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Frances Nordstrom

  • Writer
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Frances Nordstrom was a popular stage actress and comedian who became a successful comedic playwright. Early in her career she was billed as "The Young Woman with the Mahogany Hair" Frances was born in 1883 in Texas and was probably raised in Washington D.C., where her mother, Texas native Mollie Dwyer Nordstrom, worked for the Library of Congress. Frances had a younger sister, Marie Nordstrom, who would also become an actress of some note. Her father, Charles C. Nordstrom, hailed from Perry, Maine and was a Captain in the US Army. Charles was a veteran of the Civil and Indian Wars and may have been the source of the infamous phrase "The only good Indian is a dead Indian", when he confided to writer Edward Ellis that he once overheard General Sheridan tell an Indian that the only good Indians he ever saw were dead. Sheridan would later deny that he had ever made such a remark.

On 8 November, 1905 Frances married James Spottswood, who at the time was a player with the New Orleans Grand Opera House Stock Company. Frances had just completed the New York run of the play "The Man on the Box" when Spottswood sent her a telegram asking her to come to New Orleans and marry him. Frances wired back "Sure". This marriage ended around 1910. By 1915 Frances was married to fellow stock player, William Pinkham, who later doubled as her theatrical agent. Her marriage to Pinkham disintegrated in 1922 after he was caught having an affair with Zoe Barnett, a young stage actress of the day. Their divorce was finalized in 1924.

Frances would continue to write for the stage and films well into the late 1930s. In Florence Oakley Stone's 1956 obituary, mention is made of a dramatic school in Los Angeles that she, David Hartford and Frances operated for a number of years.

A short list of some of her more popular plays may include "The Magic Glasses: A Speculations in Specs" (1919), "The Ruined Lady" (1920), "Lady Bug" (1922), "Telling Tales" (1925) and "Lady Behave" (1937).
BornJune 1883
BornJune 1883
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Known for

Cullen Landis, Frank Mayo, and Mildred Ryan in Then Came the Woman (1926)
Then Came the Woman
  • Writer
  • 1926
William Bakewell, Chester Morris, and Alice White in Playing Around (1930)
Playing Around
5.9
  • Writer
  • 1930
Dame Chance
  • Writer
  • 1926
Agnes Ayres and Anders Randolf in Her Market Value (1925)
Her Market Value
  • Writer
  • 1925

Credits

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Writer



  • William Bakewell, Chester Morris, and Alice White in Playing Around (1930)
    Playing Around
    5.9
    • based on: "Playing Around": by
    • 1930
  • Jimmy Boudwin, Joyce Coad, and Florence Vidor in D'une femme à l'autre (1927)
    D'une femme à l'autre
    • play "The Ruined Lady"
    • 1927
  • God's Great Wilderness
    • Writer
    • 1927
  • The Man in the Shadow
    6.2
    • adaptation
    • 1926
  • Dame Chance
    • adaptation
    • original story
    • 1926
  • Gladys Hulette and Cullen Landis in Jack O'Hearts (1926)
    Jack O'Hearts
    • adaptation
    • 1926
  • Cullen Landis, Frank Mayo, and Mildred Ryan in Then Came the Woman (1926)
    Then Came the Woman
    • scenario
    • 1926
  • Agnes Ayres and Anders Randolf in Her Market Value (1925)
    Her Market Value
    • play "The Eleventh Commandment"
    • 1925

Personal details

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  • Born
    • June 1883
    • Texas, USA
  • Spouses
      James Spottswood1905 - ? (divorced)
  • Other works
    Active on Broadway in the following productions:

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