- Nacimiento
- Defunción1 de agosto de 1970 · Indianápolis, Indiana, Estados Unidos (un cáncer de esófago)
- Nombre de nacimientoFrances Elena Farmer
- Altura1.68 m
- Frances Farmer nació el 19 de septiembre de 1913 en Seattle, Washington, EE.UU.. Fue una actriz y escritora, conocida por Come and Get It (1936), En las entrañas de la tierra (1940) y The Toast of New York (1937). Estuvo casada con Leland Mikesell, Alfred Lobley y Leif Erickson. Murió el 1 de agosto de 1970 en Indianápolis, Indiana, EE.UU..
- CónyugesLeland Mikesell(27 de marzo de 1958 - 1 de agosto de 1970) (su muerte)Alfred Lobley(17 de abril de 1954 - 7 de marzo de 1958) (divorciado)Leif Erickson(8 de febrero de 1936 - 12 de junio de 1942) (divorciado)
- NiñosNo Children
- FamiliaresWesley(Sibling)Edith Farmer Elliot(Sibling)
- Director Howard Hawks said he considered her the best actress he ever worked with.
- Her rise and tragic fall were documented in the film Frances (1982) with Jessica Lange in the lead role. She received an Academy Award nomination for best actress for her performance.
- For her very special tribute appearance on This Is Your Life (1950), Frances was given an automobile - an Edsel.
- The actress was the subject of several theater plays: "The Frances Farmer Story" by Sebastian Stuart, "Golden Girl" by Peter Occhiogrosso and "Saint Frances of Hollywood" by Sally Clarke.
- She was the subject of the song "Frances Farmer Will Have Her Revenge on Seattle" in the 1993 album "In-Utero" by the grunge rock band Nirvana.
- [on her experience as a mental patient] Never console yourself into believing that the terror has passed, for it looms as large and evil today as it did in the despicable era of Bedlam. But I must relate the horrors as I recall them, in the hope that some force for mankind might be moved to relieve forever the unfortunate creatures who are still imprisoned in the back wards of decaying institutions.
- [on her reaction to her high school essay "God Dies"] It was pretty sad, because for the first time, I found how stupid people could be. It sort of made me feel alone in the world. The more people pointed at me in scorn, the more stubborn I got, and when they began calling me the Bad Girl of West High School, I tried to live up to it.
- [on Hollywood] It's a nuthouse. The other day, a man phoned and wanted me to endorse a certain brand of cigarettes. I had nothing against them and in fact will smoke them or anything else that comes along, but I didn't know why he was bothering me. I though maybe if I was nice, they'd give me a carton and a thank offering, so I rather tentatively broached the matter of remuneration. What was the endorsement worth, I asked, and he said three thousand dollars. What are you going to do in an atmosphere like that?
- What they had me doing first was autographing copies of "Come and Get It" at the Bon Marche, where I had been fired a couple of years back. That was bad enough but think of me autographing a book written by somebody else. That took crust but it didn't turn out so badly because when I got to the store, about twenty people finally strolled in and look at me from a distance and kept their buying firmly in control. What the Goldwyn people had forgotten was that up that way I'm still remembered as the freak from West Seattle High.
- I wondered a little why God was such a useless thing. It seemed a waste of time to have him. After that he became less and less, until he was...nothingness.
- Come and Get It (1936) - $75 /week
- Too Many Parents (1936) - $100 /week
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