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IMDbPro

Martha Sleeper(1910-1983)

  • Actress
  • Costume and Wardrobe Department
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Martha Sleeper
Trailer for this classic drama about a church
Play trailer1:50
Les cloches de Sainte-Marie (1945)
1 Video
27 Photos
On stage from the age of seven, Martha Sleeper began on screen in her early teens as a comic actress for Hal Roach. After her successful debut in the independently produced farce The Mailman (1923), she found herself cast in a series of child comedies with Buddy Messinger and a brace of one- and two-reel shorts opposite Charley Chase with titles like Trempé jusqu'aux os (1924) and Crazy Like a Fox (1926). Being voted a WAMPAS Baby Star in 1927 was a further boon to her popularity. An attempt was made to turn her into an eccentric knockabout comedienne in the vein of Gale Henry, but this failed to come off. She was subsequently used in rather more subtle domestic farce, such as in Pass the Gravy (1928) , as Max Davidson's daughter, frenetically trying to communicate with him by mime. Her last role of note in silent comedy was as a rather perfunctory leading lady in Stan Laurel's last solo effort, Should Tall Men Marry? (1928).

Her contract with Roach was not renewed due to a fiscal downsizing of the company in 1928, so Martha moved over to FBO. This was a Poverty Row outfit that specialized in low-budget features--often westerns--for the Midwest market. No prints of the six films Martha made for FBO are believed to have survived. After 1930, she bounced around among the studios, appearing in supporting roles--often as the "other woman"--in melodramas for MGM, Paramount and RKO. At the same time, growing ever more restless in Hollywood, she sought work on the stage. In an interview, she asserted that she had been given "permission to take jobs in the theater in downtown Los Angeles. That's unheard of, a contract player wanting to have time for stage work" (NY Times, April 7,1983).

In 1936, Martha and her actor-husband Hardie Albright left the West Coast for New York to begin a ten-year run on- and off-Broadway. At the same time she developed a lucrative sideline of designing idiosyncratic costume jewelry, mostly made from bakelite, wood and metal. This blossomed into a respectable $300,000-a-year business and earned Martha the sobriquet of "The Gadget Girl". Her varied creations--including tarantula brooches, necklaces of sun-drenched strawberries and collars of champagne bubbles and swizzle sticks--were hugely popular with the general public, the jet set and film stars like Dolores Del Río and Fay Wray.

In 1949, Martha settled on the island of Puerto Rico, sold her possessions in New York and reinvented herself yet again, as proprietor of a boutique in San Juan, designing and manufacturing fashionable women's clothes. She remained on the island until her retirement in 1969, spending her remaining years on her second husband's plantation near Charleston in South Carolina.
BornJune 24, 1910
DiedMarch 25, 1983(72)
BornJune 24, 1910
DiedMarch 25, 1983(72)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank

Photos27

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Known for

Myrna Loy and Warner Baxter in Penthouse (1933)
Penthouse
6.8
  • Sue Leonard
  • 1933
Randolph Scott, Joseph Cawthorn, Phyllis Lee, Buster Phelps, and Martha Sleeper in Rêves brisés (1933)
Rêves brisés
5.7
  • Martha Morley
  • 1933
Ingrid Bergman and Bing Crosby in Les cloches de Sainte-Marie (1945)
Les cloches de Sainte-Marie
7.2
  • Mary Gallagher
  • 1945
Ramon Novarro and Madge Evans in Le bel étudiant (1932)
Le bel étudiant
5.7
  • Barbara Winston
  • 1932

Credits

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IMDbPro

Actress



  • Ingrid Bergman and Bing Crosby in Les cloches de Sainte-Marie (1945)
    Les cloches de Sainte-Marie
    7.2
    • Mary Gallagher
    • 1945
  • James Blaine, Walter Catlett, Russ Clark, Jeanne Dante, Kenneth Howell, Alan Mowbray, and Martha Sleeper in Four Days Wonder (1936)
    Four Days Wonder
    5.9
    • Nancy Fairbrother
    • 1936
  • Bing Crosby in Rhythm on the Range (1936)
    Rhythm on the Range
    6.2
    • Constance Hyde
    • 1936
  • Otto Kruger, Martha Sleeper, and Fred Walton in Two Sinners (1935)
    Two Sinners
    7.4
    • Elsie Summerstone
    • 1935
  • Noël Coward and Julie Haydon in Le goujat (1935)
    Le goujat
    6.2
    • Julia Vivian
    • 1935
  • Sidney Blackmer and Martha Sleeper in Great God Gold (1935)
    Great God Gold
    5.7
    • Marcia Harper
    • 1935
  • Richard Dix and Martha Sleeper in West of the Pecos (1934)
    West of the Pecos
    7.2
    • Ril Lambeth
    • 1934
  • Dickie Moore and Martha Sleeper in Tomorrow's Youth (1934)
    Tomorrow's Youth
    5.1
    • Ellen Hall
    • 1934
  • Walt Disney, Oliver Hardy, Ruth Channing, Irene Hervey, Stan Laurel, Marion O'Connell, Lupe Velez, and Beatrice Hagen in Hollywood Party (1934)
    Hollywood Party
    5.9
    • Show Girl (uncredited)
    • 1934
  • Spitfire (1934)
    Spitfire
    5.4
    • Eleanor Stafford
    • 1934
  • Randolph Scott, Joseph Cawthorn, Phyllis Lee, Buster Phelps, and Martha Sleeper in Rêves brisés (1933)
    Rêves brisés
    5.7
    • Martha Morley
    • 1933
  • Jean Harlow and Lee Tracy in Mademoiselle Volcan (1933)
    Mademoiselle Volcan
    7.1
    • Lola's Hair Stylist (uncredited)
    • 1933
  • Myrna Loy and Warner Baxter in Penthouse (1933)
    Penthouse
    6.8
    • Sue Leonard
    • 1933
  • Loretta Young in Rose de minuit (1933)
    Rose de minuit
    7.0
    • Barbara Mannering
    • 1933
  • Le secret de Madame Blanche (1933)
    Le secret de Madame Blanche
    6.5
    • Chorus Girl Who Hears 'My Country Tis of Thee' (uncredited)
    • 1933

Costume Department



  • Sex and the College Girl (1964)
    Sex and the College Girl
    4.1
    • women's wardrobe (as Martha Sleeper of San Juan)
    • 1964

Videos1

The Bells of St. Mary's
Trailer 1:50
The Bells of St. Mary's

Personal details

Edit
  • Alternative name
    • Martha Sleeper of San Juan
  • Height
    • 1.63 m
  • Born
    • June 24, 1910
    • Lake Bluff, Illinois, USA
  • Died
    • March 25, 1983
    • Beaufort, South Carolina, USA(heart attack)
  • Spouses
      Harry Dresser Deutschbein1940 - ? (divorced)
  • Other works
    Active on Broadway in the following productions:
  • Publicity listings
    • 3 Articles

Did you know

Edit
  • Trivia
    During the mid-1950s she owned a boutique in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico. The shop was "Martha Sleeper Creates" at 101 Fortaleza St. She created dresses, pocket books and other items. During this time she also acted in the Little Theater of Puerto Rico, at one time playing the lead in "The Heiress".

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