields of Honor. Marsh's last notable starring role was as a flapper for Griffith in The White Rose (1923) with Ivor Novello and Carol Dempster. She re-teamed with Novello for the film version of his hit stage play The Rat (1925).

In 1955, Marsh was awarded the George Eastman Award,[12] given by George Eastman House for distinguished contribution to the art of film.

Sound films

Marsh returned from retirement to appear in sound films and played a role in Henry King’s remake of Over the Hill (1931). She gravitated toward character roles, and worked in this manner for the next several decades. Marsh appeared in numerous popular films, such as Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1932) and Little Man, What Now? (1934). She also became a favorite of director John Ford, appearing in The Grapes of Wrath (1940), How Green Was My Valley (1941), 3 Godfathers (1948), and The Searchers (1956).

Marsh has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame located at 1600 Vine Street.

Personal life and death

In Manhattan on September 21, 1918, Marsh married Samuel Goldwyn's publicity agent Louis Lee Arms.[13] The couple, who had four children, remained together for 50 years, until 1968, when Mae died from a heart attack at Hermosa Beach, California.[14][15] Louis died at the age of 101 on June 11, 1989.[16] They are buried together in Section 5 at Pacific Crest Cemetery in Redondo Beach, California.[15]

Filmography

Shorts

Year Title Role Notes
1910Ramona
1910Serious Sixteen
1911Fighting Blood
1912The Siren of Impulse
1912A Voice from the DeepOn BeachUncredited
Lost film
1912Just Like a WomanIn Club
1912One Is Business, the Other Crime
1912The Lesser EvilThe Young Woman's Companion
1912The Old Actor
1912When Kings Were the LawAt CourtUncredited
1912A Beast at BayThe Young Woman's Friend
1912Home FolksAt Barn Dance
1912A Temporary TruceA Murdered SettlerUncredited
1912Lena and the GeeseThe 'Adopted' Daughter
1912The Spirit AwakenedThe Renegade Farmhand's SweetheartLost film
1912The School Teacher and the WaifSchoolgirl
1912An Indian SummerThe Widow's DaughterLost film
1912Man's GenesisLillywhite
1912The Sands of DeeMary
1912The Inner Circle
1912The Kentucky GirlBelle Hopkins - Bob's SisterLost film
1912The ParasiteRose FletcherLost film
1912Two Daughters of Eve
1912For the Honor of the SeventhThe Girl in TownLost film
1912BrutalityThe Young Woman
1912The New York HatSecond Gossip
1912The Indian Uprising at Santa FeJuanLost film
1913Three FriendsThe Wife's FriendLost film
1913The Telephone Girl and the LadyThe Telephone Girl
1913An Adventure in the Autumn WoodsThe GirlLost film
1913The Tender Hearted BoyThe Tender-Hearted Boy's SweetheartLost film
1913Love in an Apartment HotelAngelina Millingford, a MaidLost film
1913Broken WaysMinor RoleUncredited
1913A Girl’s StratagemThe Young WomanLost film
1913Near to EarthOne of Marie's FriendsLost film
1913FateMother, Loving Family
1913The Perfidy of MaryMary
1913The Little TeaseThe Little Tease, as an Adult
1913The Lady and the MouseMinor RoleUncredited
1913The WandererThe Other Parents' Daughter, as an Adult
1913His Mother's SonThe Daughter
1913A Timely InterceptionMinor RoleUncredited
1913The Mothering HeartMinor RoleUncredited
1913Her Mother's OathIn ChurchLost film
1913The ReformersThe DaughterLost film
1913Two Men of the DesertLost film
1913Primitive Man
1913For the Son of the HouseThe Young WomanLost film
1913Influence of the UnknownThe Young WomanLost film
1913The Battle at Elderbush GulchSally Cameron
1914Brute ForceLillywhite
1915The VictimMary Hastings, Frank's WifeLost film
1915Big Jim's HeartLost film

Silent features

Year Title Role Notes
1914Judith of BethuliaNaomi
1914The Great Leap; Until Death Do Us PartMary GibbsLost film
1914Home, Sweet HomeApple Pie Mary Smith
1914The EscapeJennie JoyceLost film
1914The Avenging ConscienceThe Maid
1914Moonshine MollyMolly BooneLost film
1915The Birth of a NationFlora Cameron - The Pet Sister
1915The OutcastThe Girl of the Slums
1915The Outlaw's RevengeThe American loverLost film
1915Her Shattered IdolMae Carter
1916Hoodoo AnnHoodoo Ann
1916A Child of the Paris StreetsJulie / the Child-Wife
1916A Child of the StreetsLost film
1916The Wild Girl of the SierrasThe Wild GirlLost film
1916The Marriage of Molly-OMolly-OLost film
1916IntoleranceThe Dear One
1916The Little LiarMaggieLost film
1916The Wharf RatCarmen WagnerLost film
1917Polly of the CircusPolly
1917Sunshine AlleyNellLost film
1917The Cinderella ManMarjorie Caner
1918Field of HonorMarie MessereauLost film
1918The Beloved TraitorMary Garland
1918The Face in the DarkJane RidgewayLost film
1918All WomanSusan SweeneyLost film
1918The Glorious AdventureCarey WethersbeeLost film
1918Money MadElsie DeanLost film
1918Hidden FiresPeggy Murray / Louise ParkeLost film
1918The Racing StrainLucille CameronLost film
1919The Bondage of BarbaraBarbara GreyLost film
1919Spotlight SadieSadie SullivanLost film
1919The Mother and the LawThe Little Dear One
1920The Little 'Fraid LadyCecilia CarneLost film
1921Nobody's KidMary CaryLost film
1922Till We Meet AgainMarion BatesLost film
1922Flames of PassionDorothy Hawke
1923Paddy the Next Best ThingPaddyLost film
1923The White RoseBessie 'Teazie' Williams
1924DaddiesRuth Atkins
1924ArabellaArabellaLost film
1925Tides of PassionCharityLost film
1925The RatOdile Etrange
1928Racing ThroughLost film

