Goddard, Paulette
International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers
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2001
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Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company. (Hide copyright information)
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GODDARD, Paulette
Nationality: American. Born: Pauline Marion Goddard Levee in Whitestone Landing, New York, 3 June 1911. Education: Attended Mount Saint Dominic's Academy, Caldwell, New Jersey. Family: Married 1) Edgar James, 1927 (divorced 1929); 2) the actor Charlie Chaplin, 1936 (divorced 1941); 3) the actor Burgess Meredith, 1944 (divorced 1949); 4) the writer Erich Maria Remarque, 1958 (died 1970). Career: 1925—model from age 14; 1926—stage debut in Ziegfeld's No Fooling ; 1929–32—short contracts with Roach and Goldwyn; 1933–36—studied with Chaplin prior to starring with him in Modern Times ; 1938—contract with David O. Selznick under special arrangement with Chaplin; 1939—seven-year contract with Paramount; began acting in radio productions; 1944—five-month USO tour of Far East; Paramount renewed contract for seven years; 1947—in Winterset at Abbey Theatre, Dublin; 1950s—occasional TV appearances. Died: Near Ronco, Switzerland, 23 April 1990.
Films as Actress:
- 1929
The Locked Door (Fitzmaurice); Berth Marks (Lewis R. Foster—short) (as train passenger)
- 1931
City Streets (Mamoulian); The Girl Habit (Cline) (as lingerie salesgirl)
- 1932
The Mouthpiece (Flood and Nugent) (as girl at party); Show Business (White—short); Young Ironsides (Parrott—short); Pack Up Your Troubles (George Marshall and McCarey); Girl Grief (Parrott—short); The Kid from Spain (McCarey) (as "Goldwyn" girl)
- 1933
Roman Scandals (Tuttle)
- 1934
Kid Millions (Del Ruth)
- 1936
Modern Times (Chaplin) (as gamine); The Bohemian Girl (Horne and Rogers)
- 1938
The Young in Heart (Wallace) (as Leslie Saunders); Dramatic School (Sinclair) (as Nana)
- 1939
The Women (Cukor) (as Miriam Aarons); The Cat and the Canary (Nugent) (as Joyce Norman)
- 1940
The Ghost Breakers (George Marshall) (as Mary Carter); The Great Dictator (Chaplin) (as Hannah); Northwest Mounted Police (Cecil B. DeMille) (as Louvette Corbeau); Second Chorus (Potter) (as Ellen Miller)
- 1941
Pot o' Gold (The Golden Hour ) (George Marshall) (as Molly McCorkle); Hold Back the Dawn (Leisen) (as Anita Dixon); Nothing but the Truth (Nugent) (as Gwen Saunders)
- 1942
The Lady Has Plans (Lanfield) (as Sidney Royce); Reap the Wild Wind (Cecil B. DeMille) (as Loxie Claiborne); The Forest Rangers (George Marshall) (as Celia Huston); Star Spangled Rhythm (George Marshall)
- 1943
The Crystal Ball (Nugent) (as Toni Gerard); So Proudly We Hail (Sandrich) (as Lt. Joan O'Doul)
- 1944
Standing Room Only (Lanfield) (as Jane Rogers); I Love a Soldier (Sandrich) (as Eva Morgan)
- 1945
Duffy's Tavern (Walker) (as guest); Kitty (Leisen) (title role)
- 1946
Diary of a Chambermaid (Le Journal d'une femme de chambre ) (Renoir) (as Celestine)
- 1947
Suddenly It's Spring (Leisen) (as Mary Morely); Variety Girl (George Marshall) (as guest); Unconquered (Cecil B. DeMille) (as Abigail Martha "Abby" Hale); An Ideal Husband (Korda) (as Mrs. Cheveley)
- 1948
On Our Merry Way (A Miracle Can Happen ) (King Vidor and Fenton) (as Martha Pease); Hazard (George Marshall) (as Ellen Crane)
- 1949
Bride of Vengeance (Leisen) (as Lucretia Borgia); Anna Lucasta (Rapper) (title role)
- 1950
Del odio nace el amor (The Torch ; Bandit General ) (Fernández) (as María Dolores, + assoc pr)
- 1952
Babes in Bagdad (Ulmer) (as Kyra)
- 1953
Vice Squad (The Girl in Room 17 ) (Laven) (as Mona); Paris Model (Alfred E. Green) (as Betty Barnes); Charge of the Lancers (Castle) (as Tanya); Sins of Jezebel (Le Borg) (title role)
- 1954
The Stranger Came Home (The Unholy Four ) (Fisher) (as Angie Vickers)
- 1964
Gli indifferenti (A Time of Indifference ) (Maselli) (as Maria Grazia Ardengo)
- 1972
The Snoop Sisters (Female Instinct ) (Leonard Stern—for TV) (as Norma Treet)
Publications
On GODDARD: books—
Morella, Joe, and Edward Z. Epstein, Paulette: The Adventurous Life of Paulette Goddard, New York, 1985.
