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Claudette Colbert (koʊlˈbɛər/ kohl-BAIR,<ref name="Pace1996">Template:Cite news</ref> born Émilie "Lily" Claudette Chauchoin (ʃoʃwɛ̃/ show-shwan); September 13, 1903 – July 30, 1996)<ref name="Britannica"/><ref name="Pace1996" /> was an American actress. Colbert began her career in Broadway productions during the late 1920s and progressed to films with the advent of talking pictures. Initially contracted to Paramount Pictures, Colbert became one of the few major actresses of the period who worked freelance; that is to say, independently of the studio system. In 1999, the American Film Institute named Colbert the 12th-greatest female star of classic Hollywood cinema.

With her Mid-Atlantic accent,<ref name="becoming"/> versatility, witty dialogues, aristocratic demeanor, and flair<ref name="tcmdb" /> for light comedy and emotional drama, Colbert became one of the most popular stars of the 1930s and 1940s.<ref name=Britannica>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Pace1996" /> In all, Colbert acted in more than 60 movies. Among her frequent co-stars were Fred MacMurray in seven films (1935–1949), and Fredric March in four (1930–1933).

Colbert won the Academy Award for Best Actress for It Happened One Night (1934), and received two other Academy Award nominations during her career. Her other notable films include Cleopatra (1934), The Palm Beach Story (1942) and Since You Went Away (1944).

By the mid-1950s Colbert had turned from motion pictures to television and stage work; she earned a Tony Award nomination for The Marriage-Go-Round in 1959. Her career began to wane in the early 1960s. In the late 1970s she experienced a comeback in the theater, and received a Sarah Siddons Award for her Chicago theater work in 1980. Her television appearance in The Two Mrs. Grenvilles (1987) earned her a Golden Globe Award and an Emmy Award nomination.

Early lifeEdit

Émilie "Lily" Claudette Chauchoin was born in 1903 in Saint-Mandé, France,<ref>COLBERT, Claudette, British Film Institute. BFI.org.uk.</ref> to Jeanne (Template:Née, with British Channel Islands heritage) and Georges Chauchoin.<ref name="Pace1996" /><ref name="Quirk 5">Quirk, "Claudette Colbert", p. 5.</ref>

Although christened "Émilie", she was called "Lily" after Jersey-born actress Lillie Langtry.<ref name="Lily"/> Her mother had intended to name her daughter Lily, but the pastor mistakenly chose Émilie, so she was always called Lily in the family.<ref name="Lily"/> Colbert's brother, Charles Chauchoin, was also born in the Bailiwick of Jersey. Jeanne held various occupations, while Georges owned and managed a chain store of pastry and bonbon shops (more than eleven), and was also a major stockholder of an ink factory in which he suffered business setbacks.<ref name="Adrian">Film Actresses Vol.15 CLAUDETTE COLBERT: Part 1, by Iacob Adrian (November 6, 2014), Publisher: Publishing Platform, Template:ISBN</ref> Colbert's grandmother Marie Loew had been to the U.S., and Georges' brother-in-law Charles Loew was living in New York City. Marie was willing to help Georges financially, but also encouraged him to try his luck in the U.S.<ref name="Lily">Template:Cite book</ref>

File:Claudette-Colbert-1920.jpg
During her high school days, 1920

To pursue more employment opportunities, Colbert and her family, including Marie and her aunt Emily Loew, immigrated to Manhattan in 1906.<ref name="Quirk 5" /><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

They lived in a fifth-floor walk-up at 53rd Street. Colbert stated that she was always climbing those stairs until the age of 18.<ref name="A Perfect Star"/> Her parents formally changed her legal name to Lily Claudette Chauchoin.<ref name="tcmdb"/> Georges worked as a minor official in the foreign department at First National City Bank,<ref name="Adrian"/> and the family was naturalized in 1912. Before Colbert entered public school, she quickly learnt Channel Island English from Marie,<ref name="Hollywood Legend">Template:Cite news</ref> and grew up bilingual, speaking both English and French.<ref name=Britannica/><ref name="Shipman114">Shipman, The Great Movie Stars, pp. 114–115.</ref> Already as a small child, she had read Shakespeare's plays and acquired an international sensibility.<ref name="Adrian"/> She had hoped to become a painter ever since she first gripped a pencil. Her brother was drafted 1917 as private first class. After the First World War, he studied at the School of Military Aeronautics at Cornell University. Colbert's mother was an opera music fan, and her aunt was a dressmaker.<ref name="Lily"/>

