Selena Royle

Selena Royle

Acting 1904-11-06 New York City, New York, USA

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Selena Royle (November 6, 1904 – April 23, 1983) was an American actress (of stage, radio, television and film), and later, an author. Royle was born in New York City to playwright Edwin Milton Royle and actress Selena Fetter (April 12, 1860 - May 10, 1955). She had an older sister, Josephine Fetter Royle (1901–1992). Her mother recounted in a newspaper article that she used to take Selena along with her to her rehearsals and performances. One night, then seven-year-old Selena went missing. While the mother frantically searched for her, holding up act two, the audience became restless. The youngster finally turned up - she had gone on stage dressed in her mother's second-act costume; she made a bow, much to the audience's amusement. She later remarked, "And that is the first time I was ever on stage, and I liked it so well I stayed." Her father wrote the 1921 Broadway play Lancelot and Elaine to provide both her and sister Josephine with their first professional roles, as Guinevere and Elaine respectively. Eventually, she landed a part on her own in the 1923 Theatre Guild production of Peer Gynt, with Joseph Schildkraut, and became a respected Broadway actress. She made one film in the 1930s, Misleading Lady, but otherwise worked on the stage and on radio. Royle began her radio career in 1926 or 1927 and performed "almost continuously since", according to a 1939 newspaper item. Her body of work includes playing the title role in Hilda Hope, M.D. She also played Martha Jackson in Woman of Courage, Mrs. Allen in Against the Storm, Joan in The O'Neills, and Mrs. Gardner in Betty and Bob, and appeared in Kate Hopkins. In the 1940s, she returned to film and had a successful run, mainly playing maternal characters such as the bereaved mother of The Fighting Sullivans (1944), mother to Jane Powell in the big screen adaptation of A Date with Judy (1948) and the title character's mother opposite Ingrid Bergman as Joan of Arc (1948). She made several appearances on early television. However, in 1951, when she refused to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee. She sued the American Legion, which had published Red Channels, in which her name was listed, and won but her acting career ended. She made only three more roles, the last being Murder Is My Beat (1955). She also wrote several books, including Guadalajara: as I Know It, Live It, Love It (which went through several editions) and a couple of cookbooks, and some magazine articles. She was the "radio editor" of the short-lived New York periodical Swank.

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全部作品

1986 Archive Footage (Robot Monster)
1974 (archive footage) (uncredited)
1955 Beatrice Abbott
1953 Mother
1951 Mrs. Dobbs
1951 Mrs. Dolly Copeland
1950 Patricia Longworth
1950 Kate Mahoney
1950 Mrs. Lavery
1949 Freda Hofer
展开全部作品
1949 Elizabeth Almond
1949 Mrs. Adams
1949 Judge Florence Prentiss
1948 Aunt Jessie
1948 Isabelle d'Arc, Joan's Mother
1948 Mrs. Foster
1948 Cora Mayhew
1948 Mrs. Essie Miller
1948 Mrs. Wayne
1947 Louise Wargate
1947 Sairy MacBean
1946 Mrs. Merrick
1946 Mama Leckie
1946 Miss Bliss
1946 Mrs. Hanlon
1946 Mrs. Kincheloe
1946 Mrs. Zachary Montgomery
1946 Kate Porter
1945 'Ma' Abby Dibson
1945 Maude Weaver
1944 Mrs. Alleta Sullivan
1944 Mattie Trounson
1944 Mrs. Reynolds
1943 Selena Royle
1932 Alice Connell