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Ida Lupino
A headshot of Lupino looking up away from the camera
Lupino before performance on the radio series Cavalcade of America
Born (1918-02-04)4 February 1918
Herne Hill, London, England
Died 3 August 1995(1995-08-03) (aged 77)
Citizenship
  • United Kingdom
  • United States
Alma mater Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
Occupation
  • Actress
  • director
  • writer
  • producer
Years active 1931–1978
Political party Democrat
Spouse(s)
(m. 1938; div. 1945)
Collier Young
(m. 1948; div. 1951)
Howard Duff
(m. 1951; div. 1984)
Children 1
Parents
  • Stanley Lupino (father)
  • Connie Emerald (mother)
Family Lupino
Signature
Ida Lupino signature.svg

Ida Lupino (4 February 1918 – 3 August 1995) was a British actress, director, writer, and producer. Throughout her 48-year career, she appeared in 59 films and directed eight, working primarily in the United States, where she became a citizen in 1948.

Early life and family

Ida Lupino 1937 (cropped)
Ida Lupino in 1937

Lupino was born at 33 Ardbeg Road in Herne Hill, London, to actress Connie O'Shea (also known as Connie Emerald) and music hall comedian Stanley Lupino, a member of the theatrical Lupino family, which included Lupino Lane, a song-and-dance man. Her great-grandfather, George Hook, changed his name to Lupino. Her father, a top name in musical comedy in the UK, encouraged her to perform at an early age. He built a backyard theatre for Lupino and her sister Rita (1921–2016), who also became an actress and dancer. Lupino wrote her first play at age seven and toured with a travelling theatre company as a child. By the age of ten, Lupino had memorised the leading female roles in each of Shakespeare's plays. After her intense childhood training for stage plays, Ida's uncle Lupino Lane assisted her in moving towards film acting by getting her work as a background actress at British International Studios.

She wanted to be a writer, but in order to please her father, Lupino enrolled in the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. She excelled in a number of film roles, but did not enjoy being an actress and felt uncomfortable with many of the early roles she was given. She felt that she was pushed into the profession due to her family history.

Career

Ida Lupino still
Publicity photograph of Lupino for Moontide (1942)

Lupino is widely regarded as the most prominent female filmmaker working in the 1950s during the Hollywood studio system. With her independent production company, she co-wrote and co-produced several social-message films and became the first woman to direct a film noir, The Hitch-Hiker, in 1953. Among Lupino's other directed films, the best known are Not Wanted (1949), Never Fear (1950), Outrage (1950), The Bigamist (1953), and The Trouble with Angels (1966).

As an actress, Lupino's best known films are The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (1939) with Basil Rathbone; They Drive by Night (1940) with George Raft and Humphrey Bogart; High Sierra (1941) with Bogart; The Sea Wolf (1941) with Edward G. Robinson and John Garfield; Ladies in Retirement (1941) with Louis Hayward; Moontide (1942) with Jean Gabin; The Hard Way (1943); Deep Valley (1947) with Dane Clark; Road House (1948) with Cornel Wilde and Richard Widmark; While the City Sleeps (1956) with Dana Andrews and Vincent Price; and Junior Bonner (1972) with Steve McQueen.

Her performance in The Hard Way (1943) won the New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress. She starred in Pillow to Post (1945), which was her only comedic leading role. After the drama Deep Valley (1947) finished shooting, neither Warner Bros. nor Lupino moved to renew her contract and she left the studio in 1947. Although in demand throughout the 1940s, she arguably never became a major star although she often had top billing in her pictures, above actors such as Humphrey Bogart, and was repeatedly critically lauded for her realistic, direct acting style.

Lupino also directed more than 100 episodes of television shows in a variety of genres, including westerns, supernatural tales, situation comedies, murder mysteries, and gangster stories. She was the only woman to direct an episode of the original The Twilight Zone series ("The Masks"), and the only director to star in an episode ("The Sixteen-Millimeter Shrine").

Personal life

Lupino was diagnosed with polio in 1934. The New York Times reported that the outbreak of polio within the Hollywood community was due to contaminated swimming pools. The disease severely affected her ability to work, and her contract with Paramount fell apart shortly after her diagnosis. She recovered and eventually directed, produced, and wrote many films, including a film loosely based upon her travails with polio titled Never Fear in 1949, the first film that she was credited for directing. Lupino worked for various nonprofit organizations to raise funds for polio research.

Lupino's interests outside the entertainment industry included writing short stories and children's books, and composing music. Her composition "Aladdin's Suite" was performed by the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra in 1937. She composed it while recovering from polio in 1935.

Politics and religion

She became an American citizen in June 1948 and was a staunch Democrat who supported the presidency of John F. Kennedy. She was a Catholic.

Marriages

Lupino was married and divorced three times. She married actor Louis Hayward in November 1938. They separated in May 1944 and divorced in May 1945.

Her second marriage was to producer Collier Young on 5 August 1948. They divorced in 1951. When Lupino filed for divorce in September that year, she was already pregnant from an affair with future husband Howard Duff. The child was born seven months after she filed for divorce from Young.