Colbert studied at Washington Irving High School, which was known for its strong arts program. Her speech teacher, Alice Rostetter, encouraged her to audition for a play Rostetter had written. In 1921, Colbert made her stage debut at the Provincetown Playhouse in revivals of Rostetter's The Widow's Veil and Aria da Capo by Edna St. Vincent Millay, at the age of 17.<ref name="tcmdb"/> Her interests, though, still leaned towards painting, fashion design, and commercial art.<ref name="A Perfect Star"/>

Intending to become a fashion designer, she attended the Art Students League of New York, where she paid for her art education by working in a dress shop. After attending a party with writer Anne Morrison, Colbert was offered a bit part in Morrison's play,<ref name="All Movie Guide"/> and appeared on the Broadway stage in a small role in The Wild Westcotts (1923). She had used the name Claudette, instead of Lily, since high school; for her stage name, she added her paternal grandmother's maiden name, Colbert.<ref name="Britannica"/><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Her father died in 1925;<ref name="tcmdb"/> her grandmother died in New York in the mid-1930s at the age of 88.<ref name="Chapter 4">Template:Cite book</ref>

CareerEdit

The beginnings, 1924–1927Edit

Colbert worked in a string of mostly short-lived shows in Chicago, Washington, D.C., Boston and Connecticut, which enabled her to gain experience in different genres. In 1924 the actor Leslie Howard met her, was impressed by her ability to speak with both Mid-Atlantic and British accents, and contacted the producer Al Woods to cast her in Frederick Lonsdale's The Fake, but she was replaced by Frieda Inescort before it opened.<ref name="Tom Vallance">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="becoming">Dick, Bernard F. Claudette Colbert: She Walked in Beauty. pp. 24–25</ref> After signing a five-year contract with Woods, Colbert played ingenue roles on Broadway from 1925 to 1929. During this period she rejected being typecast as a French maid.<ref name="richardson">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> By 1925 she was having success in the comedy A Kiss in a Taxi, which ran for 103 performances over a two-month period.<ref name="Kiss">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Columnists sang the praises of her unconventional beauty and her power to enrapture an audience.<ref name="netflix"/> Colbert was again acclaimed as a carnival snake charmer in the Broadway production of The Barker (1927), and she reprised the role in London's West End.<ref name="Basinger">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> She was noticed by theatrical producer Leland Hayward, who suggested her for the heroine role in the silent film For the Love of Mike (1927). Now believed to be lost,<ref>Classic Film Guide.</ref> the film did not fare well at the box office.<ref name="Pace1996" /><ref name="ultimate">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The early films, 1928–1934Edit

File:Claudette Colbert, La Gringa.jpg
Colbert in the Broadway production La Gringa, 1928

In 1928, Colbert signed a contract with Paramount Pictures.<ref name="tcmdb" /> A demand existed for stage actors who could handle dialogue in the new "talkies", and Colbert's elegance and musical voice were among her best assets.<ref name="Pace1996" /> Her distinctive high-cheekboned beauty drew attention in The Hole in the Wall (1929), but at first she did not like film acting.<ref name="All Movie Guide">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Her earliest films were produced in New York. During the filming of The Lady Lies (also 1929), she was also appearing nightly in the play See Naples and Die. The Lady Lies was a box-office success.<ref name="Pace1996" /> At this period, many film critics wrote her having potential to be the screen's next big star.<ref name="netflix">Claudette Colbert The French Lady of Hollywood Template:Webarchive, Netflix, James David Patrick, access-date=May 9, 2023</ref> In 1930, she starred opposite Maurice Chevalier in The Big Pond, which was filmed in both English and French for release in their respective markets as was common during the early sound era. With her first husband Norman Foster she co-starred in the film Young Man of Manhattan (1930), for which he received negative reviews as one of her weakest leading men.<ref name="Shipman114" />

