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IMDbPro

Maris Wrixon(1916-1999)

  • Actress
  • Soundtrack
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Maris Wrixon
Official Trailer
Play trailer1:14
The Case of the Black Parrot (1941)
1 Video
28 Photos
This shapely starlet had a minor career at Warner Brothers during the 1930's and 40's. She possessed all the physical endowments that had propelled other screen sirens of the period to stardom. Hollywood's premier glamour photographer, George Hurrell Sr., thought her alluring. Her face adorned covers of Vogue and the rotogravure section of numerous women's magazines. Yet, in spite of this, Maris Wrixon never quite made the grade and is almost forgotten today. She had a smattering of a theatrical background before she began in films in 1939. That year, Warners put her in thirteen films and then in twelve during 1940. For the majority of these, she was glimpsed as uncredited background characters, or, at best, had a line or two. Sometimes, she was a brunette, at other times a blonde. Maris did eventually move up the list of credits to undemanding leads in films like The Case of the Black Parrot (1941) and Bullets for O'Hara (1941). In between these assignments, Maris was loaned out to Monogram, which she likened to "being in a foxhole".

Her best remembered role at the Poverty Row outfit was in The Ape (1940), a lesser entry into the horror genre. Maris co-starred as a crippled girl, whose condition so moves an obsessive country doctor (Boris Karloff), that he endeavours finding a serum to affect her cure by any means, even murder (for which task he disguises himself by wearing the hide of a slain gorilla, hence the film's title). In later years, Maris fondly recalled Karloff regaling her with amusing stories in between takes. Sadly, that was pretty much the high point of her career, though she popped up in a similar offering from Monogram, menaced this time by John Carradine (as another mad doctor) and his voodoo-practising maid in The Face of Marble (1946). She also appeared in a trio of routine wartime propaganda films of negligible artistic merit: Femmes enchaînées (1943), Waterfront (1944) and The Master Key (1945). None of these were enough to establish her as a star.

Maris made her last film in 1951, then had a few small TV guest spots before retiring from the screen in 1963. Unlike her desultory movie career, her personal life seems to have been rather more of a success story: she was married for 59 years to the German-born editor Rudi Fehr, surely an impressive feat for Hollywood.
BornDecember 28, 1916
DiedOctober 6, 1999(82)
BornDecember 28, 1916
DiedOctober 6, 1999(82)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank

Photos28

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Known for

William Lundigan, Charles Waldron, and Maris Wrixon in The Case of the Black Parrot (1941)
The Case of the Black Parrot
5.9
  • Sandy Vantine
  • 1941
Milburn Stone and Jan Wiley in The Master Key (1945)
The Master Key
6.6
  • Dorothy Newton
  • 1945
Boris Karloff, Ray Corrigan, Gene O'Donnell, and Maris Wrixon in The Ape (1940)
The Ape
4.7
  • Miss Frances Clifford
  • 1940
John Carradine, Willie Best, and Claudia Drake in The Face of Marble (1946)
The Face of Marble
4.9
  • Linda Sinclair
  • 1946

Credits

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IMDbPro

Actress



  • Dayton's Devils (1968)
    Dayton's Devils
    5.6
    • Cashier
    • 1968
  • Dustin Hoffman and Anne Bancroft in Le lauréat (1967)
    Le lauréat
    8.0
    • Guest at Welcoming Party (uncredited)
    • 1967
  • The Double Life of Henry Phyfe (1966)
    The Double Life of Henry Phyfe
    7.3
    TV Series
    • Woman in Hotel
    • 1966
  • Richard Crenna and Maxine Stuart in Slattery's People (1964)
    Slattery's People
    8.0
    TV Series
    • Miss Locke
    • 1964
  • Breaking Point (1963)
    Breaking Point
    7.2
    TV Series
    • Lawyer's Secretary
    • 1963
  • Abel Fernandez, Nicholas Georgiade, Paul Picerni, and Robert Stack in Les incorruptibles (1959)
    Les incorruptibles
    8.0
    TV Series
    • First Nurse
    • 1963
  • Peter Loves Mary (1960)
    Peter Loves Mary
    6.2
    TV Series
    • Mrs. Brubaker
    • 1960
  • Rod Taylor in Hong Kong (1960)
    Hong Kong
    8.0
    TV Series
    • Mrs. Norman
    • 1960
  • Lloyd Bridges in Remous (1958)
    Remous
    7.7
    TV Series
    • Edith Judd
    • 1960
  • Target (1958)
    Target
    7.3
    TV Series
    • 1958
  • Frank McHugh and Marvin Miller in The Millionaire (1955)
    The Millionaire
    7.8
    TV Series
    • Mrs. Robinson
    • 1958
  • Craig Hill and Kenneth Tobey in Whirlybirds (1957)
    Whirlybirds
    7.7
    TV Series
    • Mrs. Sloane
    • 1958
  • The Silent Service (1957)
    The Silent Service
    8.4
    TV Series
    • The Woman
    • 1958
  • The O. Henry Playhouse (1957)
    The O. Henry Playhouse
    6.4
    TV Series
    • Woman
    • 1957
  • Mark Stevens in Big Town (1950)
    Big Town
    7.6
    TV Series
    • Alice Anderson
    • 1956

Soundtrack



  • Roy Rogers, June Weaver, Frank Weaver, Leon Weaver, and Maris Wrixon in Jeepers Creepers (1939)
    Jeepers Creepers
    6.0
    • performer: "Jeepers Creepers"
    • 1939

Videos1

The Case of the Black Parrot
Trailer 1:14
The Case of the Black Parrot

Personal details

Edit
  • Alternative names
    • Maris Wrixon Fehr
  • Born
    • December 28, 1916
    • Pasco, Washington, USA
  • Died
    • October 6, 1999
    • Santa Monica, California, USA(heart failure)
  • Spouse
    • Rudi FehrJanuary 28, 1940 - April 16, 1999 (his death, 4 children)
  • Children
      Kaja Fehr
  • Publicity listings
    • 3 Pictorials

Did you know

Edit
  • Trivia
    Mother of Kaja Fehr and Michele Fehr.
  • Quotes
    [about Boris Karloff, during filming of The Ape (1940)] I remember that Karloff was always saying something funny to me when the cameras weren't rolling. He was an elegant, well-educated man, and he was considerate of others.
  • Salary
    • Waterfront
      (1944)
      $75 per week

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