Lupino's third and final marriage was to actor Howard Duff, whom she wed on 21 October 1951. Six months later, they had a daughter, Bridget, on 23 April 1952. They separated in 1966 and divorced in 1983.

She petitioned a California court in 1984 to appoint her business manager, Mary Ann Anderson, as her conservator due to poor business dealings from her prior business management company and her long separation from Howard Duff.

Death

Lupino died from a stroke while undergoing treatment for colon cancer in Los Angeles on 3 August 1995, at the age of 77. Her memoirs, Ida Lupino: Beyond the Camera, were edited after her death and published by Mary Ann Anderson.

Influences and legacy

Hitchhiker1953
Ida Lupino's The Hitch-Hiker (1953) was the first American film noir directed by a woman.

Lupino learned filmmaking from everyone she observed on set, including William Ziegler, the cameraman for Not Wanted. When in preproduction on Never Fear, she conferred with Michael Gordon on directorial technique, organization, and plotting. Cinematographer Archie Stout said of Ms. Lupino, "Ida has more knowledge of camera angles and lenses than any director I've ever worked with, with the exception of Victor Fleming. She knows how a woman looks on the screen and what light that woman should have, probably better than I do." Lupino also worked with editor Stanford Tischler, who said of her, "She wasn't the kind of director who would shoot something, then hope any flaws could be fixed in the cutting room. The acting was always there, to her credit."

Accolades

Ida Lupino in The Hard Way trailer 2
The Hard Way (1943)
  • Lupino has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for contributions to the fields of television and film – located at 1724 Vine Street and 6821 Hollywood Boulevard.
  • New York Film Critics Circle Award – Best Actress, The Hard Way, 1943
  • Inaugural Saturn Award - Best Supporting Actress, The Devil's Rain, 1975
  • A Commemorative Blue Plaque is dedicated to Lupino and her father Stanley Lupino by The Music Hall Guild of Great Britain and America and the Theatre and Film Guild of Great Britain and America at the house where she was born in Herne Hill, London, 16 February 2016
  • Composer Carla Bley paid tribute to Lupino with her jazz composition "Ida Lupino" in 1964.
  • The Hitch-Hiker and Outrage were inducted into the National Film Registry in 1998 and 2020 respectively.

Filmography

Selected credits as actress and/or director
Title Year As actress Role As director Notes
Love Race, TheThe Love Race 1931 Yes Minor supporting role Uncredited
Her First Affaire 1932 Yes Ann Brent
Money for Speed 1933 Yes Jane
I Lived with You 1933 Yes Ada Wallis
Prince of Arcadia 1933 Yes The Princess
Ghost Camera, TheThe Ghost Camera 1933 Yes Mary Elton
High Finance 1933 Yes Jill
Search for Beauty 1934 Yes Barbara Hilton
Come On, Marines! 1934 Yes Esther Smith-Hamilton
Ready for Love 1934 Yes Marigold Tate
Paris in Spring 1935 Yes Mignon de Charelle
Smart Girl 1935 Yes Pat Reynolds
Peter Ibbetson 1935 Yes Agnes
La Fiesta de Santa Barbara 1935 Yes Herself Short film made in Technicolor, with several celebrities appearing as themselves
Anything Goes 1936 Yes Hope Harcourt
One Rainy Afternoon 1936 Yes Monique Pelerin
Yours for the Asking 1936 Yes Gert Malloy
Gay Desperado, TheThe Gay Desperado 1936 Yes Jane
Sea Devils 1937 Yes Doris Malone
Let's Get Married 1937 Yes Paula Quinn
Artists and Models 1937 Yes Paula Sewell / Paula Monterey
Fight for Your Lady 1937 Yes Marietta
Lone Wolf Spy Hunt, TheThe Lone Wolf Spy Hunt 1939 Yes Val Carson
Lady and the Mob, TheThe Lady and the Mob 1939 Yes Lila Thorne
Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, TheThe Adventures of Sherlock Holmes 1939 Yes Ann Brandon
Light That Failed, TheThe Light That Failed 1939 Yes Bessie Broke
Screen Snapshots Series 18, No. 6 1939 Yes Herself Promotional short film
They Drive by Night 1940 Yes Lana Carlsen
High Sierra 1941 Yes Marie
Sea Wolf, TheThe Sea Wolf 1941 Yes Ruth Webster
Out of the Fog 1941 Yes Stella Goodwin
Ladies in Retirement 1941 Yes Ellen Creed
Moontide 1942 Yes Anna
Life Begins at Eight-Thirty 1942 Yes Kathy Thomas
Hard Way, TheThe Hard Way 1943 Yes Mrs. Helen Chernen
Forever and a Day 1943 Yes Jenny
Thank Your Lucky Stars 1943 Yes Herself
In Our Time 1944 Yes Jennifer Whittredge
Hollywood Canteen 1944 Yes Herself
Pillow to Post 1945 Yes Jean Howard
Devotion 1946 Yes Emily Brontë
Man I Love, TheThe Man I Love 1947 Yes Petey Brown
Deep Valley 1947 Yes Libby Saul
Escape Me Never 1947 Yes Gemma Smith
Road House 1948 Yes Lily Stevens
Lust for Gold 1949 Yes Julia Thomas
Not Wanted 1949 Yes Uncredited
Never Fear 1950 Yes
Woman in Hiding 1950 Yes Deborah Chandler Clark
Outrage 1950 Yes Country Dance Attendee Yes Uncredited
Hard, Fast and Beautiful 1951 Yes Seabright Tennis Match Supervisor Yes Uncredited
On the Loose 1951 Yes Narrator Voice, Uncredited
On Dangerous Ground 1952 Yes Mary Malden
Beware, My Lovely 1952 Yes Mrs. Helen Gordon
Hitch-Hiker, TheThe Hitch-Hiker 1953 Yes
Jennifer 1953 Yes Agnes Langley
Bigamist, TheThe Bigamist 1953 Yes Phyllis Martin Yes
Private Hell 36 1954 Yes Lilli Marlowe
Women's Prison 1955 Yes Amelia van Zandt
Big Knife, TheThe Big Knife 1955 Yes Marion Castle
While the City Sleeps 1956 Yes Mildred Donner
Strange Intruder 1956 Yes Alice Carmichael
Teenage Idol 1958 Yes TV movie
Trouble with Angels, TheThe Trouble with Angels 1966 Yes
Women in Chains 1972 Yes Claire Tyson TV movie
Deadhead Miles 1972 Yes Herself
Junior Bonner 1972 Yes Elvira Bonner
The Strangers in 7A 1972 Yes Iris Sawyer TV movie
Female Artillery 1973 Yes Martha Lindstrom TV movie
I Love a Mystery 1973 Yes Randolph Cheyne TV movie
The Letters 1973 Yes Mrs. Forrester TV movie
Devil's Rain, TheThe Devil's Rain 1975 Yes Mrs. Preston Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress
Food of the Gods, TheThe Food of the Gods 1976 Yes Mrs. Skinner
My Boys Are Good Boys 1978 Yes Mrs. Morton Final film role