Sound

Year Title Role Notes
1931Over the HillMa Shelby
1932Rebecca of Sunnybrook FarmAunt Jane
1932That's My BoyMom Scott
1933Alice in WonderlandSheep
1934Little Man, What Now?Wife of Karl Goebbler
1935Bachelor of ArtsMrs. Mary Barth
1935Black FuryMrs. Mary Novak
1936Hollywood BoulevardCarlotta Blakeford
1939Drums Along the MohawkPioneer WomanUncredited
1939Heaven with a Barbed Wire FenceEmpire State Building TouristUncredited
1939Swanee RiverMrs. Jonathan FryUncredited
1940The Man Who Wouldn't TalkMrs. Stetson
1940The Grapes of WrathMuley's WifeUncredited
1940Four SonsTownswomanUncredited
1940Young PeopleMaria Liggett
1941Tobacco RoadCounty Clerk's AssistantUncredited
1941The Cowboy and the BlondeOffice WorkerUncredited
1941For Beauty's SakeNight ManagerUncredited
1941Belle StarrPreacher's WifeUncredited
1941Great GunsAunt Martha
1941Swamp WaterMrs. McCordUncredited
1941How Green Was My ValleyMiner's WifeUncredited
1941Remember the DayTeacherUncredited
1942Blue, White and PerfectMrs. Bertha Toby
1942Son of Fury: The Story of Benjamin BlakeMrs. PurdyUncredited
1942It Happened in FlatbushAunt Mae, Team Co-OwnerUncredited
1942Tales of ManhattanMollyRobinson sequence
1942Just Off BroadwayAutograph SeekerUncredited
1942The Loves of Edgar Allan PoeMrs. PhillipsUncredited
1942The Man in the TrunkMrs. IngeUncredited
1942Quiet Please, MurderMiss HartwigUncredited
1943The Meanest Man in the WorldOld LadyUncredited
1943Dixie DuganMrs. Sloan
1943The Moon Is DownVillagerUncredited
1943Tonight We Raid CalaisFrench TownswomanUncredited
1943The Song of BernadetteMadame Blanche - TownswomanUncredited
1943Jane EyreLeahUncredited
1944The Fighting SullivansNeighbor of Mrs. GriffinUncredited
1944Buffalo BillArcade CustomerUncredited
1944Sweet and Low-DownApartment House TenantUncredited
1944In the Meantime, DarlingEmmaUncredited
1945A Tree Grows in BrooklynTynmore Sister
Uncredited
1945State FairRing-Toss SpectatorUncredited
1945The Dolly SistersAnnieUncredited
1945Leave Her to HeavenFisherwomanUncredited
1946Johnny Comes Flying HomeBus PassengerUncredited
1946SmokyWoman Watching ParadeUncredited
1946My Darling ClementineSimpson's SisterUncredited
1947The Late George ApleyDressmakerUncredited
1947Miracle on 34th StreetWoman in Santa LineUncredited
1947Thunder in the ValleyFlower VendorUncredited
1947Mother Wore TightsResort GuestUncredited
1947Daisy KenyonWoman Leaving ApartmentUncredited
1948Fort ApacheMrs. Gates
1948Green Grass of WyomingRace SpectatorUncredited
1948Deep WatersMolly Thatcher
1948The Snake PitTommy's MotherUncredited
19483 GodfathersMrs. Perley Sweet
1949A Letter to Three WivesMiss JenkinsUncredited
1949ImpactMrs. King
1949It Happens Every SpringGreenleaf's MaidUncredited
1949The Fighting KentuckianSister Hattie
1949Everybody Does ItHiggins - the Borlands' MaidUncredited
1950When Willie Comes Marching HomeMrs. Clara FettlesUncredited
1950The GunfighterMrs. O'BrienUncredited
1950My Blue HeavenMaidUncredited
1950The JackpotMrs. Woodruff in PhotoUncredited
1951The Model and the Marriage BrokerTalkative PatientUncredited
1952The Quiet ManFather Paul's MotherUncredited
1952Night Without SleepMaidUncredited
1953The Sun Shines BrightG.A.R. Woman at the Ball
1953TitanicWoman to Whom Norman Gave His SeatUncredited
1953Powder RiverTownswomanUncredited
1953A Blueprint for MurderAnna Swenson - Lynne's HousekeeperUncredited
1953The RobeJerusalem Woman Aiding DemetriusUncredited
1954A Star Is BornMalibu Party GuestUncredited
1955Prince of PlayersWitch in 'Macbeth'Uncredited
1955The Tall MenEmigrantUncredited
1955The Girl RushCasino PatronUncredited
1955Good Morning, Miss DoveWoman in BankUncredited
1955Hell on Frisco BayMrs. Cobb - Steve's LandladyUncredited
1956While the City SleepsMrs. Manners
1956The SearchersDark Cloaked Woman at Fort Guarding Deranged WomanUncredited
1956Girls in Prison'Grandma' Edwards
1956JulieHysterical Passenger
1957The Wings of EaglesNurse CrumleyUncredited
1958Cry Terror!Woman in ElevatorScenes deleted
Replaced by Marjorie Bennett
1958The Last HurrahMourner at WakeUncredited
1960Sergeant RutledgeMrs. Nellie HackettUncredited
1960From the TerraceSandy's GovernessUncredited
1961Two Rode TogetherHanna CleggUncredited
1963Donovan's ReefFamily Council MemberUncredited
1964Cheyenne AutumnWomanUncredited