Colbert co-starred with Fredric March in Manslaughter (1930), acclaimed again by critics<ref>Quirk, p. 64, citing The New York Times.</ref> for her performance as a woman charged with vehicular manslaughter.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> She was paired with March again in Honor Among Lovers (1931), which was popular at that time;<ref>Quirk, p. 36.</ref> he was also originally cast as her co-star in His Woman (1931), but was replaced by Gary Cooper.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Colbert also starred in Mysterious Mr. Parkes (1931), a French-language version of Slightly Scarlet for the European market, although her French was tinged with an English accent after American life. It was also screened in the United States. She sang and played piano/violin in the Ernst Lubitsch musical The Smiling Lieutenant (1931), which was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture as well as being a box-office hit and critical success.<ref name="Pace1996" /><ref>Quirk, p. 37.</ref>

Colbert's career got a further boost when she played the supporting role as femme fatale Poppaea in Cecil B. DeMille's historical epic The Sign of the Cross (1932), opposite Fredric March and Charles Laughton. In one of the best-remembered scenes of her film career, she bathes nude in a marble pool filled with asses' milk.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The film was the highest-grossing picture of the year in the United States.<ref name="Birchard">Template:Cite book</ref>

In 1933, Colbert renegotiated her contract with Paramount to allow her to appear in films for other studios. The pioneering screwball comedy film<ref>Three-Cornered Moon AllMovie review by Craig Butler, accessed October 28, 2023</ref> Three-Cornered Moon reached No. 9 in the National Board of Review Awards in 1933.<ref>Three-Cornered Moon profile Template:Webarchive, nbrmp.org; accessed August 4, 2015.</ref> Her musical voice, a contralto that footnotes list as being coached by Bing Crosby, was also featured in Torch Singer (1933),<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> co-starring Ricardo Cortez and David Manners. Partly as results, she was ranked as the year's 13th box-office star.<ref>Schallert, Edwin. "Stars' Box-Office Ratings for Past Season Given: Survey Shows Sophisticates Slipping Fast. Will Rogers Tops All; Shirley Temple and Crosby Shoot Up", Los Angeles Times, December 9, 1934, p. A1.</ref><ref>Motion Picture Herald, December 1, 1934; accessed October 13, 2016</ref> By 1933, she had appeared in 21 films, averaging four per year. Many of her early films were dramatics, and her performances were admired.<ref name="Britannica" /> Colbert's leading roles were down-to-earth and diverse, highlighting her versatility.<ref name="richardson" />

Colbert was initially reluctant to appear in the screwball comedy It Happened One Night (1934). The studio agreed to pay her $50,000 for the role and guaranteed filming would be done within four weeks so she could take a planned vacation.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> She won the Academy Award for Best Actress for the film.<ref name="Oscars7" />

In Cleopatra (1934), Colbert played the title role opposite Warren William and Henry Wilcoxon. It was the second highest-grossing picture of that year in the United States.<ref name="Birchard"/><ref name="Pace1996" /><ref name=ultimate/> Thereafter, Colbert did not wish to be portrayed as overtly sexual and later refused such roles.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> She was loaned to Universal Pictures for Imitation of Life (1934), which was another box-office success.<ref name="Shipman114" /><ref name="ultimate" /><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Those three films were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture in the next year; Colbert is the only actress to date to star in three films nominated for Best Motion Picture in the same year.