Gilbert, Julie Goldsmith, Opposite Attraction: The Lives of Erich Maria Remarque and Paulette Goddard, New York, 1995.
On GODDARD: articles—
Current Biography 1946, New York, 1946.
Gorney, J., "Paulette Goddard: Lost Too Many Good Parts," in Films in Review (New York), August/September 1974.
Obituary in New York Times, 24 April 1990.
Obituary in Variety (New York), 25 April 1990.
Lambert, Gavin, "Paulette Goddard: Star of Modern Times and Kitty in Coldwater Canyon," in Architectural Digest (Los Angeles), April 1992.
* * *
Paulette Goddard began her career at age 14 as a Ziegfeld girl billed as "Peaches." Although she retired in her teens to wed a timber magnate, Edgar James, she embarked for Hollywood when her marriage failed and moved from bit parts in the 1930s to become one of Paramount's leading ladies in the 1940s. Goddard never allowed herself to be typecast, and variety best characterizes both her choice of roles and of husbands. Her pictures ranged from comedies to musicals and serious drama, and she played everything from the gamine to the frightened heroine and the siren.
After a series of very minor roles, she met Charles Chaplin (whom she eventually married), who gave her the part of the beautiful waif in his last silent release Modern Times. Her performance was fresh, seemingly spontaneous, and was widely praised. Her appearance almost netted her the part of Scarlett O'Hara, and she was under contract to Selznick until she was sold to Paramount. With the latter she had her first starring role in The Cat and the Canary, opposite Bob Hope. At Paramount and on loan to other studios she was to appear in a wide range of films, including musicals with Fred Astaire (Second Chorus ) and James Stewart (Pot o' Gold ), another Hope film (Nothing but the Truth ) and, with Ray Milland, a spy film (The Lady Has Plans ), a comedy (The Crystal Ball ), and a hit costumer (Kitty ). She received her only Oscar nomination, as best supporting actress, for her performance in a war drama (So Proudly We Hail ), with Claudette Colbert and Veronica Lake. Goddard also appeared in Chaplin's The Great Dictator, their second and last film together (they later divorced).
Of all her roles, critics usually deem one of her best to have been in Diary of a Chambermaid, co-produced by Jean Renoir and Goddard's third husband, Burgess Meredith, and directed by Renoir. Goddard starred as an outspoken maid in a 19th-century French household, in what is often regarded as one of Renoir's best American films. Her career was in decline by the 1950s, however, and she appeared in a number of B pictures such as Babes in Bagdad, The Sins of Jezebel, and The Charge of the Lancers. With her marriage to Erich Maria Remarque in 1958, she ceased working, appearing only in the Italian Gli indifferenti (based on an Alberto Moravia novel) in 1964 and making a rare television appearance in The Snoop Sisters in 1972.
—Frances M. Malpezzi, updated by
Frank Uhle
Cite this article
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Misericords do indeed have a story to tell ; I was very interested to read the piece on misericords in your Midweek Antiques column. These fascinating carvings in many of our medieval cathedrals and major churches afford endless interest to those able to explore them, and the ones at Exeter Cathedral have the distinction of being the earliest figuratively carved set in England.
Newspaper article from: Western Morning News, The Plymouth (UK); 7/15/2008; 512 words
; ...very interested to read the piece on misericords in your Midweek Antiques column. These...Reynard the Fox. Incidentally, the misericords' carvings were hidden not so much by...World Upside-Down, a study of English misericords by Christa Grossinger (Harvey Miller...
