Loretta Young (January 6, 1913 – August 12, 2000) was an Academy Award-winning American actress.
In 1930, Young, then only 17, ran off with 26-year-old actor Grant Withers and married him in Yuma, Arizona. The marriage was annulled the next year, just as their second movie together, (ironically titled Too Young to Marry), was released.
In 1934, Young had an affair with Clark Gable while on location for "Call of the Wild", and became pregnant. Returning from a long "vacation" (during which she secretly gave birth to a daughter), Young announced that she had "adopted" the little girl. The child was raised as "Judy Lewis" after taking the name of Young's second husband, producer Tom Lewis. According to Judy's autobiography Uncommon Knowledge, she first learned that Gable was her father from other children at school.
Young made as many as seven or eight movies a year and won an Oscar in 1947 for her performance in The Farmer's Daughter. The same year she co-starred with Cary Grant and David Niven in The Bishop's Wife, a perennial favorite that still airs on television during the Christmas season.
In 1949, Young received another Academy Award nomination, (for "Come to the Stable"), and in 1953 appeared in her last film, It Happens Every Thursday. Moving to television, she hosted and starred in the well-received anthology series The Loretta Young Show. Her "sweeping" trademark appearance at the beginning of each show was to appear dramatically in various high fashion evening gowns. (Young's TV shows are not rerun on television because she had it legally stipulated that they not be; the ever image-conscious Young didn't want to be seen in "outdated" wardrobe and hairstyles.)
These arrangements, however, were made before the invention of videos and DVDs, and so luckily, her television work can still be viewed.
She died at 87 from ovarian cancer at the Santa Monica, California home of her (half)sister, Georgiana Montalban, and was interred in the family plot in the Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California.
Young has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame -- one for motion pictures, at 6104 Hollywood Blvd., and another for television, at 6141 Hollywood Blvd.
1913 births | 2000 deaths | American actors | American film actors | American silent film actors | American television actors | Best Actress Academy Award nominees | Best Actress Oscar | Burials at Holy Cross Cemetery | Cancer deaths | Deaths from ovarian cancer | Child actors | Entertainers who died in their 80s | Hollywood Walk of Fame | People from Utah | Roman Catholic entertainers
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