File:Cleopatra publicity photo.jpg
Colbert in the title role of Cleopatra, 1934

Mid-career, 1935–1944Edit

Colbert's rising profile internationally allowed her to renegotiate her contract, which raised her salary. For 1935 and 1936, she was listed sixth and eighth in Quigley's annual "Top-Ten Money-Making Stars Poll".<ref name="Quigley">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The Gilded Lily (1935) was popular at that time,<ref name="Pace1996" /><ref name="tcmdb" /> but she received an Academy Award nomination for her role in the hospital drama Private Worlds (1935).<ref name="Oscars8" />

In 1936, Colbert signed a new contract with Paramount, making her Hollywood's highest-paid actress.<ref name="Shipman117">Shipman, The Great Movie Stars, p. 117.</ref> When the studio renewed her contract in 1938, she was again reported to be Hollywood's top-paid actress, with a salary of $426,924.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> At the peak of her popularity in the late 1930s, she earned $150,000 per film.<ref name="Obituary" /> In 1937 and 1938, she was listed as the fourteenth and sixth (respectively) top money-making woman in the U.S.<ref name="tcmdb" />

Colbert spent the rest of the 1930s deftly alternating between romantic comedies and dramas: She Married Her Boss (1935) with Melvyn Douglas; The Bride Comes Home (1935), with Fred MacMurray; Under Two Flags (1936) with Ronald Colman; Zaza (1939) with Herbert Marshall; and It's a Wonderful World (1939) with James Stewart.

Colbert was Template:Convert tall.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> One columnist wrote that Colbert placed her career "ahead of everything, save possibly her marriage", and that she had a strong sense of what was best for her, and a "deep-rooted desire to be in shape, efficient, and under control".<ref name="ShipmanMovieTalk"/> A biographer wrote that Colbert "helped define femininity for her generation with her chic manner".<ref name="Berg_p190">Template:Cite book</ref> Colbert once said, "I know what's best for me—after all."<ref name="The Claudette Colbert Business"/><ref name="Legends">Template:Cite bookTemplate:ISBN?Template:Page needed</ref>

Colbert was very particular about how she appeared on-screen, and believed her face was difficult to light and photograph. She insisted on having the right side of her face away from the camera when shooting close-up, because of a small bump from a broken nose as a child.<ref>Helen Dudar, "Claudette Colbert Revels in a Happy, Starry Past", The New York Times, October 27, 1991, p. A-1</ref> This sometimes required movie sets to be redesigned.<ref name="All Movie Guide"/> During the filming of Tovarich (1937), director Anatole Litvak favored co-starring Charles Boyer over her in the camera angles, so she got very frustrated.<ref>Quirk, p. 100-101.</ref>

Gary Cooper was terrified at the prospect of working with Colbert in his first comedy, Bluebeard's Eighth Wife (1938), considering Colbert an expert in the genre.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Midnight (1939) with Don Ameche, directed by Mitchell Leisen and written by Billy Wilder and Charles Brackett, was one of her best comedy films.<ref name="Tom Vallance"/> Ernst Lubitsch and Mitchell Leisen were her particularly favorite film directors working with.<ref>Quirk, p. 102, 107.</ref>

Colbert learnt about lighting and cinematography, and refused to begin filming until she was satisfied that she would be shown to her best advantage.<ref name="KDL_p119">Template:Cite book</ref> Drums Along the Mohawk (1939) with Henry Fonda was her first color film, and was the 10th-grossing picture of the year in the United States.<ref name=AllTime>Template:Cite news</ref> However, she mistrusted the relatively new Technicolor process, and fearing she would not photograph well, preferred thereafter to be filmed in black-and-white.<ref>Finler, p. 24.</ref>

During this time, she began performing on CBS's popular radio program Lux Radio Theater, and was heard in 22 episodes between 1935 and 1954.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> She also participated in 13 episodes of radio's The Screen Guild Theater, between 1939 and 1952.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 1940, Colbert was offered a seven-year contract with Paramount Pictures that would have paid her $200,000 a year; she declined the offer after learning she could command $150,000 per film as a freelance artist. She secured roles in several prestigious films and this period marked the height of her earning power.<ref name="Shipman117" /> As a supporting role, Colbert co-starred with Clark Gable and Spencer Tracy in Boom Town, released by MGM in 1940 and was the highest-grossing picture of the year in the United States. However, Colbert once often said that Arise, My Love (1940) was her favorite of all her movies. <ref>Quirk, p. 115.</ref><ref name="Tom Vallance"/> It won the Academy Award for Best Story.

