Ida Lupino(1918-1995)
- Actress
- Director
- Writer
Ida was born in London to a show business family. In 1932, her mother
took Ida with her to an audition and Ida got the part her mother
wanted. The picture was
Her First Affaire (1932). Ida,
a bleached blonde, went to Hollywood in 1934 playing small,
insignificant parts.
Peter Ibbetson (1935) was one of
her few noteworthy movies and it was not until
The Light That Failed (1939)
that she got a chance to get better parts. In most of her movies, she
was cast as the hard, but sympathetic woman from the wrong side of the
tracks. In The Sea Wolf (1941) and
High Sierra (1940), she played the
part magnificently. It has been said that no one could do hard-luck
dames the way Lupino could do them. She played tough, knowing
characters who held their own against some of the biggest leading men
of the day - Humphrey Bogart,
Ronald Colman,
John Garfield and
Edward G. Robinson. She made
a handful of films during the forties playing different characters
ranging from
Pillow to Post (1945), where she
played a traveling saleswoman to the tough nightclub singer in
The Man I Love (1946). But good
roles for women were hard to get and there were many young actresses
and established stars competing for those roles. She left Warner
Brothers in 1947 and became a freelance actress. When better roles did
not materialize, Ida stepped behind the camera as a director, writer
and producer. Her first directing job came when director
Elmer Clifton fell ill on a script that
she co-wrote Not Wanted (1949). Ida
had joked that as an actress, she was the poor man's
Bette Davis. Now, she said that as a
director, she became the poor man's
Don Siegel. The films that she wrote, or
directed, or appeared in during the fifties were mostly inexpensive
melodramas. She later turned to television where she directed episodes
in shows such as
The Untouchables (1959) and
The Fugitive (1963). In the
seventies, she made guest appearances on various television show and
appeared in small parts in a few movies.