
Claudette Colbert
Biography
Claudette Colbert was born in Saint-Mandé, Val-de-Marne, France on September 13, 1903 and was brought to the United States as a child three years later. Born Emilie 'Lily' Claudette Chauchoin, she went to high school in New York. She was studying at the Art Students League when, in 1923, she took the name Claudette Colbert for her first Broadway role in "The Wild Westcotts". Her most noteworthy stage vehicle was the "The Barker" in 1927. Her first film was a silent For the Love of Mike (1927), directed by Frank Capra. Made on a shoestring, the movie was a flop, and she vowed that it would be her last film role: "I only left Broadway when the crash came. The Depression killed the theater, and the pictures were manna from heaven". She had her first film success the next year, however, in The Lady Lies (1929). Her early notable films were all box-office hits and included Cleopatra (1934), in which she played the title role enticingly. She had her greatest triumph playing a runaway heiress, with enormous charm, opposite Clark Gable in Capra's comedy It Happened One Night (1934), for which she won the Academy Award as Best Actress. By 1938 her keen ability in business made her the highest paid star in Hollywood. By 1950, though, her star had begun to wane. She returned to the stage in 1956 when she replaced Margaret Sullavan during the spring and summer in the comedy "Janus". Appearances in other Broadway productions followed, including "The Marriage-Go-Round". Besides the stage, she did TV specials and had a supporting role in a notable TV movie, The Two Mrs. Grenvilles (1987), for which she received a Golden Globe award. In 1989 she was presented with a Life Achievement award from the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. She married actor Norman Foster in 1928, although they never lived together and were divorced after seven years. She married surgeon Dr. Joel Pressman soon after and remained married until his death in 1968. In latter years she divided her time between an apartment in New York and a 200-year-old plantation house in Speightstown, Barbados, where she entertained such guests as Frank Sinatra and Ronald Reagan. She remained on Barbados Island after her stroke. On July 30, 1996, Claudette died in Speightstown, Barbados. She was 92.
Filmography

Complicated Women

Frank Capra Jr. Remembers: 'It Happened One Night'

The Silver Screen: Color Me Lavender

That's Entertainment! III

Parrish

Blithe Spirit

Texas Lady

Royal Affairs in Versailles

Daughters of Destiny

The Planter's Wife

Let's Make It Legal

Thunder on the Hill

The Secret Fury

Three Came Home

Bride for Sale

Family Honeymoon

Sleep, My Love

The Egg and I

The Secret Heart

Without Reservations

Tomorrow Is Forever

Guest Wife

Practically Yours

Since You Went Away

So Proudly We Hail

No Time for Love

Hedda Hopper’s Hollywood No. 6

The Palm Beach Story

Remember the Day

Skylark

Arise, My Love

Boom Town

Cavalcade of the Academy Awards

Hollywood: Style Center of the World

Drums Along the Mohawk

It's a Wonderful World

Midnight

Breakdowns of 1938

Zaza

Hollywood Goes to Town

Bluebeard's Eighth Wife

Tovarich

I Met Him in Paris

Maid of Salem

Under Two Flags

The Bride Comes Home

The Fashion Side of Hollywood

She Married Her Boss

Private Worlds

The Gilded Lily

Imitation of Life

Cleopatra

It Happened One Night

Four Frightened People

Torch Singer

Three-Cornered Moon

I Cover the Waterfront

Tonight Is Ours

The Sign of the Cross

The Phantom President

Make Me a Star

The Man from Yesterday

The Misleading Lady

The Wiser Sex

His Woman

Secrets of a Secretary

The Smiling Lieutenant

The House That Shadows Built

Honor Among Lovers

Manslaughter

The Big Pond

Young Man of Manhattan

The Lady Lies

The Hole in the Wall