Preston Sturges' mature The Palm Beach Story (1942) had been accepted some re-evaluation over the years as a comedic classic,<ref>An 80-Year-Old Romantic Comedy Leaves VFX Artists Baffled By Mystery Of One Key Shot SCREEN RANT, by RACHEL ULATOWSKI, published JUN 11, 2023, accessed October 31, 2023</ref> where she did one of the best performances of her film career,<ref>The Palm Beach Story AllMovie review by Richard Gilliam, accessed October 31, 2023</ref> which featured such a thing as beauty that speaks of intelligence.<ref>The Palm Beach Story: Love in a Warm Climate The Criterion Collection, by film critic Stephanie Zacharek, published JAN 21, 2015, accessed October 31, 2023</ref> She again became the industry's highest-paid star in 1942.<ref name="Pace1996" /> In the next year, No Time for Love (1943) was popular.<ref name="Pace1996" /><ref name="tcmdb" />

During filming of So Proudly We Hail! (1943), her co-star Paulette Goddard preferred working with the other co-star Veronica Lake, over Colbert; Colbert felt that the younger actress had treated her like an "old lady". Goddard said that Colbert "was at [my] eyes at every moment". Goddard insisted that portions of the script be rewritten so that her role was as large as Colbert's.<ref name="ShipmanMovieTalk" /> This was unusual for Colbert, who was otherwise known for maintaining high standards of professionalism.<ref name="The Claudette Colbert Business"/><ref name="Britannica" /> For example, from her early film career, she offered acting advice to her less experienced co-stars. <ref>Quirk, p. 180.</ref>

Impressed by Colbert's role in So Proudly We Hail!, David O. Selznick approached her to play the lead in Since You Went Away (1944). Colbert was initially reluctant to appear as a mother of teenaged children, but Selznick eventually convinced her to take the role.<ref>Haver, pp. 338–340.</ref> Released in June 1944, the film made almost $5 million at the US box office and was the year's third highest-grossing picture. One critic praised aspects of the film, but particularly Colbert's work.<ref>Haver, p. 342.</ref> Partly as a result, she received an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress.<ref name="Oscars17" />

During the World War II, she also volunteered with the Red Cross.<ref name="netflix" />

Middle years, 1945–1961Edit

File:CLAUDETTE COLBERT Screenland.jpg
Colbert on Screenland cover before release of Guest Wife (1945)

In 1945, Colbert ended her association with Paramount and continued to freelance in such films as Guest Wife (1945) with Don Ameche. She starred opposite John Wayne in RKO's Without Reservations (1946), which grossed $3 million in the U.S. While working on it, director Mervyn LeRoy described Colbert as an "interesting" lady to work with, recalling her habit of not watching where she was going and constantly bumping into things.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Praised for her sense of style and fashion, Colbert ensured throughout her career that she was impeccably groomed and costumed. For the melodrama Tomorrow Is Forever (1946), Jean Louis was hired to create 18 changes of wardrobe for her.<ref>Jewell and Harbin, p. 209.</ref> Tomorrow is Forever and The Secret Heart (also 1946) were also substantial commercial successes,<ref name="ultimate" /> and Colbert's popularity during 1947 led her to place 9th in Quigley's "Top Ten Money-Making Stars Poll".<ref name="Quigley" />

She achieved great success opposite Fred MacMurray in the comedy The Egg and I (1947), which was the year's second-highest grossing picture, and later acknowledged as the 12th-most profitable American film of the 1940s.<ref>Finler, p. 216.</ref> The suspense film Sleep, My Love (1948) with Robert Cummings was a modest commercial success. By 1949, she still ranked as the 22nd-highest box-office star.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