References

  1. 1 2 Sicherman, Barbara; Green, Carol Hurd (1980). Notable American Women: The Modern Period : a Biographical Dictionary. Harvard University Press. pp. 457–458. ISBN 9780674627338. Retrieved September 8, 2018. Mae Marsh.
  2. 1 2 U.S. Census records for 1900, El Paso, Texas, Sheet No. 6
  3. 1 2 3 4 Menefee, David W. (2004). The First Female Stars: Women of the Silent Era. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 113–125. ISBN 9780275982591. Retrieved September 8, 2018.
  4. "Twelfth Census of the United States: Population Schedule, 1900", image of original enumeration page showing Mae Marsh (daughter) and other children in household of S[tephen] C[harles] Marsh and his wife "May", El Paso, Texas, June 1, 1900. Census page retrieved via FamilySearch, Salt Lake City, Utah, March 30, 2023.
  5. U.S. Census records for 1910, Los Angeles, California, Sheet No. 4A
  6. O’Dell, 1970 p. 49: O’Dell refers to an unpublished manuscript title Mae Marsh and Robert Harron by Harold Dunham. See Bibliography, p. 157, note no. 4
  7. O’Dell, 1970 p. 16-17: Marsh “conveys beautifully the drama and tension of the situation through what might be called counter-dramatic terms...”
  8. O’Dell, 1970 p. 16-17: Minor changes to punctuation for clarity, italics added for same. Quoted here, ellipsis in O’Dell And p. 157: Bibliography: footnote no. 1, Mae Marsh in Screen Acting, Photo Star Publishing Co., 1921
  9. O’Dell, 1970 p. 72: “...the extreme close-up shots...are much quoted and illustrated as examples of Griffith's use of this technique...”
  10. O’Dell, 1970 p. 8
  11. 1 2 O’Dell, 1970 p. 73-74
  12. "Eastman House award recipients · George Eastman House Rochester". Eastmanhouse.org. Archived from the original on April 15, 2012. Retrieved July 3, 2013.
  13. "New York, New York City Marriage Records, 1829-1938", marriage license and certificate of Louis Lee Arms and Mary Warne Marsh, September 21, 1918, Manhattan, New York City. Retrieved via FamilySearch, March 30, 2023.
  14. "Death of Mae Marsh", obituary, Los Angeles Times, February 18, 1968, p. F5. Retrieved via ProQuest Historical Newspapers (Ann Arbor, Michigan); subscription access through The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Library, March 30, 2023.
  15. 1 2 "Mae Marsh" (1894–1968), memorial, 5849996, Pacific Crest Cemetery, Redondo Beach, Los Angeles County, California. Accessed via Find a Grave (Lehi, Utah), online database, March 30, 2023.
  16. "California Death Index, 1940-1997," database, Louis Lee Arms, 11 June 1989; California Department of Public Health Services, Sacramento. Retrieved via FamilySearch, March 30, 2023.

Sources

  • O’Dell, Paul (1970). Griffith and the Rise of Hollywood (1970 ed.). New York: A. S. Barnes & Co. p. 163. ISBN 0-498-07718-7.

Bibliography

  • When the Movies Were Young by Linda Arvidson, New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1969
  • Adventures with D.W. Griffith by Karl Brown, New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1973
  • "Robertson-Cole Offers Mae Marsh in a Sumptuously Produced Play from Novel", The Moving Picture World, 18 December 1920
  • Mae Marsh in an Interview with Robert B. Cushman by Anthony Slide in The Silent Picture, New York: Arno Press, 1977
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