Mary Duncan
Biography
From Wikipedia
Mary Duncan (August 13, 1895 – May 9, 1993) was an American actress.
Mary Duncan was born in Northumberland county, Virginia, the sixth of eight children born to Capt. William "Bill" Dungan and his wife, the former Ada Thaddeus Douglass. She attended Cornell University before settling on acting as a career.
She began her career as a child actress playing on the Broadway stage from 1910. In 1926 she played the daughter "Poppy" in the smash hit and controversial play The Shanghai Gesture. Florence Reed played her mother called Mother Goddam in which Reed kills Duncan in a startling end to the play. This play was turned into a very sanitized film in 1941 with Gene Tierney.
She met and married Stephen "Laddie" Sanford, who was an international polo player as well as director of the Bigelow-Sanford Carpet Company, in 1933, after which she retired from films. They remained married until his death in 1977. She spent much of her remaining years working with several major charities.
Her last film appearance was with Katharine Hepburn in the 1933 film Morning Glory.
She kept herself active by playing golf twice a week and swimming every morning before breakfast, which helped her maintain her size 8 figure. As an actress, she had followed the ministrations of Sylvia of Hollywood to keep her shape.
Mary Duncan died in her sleep aged 97. She was survived by a niece and great-niece, and she was the last known person to have in her possession a copy of the lost Murnau film 4 Devils; Martin Koerber, curator of Deutsche Kinemathek, has speculated that her heirs may still have the valuable print somewhere.
Filmography
Morning Glory
as Rita Vernon 1933
Thirteen Women
as June Raskob 1932
The Phantom of Crestwood
as Dorothy Mears 1932
The River
as Rosalee 1929
Five and Ten
as Muriel Preston 1931
State's Attorney
as Nora Dean 1932
4 Devils
as The Lady 1928
Kismet
as Zeleekha 1930
Men Call It Love
as Helen 1931
The Boudoir Diplomat
as Mona 1930
Romance of the Rio Grande
as Carlotta 1929
Soft Living
as Lorna Estabrook 1928
The Age for Love
as Nina Donnet 1931
Thru Different Eyes
as Viola 1929