The romantic comedy Bride for Sale (1949), wherein Colbert played part of a love triangle that included George Brent and Robert Young, was well-reviewed.<ref name="Jewell and Harbin, p. 248">Jewell and Harbin, p. 248.</ref> Her performance in the Pacific war film Three Came Home (1950) was also praised by critics.<ref name="Pace1996" /> However, the mystery melodrama The Secret Fury (1950), distributed by RKO Studios, received mixed reviews.<ref name="Jewell and Harbin, p. 248" /> During this period, Colbert was unable to work beyond 5 p.m. each day due to orders from her doctor.<ref name="Anderson">Template:Cite book</ref> While Colbert still looked like a young woman,<ref name="A Perfect Star"/> she found it difficult making the transition to playing more mature characters as she entered middle age.<ref name="ShipmanMovieTalk">Template:Cite book</ref> She said, "I'm a very good comedienne, but I was always fighting that image, too."<ref name="Obituary" />

In 1949, Colbert was asked to play the lead role in All About Eve, because the producer felt that she best represented the style he envisioned for the part. However, Colbert severely injured her back, forcing her to abandon the picture shortly before filming began. Bette Davis was cast, instead. In later life, Colbert said, "I just never had the luck to play bitches."<ref name="Obituary" />

File:Claudette Colbert-Patric Knowles in Three Came Home.jpg
Patric Knowles and Colbert in Three Came Home, 1950

In the early 1950s, Colbert traveled to Europe for tax purposes<ref name="A Perfect Star" /> and joined fewer films. The Planter's Wife (1952) was a success in British market.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> She played a small role in Royal Affairs in Versailles (1954), her only film with a French director (Sacha Guitry). Colbert had found the directorial method disappointing, which was on the heavy-handed and ponderous.<ref>Quirk, p. 36.</ref> It was screened in the United States in 1957.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 1954, Colbert turned down a million-dollar broadcast deal with NBC-TV,<ref name="A Perfect Star">Template:Cite magazine</ref> but made a pact with CBS-TV to star in several teleplays. After a successful appearance in a television version of The Royal Family (a parody of the Barrymore family in The Best of Broadway series),<ref name="tcmdb" /> she took on more than 20 television works. She starred in television adaptations of Blithe Spirit in 1956 and The Bells of St. Mary's in 1959, and guest-starred on Robert Montgomery Presents and Playhouse 90.

In 1956, Colbert hosted the 28th Academy Awards ceremony.

In 1957, she was cast as Lucy Bradford, wife of schoolteacher Jim Bradford (Jeff Morrow), in the "Blood in the Dust" episode of CBS's Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre. In the story, Jim refuses to back down when a gunman orders him to leave town, and Lucy is distressed because Jim hasn't fired a weapon since he was in the Civil War.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In the show's 1960 episode "So Young the Savage Land", she played Beth Brayden, who becomes disillusioned with her rancher-husband Jim (John Dehner) when he turns to violence to protect their property.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 1958, she returned to Broadway in The Marriage-Go-Round, for which she was nominated for a Best Actress Tony Award.

File:Claudette colbert 1959.jpg
Colbert during TV production in 1959

She made a brief return to the screen, played the supporting role as the mother of Troy Donahue in Parrish (1961). It was her last appearance on the big screen. The film was a commercial success,<ref>"All-Time Top Grossers", Variety, 8 January 1964 p 69</ref> but Colbert received little attention, and she directed her agent to end any further attempts to generate interest in her as a TV actress.<ref name="Shipman119">Shipman, The Great Movie Stars, p. 119.</ref> Even at this period, she still looked younger than her actual age.<ref name="Quirk 181">Quirk, "Claudette Colbert", p. 181.</ref>

Later career, 1963–1987Edit

Colbert made successful Broadway appearances in The Irregular Verb to Love (1963); in The Kingfisher (1978), with co-star Rex Harrison; and in Frederick Lonsdale's Aren't We All? (1985), also with Harrison. She told an interviewer, "Audiences always sound like they're glad to see me, and I'm damned glad to see them."<ref name="Pace1996" /> 

