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Gladys Swarthout(1897-1969)

  • Actress
  • Soundtrack
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Gladys Swarthout in Romance in the Dark (1938)
This colorful diva of the Metropolitan Opera was one of several who jumped on the operatic bandwagon during the 1930s to achieve film stardom. Following her prima donna peers Jeanette MacDonald, Lily Pons and Grace Moore to the silver screen, Gladys' turnout would be meager and a major disappointment. Born in Deepwater, Missouri, an Ozark mining town, in 1900 (some sources give the years 1898 and even 1904), Gladys was schooled in Kansas City. A delicate and sickly child, her singing talents were robust, however, and she showed great promise at an early age. A local church soloist by age 13, she attended the Bush Conservatory of Music in Chicago where she received a Doctorate of Music in 1923. She joined the Chicago Civic Opera Company the following year where she learned over 22 roles. Training and performing in Europe in the late 20s, she made her Metropolitan debut in 1929 with "La Gioconda". As one of the Met's finest mezzos, her vast repertoire (25 in all) would include "Norma", "Peter Ibbetson", "La Forza del Destino", "Mignon" and, notably, "Carmen", which would become her signature role. While MGM had a lucrative commodity in MacDonald, RKO was busy grooming Pons and Columbia was putting Moore on glossy display. Paramount, in turn, courted and recruited the lovely, brown-eyed Gladys for their operettas. Rather docile and slightly meek in countenance, she nevertheless signed a lucrative deal and her publicity was quite the envy. She made an ambitious but ultimately unsuccessful debut in dual roles with La rose du ranch (1936). Not only playing a Spanish senorita, she was handed the role of "Don Carlos", the masked vigilante leader, due to her reputation on the operatic stage for playing "trouser" roles. Opposite John Boles, the film died fairly quickly at the box office. Things did not get better. Le rêve de sa vie (1936) fizzled despite a book by Oscar Hammerstein II and a strong leading man in Polish tenor Jan Kiepura, who managed to outshine her. Champagne valse (1937) lacked both fiery songs and an engaging script. The mediocre Romance in the Dark (1938), which paired her again tritely with Boles, top-lined a declining John Barrymore. But it was the dull, non-singing melodrama Ambush (1939) that clinched her final cinematic curtain. Radio, on the other hand, was a superlative medium for Gladys. She was a vibrant guest on a number of programs and had her own show in New York City, singing everything from arias to spirituals to standards. She was named the #1 classical radio singer throughout the war years with sold-out recordings and concert tours to match. It would take something tragic to stop this workhorse diva and that's exactly what happened. Having survived rheumatic fever as a child, she developed life-threatening heart problems in later years and, following major surgery to repair a valve, was forced into retirement by 1957. Her personal life was, thankfully, quite blissful. Her second husband was opera singer Frank Chapman, who gave up his own career to manage hers. In the twilight years, they divided their time between a Connecticut home and a villa in Italy. Chapman died in 1966 and Gladys, who remained childless, died of her heart ailment three years later.
BornDecember 25, 1897
DiedJuly 8, 1969(71)
BornDecember 25, 1897
DiedJuly 8, 1969(71)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
  • Awards
    • 2 wins total

Photos22

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Known for

John Barrymore, John Boles, and Gladys Swarthout in Romance in the Dark (1938)
Romance in the Dark
7.6
  • Ilona Boros
  • 1938
Fred MacMurray and Gladys Swarthout in Champagne valse (1937)
Champagne valse
6.0
  • Elsa Strauss
  • 1937
Lloyd Nolan and Gladys Swarthout in Ambush (1939)
Ambush
5.8
  • Jane Hartman
  • 1939
Le rêve de sa vie (1936)
Le rêve de sa vie
7.2
  • Maria Severelli
  • 1936

Credits

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IMDbPro

Actress



  • Opera Television Theatre
    TV Series
    • Carmen
    • 1950
  • Lloyd Nolan and Gladys Swarthout in Ambush (1939)
    Ambush
    5.8
    • Jane Hartman
    • 1939
  • John Barrymore, John Boles, and Gladys Swarthout in Romance in the Dark (1938)
    Romance in the Dark
    7.6
    • Ilona Boros
    • 1938
  • Fred MacMurray and Gladys Swarthout in Champagne valse (1937)
    Champagne valse
    6.0
    • Elsa Strauss
    • 1937
  • Le rêve de sa vie (1936)
    Le rêve de sa vie
    7.2
    • Maria Severelli
    • 1936
  • John Boles and Gladys Swarthout in La rose du ranch (1936)
    La rose du ranch
    6.3
    • Rosita Castro aka Don Carlos
    • 1936
  • Lucky Stars (1935)
    Lucky Stars
    Short
    • Opera Starlet
    • 1935

Soundtrack



  • Le rêve de sa vie (1936)
    Le rêve de sa vie
    7.2
    • performer: "Lift up your voices" processional, "Sweet Melody of Night" (Romeo's prelude), "My Love and I", "I Mean to Say I Love You", "Music in the Night (and Laughter in the Air)" (uncredited)
    • 1936

Personal details

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  • Alternative name
    • Gladys Swarthout Chapman
  • Born
    • December 25, 1897
    • Deepwater, Missouri, USA
  • Died
    • July 8, 1969
    • Florence, Tuscany, Italy(heart disease)
  • Spouses
      Frank Chapman1932 - July 27, 1966 (his death)
  • Other works
    Sang the soprano role in Arturo Toscanini's 1947 radio broadcast of Hector Berlioz's "dramatic symphony", "Romeo et Juliette". Excerpts from this performance were released on records during Toscanini's lifetime and for years afterward; the complete performance finally appeared on CD in the 1990s. Toscanini was one of the few conductors who played this work during the early to mid-twentieth century. Today there are several full-length recordings of it.
  • Publicity listings
    • 1 Print Biography
    • 4 Articles
    • 2 Magazine Cover Photos

Did you know

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  • Trivia
    When she did the movie Champagne valse (1937) in 1937, she sang her songs in five languages, adding French, German, Italian, and Spanish for the foreign versions of the films, making them quite popular overseas.

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