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CROUCHING DRAGONS
Magazine article from: Muse; 1/1/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...too holy, so many misericords just got standard leaves...castles. On a decent misericord hunt, you'll find...substantial number of misericord carvings that are just...mostly stopped doing misericords in the 1500s, but...rare breed of modern misericord carvers. Few people...
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Discovery of rare seats reveals bishop's mark
Newspaper article from: Press and Journal, The Aberdeen (UK); 8/8/2006; ; 657 words
; ...000 worldwide pre- Reformation misericords in existence, a mere 18 feature...studies, said: "This remarkable misericord panel is an amazing find and we...the historical significance of misericords, studies of these unique objects...
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Reynard the Fox: Social Engagement and Cultural Metamorphoses in the Beast Epic from the Middle Ages to the Present.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Folklore; 4/1/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...representation on an English misericord (at Faversham) is a twentieth...and the suggested Sick Lion misericord in Gloucester Cathedral...twelve of the fifty-eight misericords at Gloucester are modern...in France, "there is a misericord carving showing a man with...
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Taking the weight off a lengthy sermon ; We may laugh at the lengthy sermons that clerics delivered to their congregations in times past, though not perhaps at any discomfort they had after having sat for so long on hard, wooden seats. Many were so fearful of their local priests' deliverances they sat for hours in obedient silence, enduring untold agonies without being allowed to slip outside for what is now called a "comfort break".
Newspaper article from: Western Morning News, The Plymouth (UK); 7/9/2008; 700+ words
; ...plenty of these decorative corbels called misericords do, and some of the best are right...examples in the country. Obviously misericords carved for a fine cathedral would be...carpenters, though not often. But four misericords in Bristol Cathedral are copies of Thielmann...
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NO-HEADLINE
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 4/13/1997; 350 words
; ...in The World Upside-Down: English Misericords (Harvey Miller pounds 38/pounds 18...weaker monks to rest their legs. Thus misericords, from the Latin misericordia, meaning...the 11th century and the Reformation, misericord carvings quickly developed their own...
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Woodcarvings used online to aid teaching
Newspaper article from: The Northern Echo; 3/20/2002; 351 words
; ...for schools through the Internet. The misericords - hinged seats in the choir stalls...takes eight different creatures from the misericords, telling some of the legends linked...Green Man and information about the misericords there is also the Woodwose Challenge...
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Mediaeval rugby players at the cathedral?
Newspaper article from: Citizen Gloucestershire, The; 6/16/2008; 547 words
; ...the mediaeval footballers carved on one of the misericords. Misericords are, literally, "mercy seats" and are little...we know it was born. It is very likely that our misericord is an early depiction of "fute ball" perhaps...
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Crash may have been caused by driver's collapse.
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 12/30/1998; 700+ words
; ...and unlikely to cause an unholy row. They are reproductions of the exquisitely carved misericords that can be seen in the Quire at the Cathedral. Misericords date from the Middle Ages and are brackets on the underside of hinged seats which could...
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Green men boost cathedral funds.
Newspaper article from: Birmingham Evening Mail (England); 12/30/1998; 296 words
; ...someone's pagan imagination. For they are reproductions of the exquisitely carved misericords that can be seen in the Quire at the Cathedral. Misericords date from the Middle Ages and are basically brackets on the underside of hinged seats...
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misericord
Book article from: The Oxford Dictionary of Art
misericord. In Christian church architecture...examples date from the early 13th century. Misericords are often richly carved, and England...but there is often a moral attached. Misericords were at their peak of development in...
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misericords
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
misericords , carvings in Gothic churches that adorn choir stalls provided for the...that demonstrated the artist's skill and wit. Superb examples of misericords are at Ely, Wells, and Lincoln cathedrals in England.
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miserere
Book article from: A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture
miserere, misericord . 1. Mercy-seat , subsellium...the seats were folded upright, the misericords could give support to a person standing...indecencies. Excellent carved medieval misericords survive, e.g. in the Parish Church...
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stall
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...scenes from everyday life or with fabulous animal forms, called misericords . From the 14th cent. onward the stalls became objects of the...Garter, are of this kind. Bibliography: See M. D. Anderson, Misericords (1954).
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miser
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology
...O God’ XIII; prayer for mercy XVII; misericord (seat) XVIII. imper. sg. of L. miserē...have pity, f. miser ; the last sense is a misuse. misericord †pity, mercy XIV; dagger for giving the...
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