She appeared in a supporting role in the television miniseries The Two Mrs. Grenvilles (1987), which was a ratings success, and for which she won a Golden Globe and was nominated for an Emmy Award. Towards the end of her life, she explained why she had never written her autobiography, "I've been happy, and that's no story."<ref> Template:Cite book</ref>

Modern critics have pointed out that Colbert had a unique set of assets—her heart-shaped face, distinct facial features,<ref name="tcmdb" /> curly hair,<ref name="Pace1996" /> aristocratic manner, relaxed acting, little mysterious, and intelligent style,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>—that distinguishes her from other classic cinema stars through the 1930s and 1940s.<ref name="The Claudette Colbert Business">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In her comedies, she invariably played shrewd, self-reliant women; unlike many of her contemporaries, though, she rarely engaged in physical comedy. Her characters were more likely to be observers and commentators.<ref name="DiBattista, p. 210">Template:Cite book</ref>

Personal lifeEdit

In 1928, Colbert married actor and director Norman Foster, with whom she co-starred in the Broadway show The Barker. Their marriage remained a secret for many years while they lived in separate homes.<ref name="tcmdb">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In Los Angeles, Colbert shared a home with her mother, Jeanne Chauchoin,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> who disliked Foster and reputedly did not allow him into the home.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Colbert and Foster divorced in 1935 in Mexico.<ref name="tcmdb" />

File:Claudette Colbert & Mother.jpg
Colbert and her mother, Jeanne, in early 1930s

On Christmas Eve, 1935, in Yuma, Arizona, Colbert married Dr. Joel Pressman, who eventually became a professor and chief of the head and neck surgery department of UCLA Medical School. She gave Pressman a Beechcraft airplane as a present. They purchased a ranch in northern California,<ref name="A Perfect Star" /> where Colbert enjoyed horseback riding<ref>Dick, Bernard F. (2008). "Chapter 12. The Last Picture Show". Claudette Colbert: She Walked in Beauty. University Press of Mississippi</ref> and her husband kept show cattle. During this time, Colbert drove a Lincoln Continental and a Ford Thunderbird.<ref name="A Perfect Star" /> The marriage lasted 33 years, until Pressman's death from liver cancer in 1968.

Jeanne reportedly envied her daughter,<ref name="A Perfect Star" /> preferred her son's company, and made Colbert's brother Charles serve as his sister's agent. Charles used the surname Wendling, borrowed from Jeanne's paternal grandmother Rose Wendling.<ref name="Lily" /> He served as Colbert's business manager for a time,<ref name="Quirk 5" /> and was credited with negotiating some of her more lucrative contracts in the late 1930s and early 1940s.<ref name="Shipman117" /><ref name="Lily" /> In 1942, Charles enlisted to take part in World War Two. Colbert's uncle Charles Loew died in 1953, and her aunt Emily Loew in 1954.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Although virtually retired from motion pictures since the mid-1950s, Colbert continued to maintain an upscale lifestyle. She had a country house in Palm Springs for weekends. An advertising executive said, "Claudette was extravagant; I never, ever saw her question the price of anything." In 1963, Colbert sold her a Lloyd Wright-designed residence in Holmby Hills, and she and Dr. Pressman rented a small house in Beverly Hills.<ref name="A Perfect Star" />

In 1958, she met Verna Hull, a wealthy painter, photographer, and the stepdaughter of a Sears Roebuck heiress. They had a nine-year friendship that included travel, and an interest in art, and they rented twin New York penthouses. When Colbert bought a house in Barbados in the early 1960s, Hull bought a house next door, amid rumors that their friendship was a romantic one, which Colbert denied.<ref name="A Perfect Star" /> The friendship ended after an argument that took place as Colbert's husband lay dying, during which Hull insisted that Pressman would not only take his own life, but Colbert's as well, rather than die alone.<ref name="A Perfect Star" /> Pressman died on February 26, 1968.<ref name="A Perfect Star" />

File:CLAUDETTE COLBERT 1977.jpg
at party in Dorothy Shaver Award Nov. 9, 1977, New York City

Colbert was a lifelong Republican.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Final years and deathEdit

For years, Colbert divided her time between her Manhattan apartment and her vacation home in Speightstown, Barbados.<ref name="Pace1996" /> The latter, purchased from a British gentleman and nicknamed Bellerive, was the island's only plantation house fronting the beach.<ref name="A Perfect Star"/> Her permanent address remained Manhattan.

