Janet Gaynor

Janet Gaynor Headshot

Actress

Birth Date: October 6, 1906

Death Date: September 14, 1984

Birth Place: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

A petite, wholesome screen star, Janet Gaynor hit it big just as silent films were coming to an end and continued as one of the screen's most popular stars of the 1930s. Gaynor got her start in films through her sister, a secretary for Hal Roach. In 1925-26, she appeared in a number of shorts (including several Glenn Tryon Westerns) and as an extra in features. Her first break was a supporting role in "The Johnstown Flood" (1926), which began her long association with Fox.

Gaynor appeared in such films as "The Midnight Kiss" and "The Return of Peter Grimm" (both 1926), before becoming a full-fledged star as a street urchin in "Seventh Heaven" and a threatened farm wife in "Sunrise" (both 1927). She won the Best Actress award at the first Oscar ceremony, on May 16, 1929, for her combined work on those films and "Street Angel" (1928). She finished out the silent era with "Four Devils," "Christina" and "Lucky Star" (all 1929). When talking films became popular, Gaynor rode the crest with the musical "Sunny Side Up" (1929). With her round, girlish face and cartoon-character voice, Gaynor remained one of Hollywood's biggest stars of the early Depression years, placing near the top of an annual exhibitors' poll of top ten box-office stars for several years in a row until 1935. Gaynor made an especially popular romantic team with the similarly gentle-mannered Charles Farrell in a dozen films, including the delightful musical "Sunny Side Up," the improbable but magically romantic "Lucky Star" (both 1929), the unusual Gershwin tunefest "Delicious" (1931), and lesser but enjoyable films like "Tess of the Storm Country" (1932) and "Change of Heart" (1934). Gaynor also did well in vehicles without Farrell, including "State Fair" (1933) and the unjustly neglected "One More Spring" (1935). Perhaps Gaynor's best-remembered starring vehicle is the first screen version of "A Star Is Born" (1937), in which she teamed with Fredric March in the classic story of two married film stars, one on the way up and the other on the way down. She retired from the screen after making the highly enjoyable "The Young in Heart" (1938) but returned to films once more to play the mother in "Bernardine" (1957). Gaynor's second husband (1939-59) was famed MGM costume designer Gilbert Adrian. In 1982, she and her longtime close friend Mary Martin were in an auto accident in San Francisco; Martin's manager was killed and Gaynor never fully recovered from her injuries. She died two years later.

Credits

Bernardine

Actor
Mrs. Ruth Wilson
Movie
1957

Medallion Theater

Actor
Show
1953

The Young in Heart

Actor
George-Anne Carleton
Movie
1938

Three Loves Has Nancy

Actor
Nancy Briggs
Movie
1938

A Star Is BornStream

Actor
Esther Victoria Blodgett
Movie
1937
100%

Small Town Girl

Actor
Katherine "Kay" Brannan
Movie
1936

Ladies in Love

Actor
Martha Kerenye
Movie
1936

One Horse Town

Actor
Katherine "Kay" Brannan
Movie
1936

One More Spring

Actor
Elizabeth Cheney
Movie
1935

The Farmer Takes a Wife

Actor
Molly Larkins
Movie
1935

Change of Heart

Actor
Catherine Furness
Movie
1934

Adorable

Actor
Princess Marie Christine
Movie
1933

State Fair

Actor
Margy Frake
Movie
1933

Tess of the Storm Country

Actor
Tess Howland
Movie
1932

The First Year

Actor
Grace Livingston
Movie
1932

Daddy Long Legs

Actor
Judy Abbott
Movie
1931

The Man Who Came Back

Actor
Angie Randolph
Movie
1931

Delicious

Actor
Heather Gordon
Movie
1931

Sunny Side Up

Actor
Molly Carr
Movie
1929

Christina

Actor
Christina
Movie
1929

Lucky Star

Actor
Mary Tucker
Movie
1929

4 Devils

Actor
Marion
Movie
1928

Street Angel

Actor
Angela
Movie
1928

Sunrise

Actor
The Wife (Indre)
Movie
1927

Seventh Heaven

Actor
Diane
Movie
1927

The Return of Peter Grimm

Actor
Catherine
Movie
1926

The Johnstown Flood

Actor
Anna Burger
Movie
1926

The Blue Eagle

Actor
Rose Kelly
Movie
1926

The Shamrock Handicap

Actor
Lady Sheila O'Hara
Movie
1926