When her mother Jeanne died in 1970,<ref name="tcmdb" /> and her brother Charles in 1971, Colbert's only surviving relative was her brother's daughter, Coco Lewis.<ref name="Obituary">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

Colbert suffered a series of small strokes during the last three years of her life. She died in 1996 in Barbados,<ref name="Pace1996" /> where she had employed a housekeeper and two cooks. She was 92. Her remains were transported to New York City for cremation and funeral services.<ref name="A Perfect Star" />

A requiem mass was later held at Church of St. Vincent Ferrer in Manhattan.<ref name="Envoi">Template:Cite book</ref> Her ashes are laid to rest in the Godings Bay Church Cemetery, Speightstown, Saint Peter, Barbados, alongside her mother and second husband.<ref name="A Perfect Star" />

Colbert never had children. She left most of her estate, estimated at $3.5 million and including her Manhattan apartment and Bellerive, to longtime friend Helen O'Hagan, a retired director of corporate relations at Saks Fifth Avenue. Colbert had met O'Hagan in 1961 on the set of Parrish, her last film,<ref>Stephanie Harvin, "O'Hagan, a Legend at Saks", Post and Courier, August 23, 1996</ref><ref>"Colbert's Will Provides for Long-Time Friends", Austin American-Statesman, August 10, 1996, p. B12</ref> and they became best friends around 1970.<ref name="tcmdb"/>

After Pressman's death, Colbert instructed her friends to treat O'Hagan as they had Pressman, "as her spouse".<ref name=mann>Template:Cite book</ref> Although O'Hagan was financially comfortable without the generous bequest, Bellerive was sold for over $2 million to David Geffen. Colbert's will also left $150,000 to her niece Coco Lewis; a trust of over $100,000 to UCLA, in Pressman's memory; and $75,000 to Marie Corbin, her Bajan housekeeper.<ref name="A Perfect Star"/>

Awards and honorsEdit

Year Award Category Film Result Template:Tooltip
1935 Academy Award Best Actress It Happened One Night Template:Won <ref name="Oscars7">Template:Cite news</ref>
1936 Private Worlds Template:Nom <ref name="Oscars8">Template:Cite news</ref>
1945 Since You Went Away Template:Nom <ref name="Oscars17">Template:Cite news</ref>
1959 Tony Award Best Actress The Marriage-Go-Round Template:Nom Template:Citation needed
1960 Hollywood Walk of Fame Star at 6812 Hollywood Blvd. Template:Won citation CitationClass=web

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1980 Sarah Siddons Award The Kingfisher Template:Won citation CitationClass=web

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1984 Film Society of Lincoln Center Lifetime Achievement Award Template:Won <ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
1985 Drama Desk Drama Desk Special Award Aren't We All Template:Won <ref>Drama Desk Award winners Template:Webarchive</ref>
1987 Primetime Emmy Award Outstanding Supporting Actress The Two Mrs. Grenvilles Template:Nom Template:Citation needed
1988 Golden Globe Award Best Supporting Actress in a Series Template:Won Template:Citation needed
1989 Kennedy Center Honors Lifetime Achievement Award Template:Won citation CitationClass=web

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1990 San Sebastián International Film Festival Donostia Award Template:Won citation CitationClass=web

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1999 American Film Institute Greatest Female Stars Template:Won citation CitationClass=web

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Selected filmographyEdit

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The following is a list of feature films in which Colbert had top billing. Template:Div col

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See alsoEdit

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ReferencesEdit

NotesEdit

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BibliographyEdit

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External linksEdit

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