Partial television credits

As actress and/or director
Title Year As actress Role As director Episode
Mr. Adams and Eve 1957–1958 Yes Eve Adams/Eve Drake Yes Main cast (66 episodes); 1 episode 1958
The Twilight Zone 1959 Yes Barbara Jean Trenton "The Sixteen-Millimeter Shrine"
Bonanza 1959 Yes Annie O'Toole "The Saga of Annie O'Toole"
Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour 1959 Yes Herself "Lucy's Summer Vacation"
Death Valley Days 1960 Yes Pamela Mann "Pamela's Oxen"
The Rifleman 1961 Yes "Assault"
Thriller 1961 Yes "The Last of the Sommervilles"
The Investigators 1961 Yes "Something for Charity"
Kraft Suspense Theatre 1963 Yes Harriet Whitney "One Step Down"
The Virginian 1963 Yes Helen Blaine "A Distant Fury"
The Twilight Zone 1964 Yes "The Masks"
Gilligan's Island 1964 Yes "Goodnight, Sweet Skipper"
Gilligan's Island 1964 Yes "Wrongway Feldman"
Bewitched 1965 Yes "A is for Aardvark"
Honey West 1965 Yes "How Brillig, O, Beamish Boy"
Gilligan's Island 1966 Yes "The Producer"
It Takes A Thief 1968 Yes Doctor Schneider "Turnabout"
Batman 1968 Yes "Doctor Cassandra" Spellcraft "The Entrancing Dr. Cassandra"
Family Affair 1969 Yes Lady "Maudie" Marchwood "Maudie"
Family Affair 1970 Yes Lady "Maudie" Marchwood "Return of Maudie"
Columbo 1972 Yes Roger Stanford's Aunt "Short Fuse"
The Streets of San Francisco 1973 Yes Wilma Jamison "Blockade"
Columbo 1974 Yes Mrs. Edna Brown "Swan Song"
Police Woman 1975 Yes Hilda Morris "The Chasers"
Charlie's Angels 1977 Yes Gloria Gibson "I Will Be Remembered"

Radio appearances

Year Program Episode/source
1937 The Chase and Sanborn Hour
1937 Lux Radio Theatre The 39 Steps
1938 The Silver Theatre Challenge for Three
1939 The Campbell Playhouse The Bad Man
1939 The Chase and Sanborn Hour
1939 Lux Radio Theatre Wuthering Heights
1939 Woodbury's Hollywood Playhouse For All Our Lives
1940 Lux Radio Theatre The Young in Heart
1940 Good News of 1940 The Light That Failed
1940 Lux Radio Theatre Wuthering Heights
1940 Lux Radio Theatre Rebecca
1942 Charlie McCarthy Show
1942 It's Time to Smile
1942 Lux Radio Theatre A Woman's Face
1943 Lux Radio Theatre Now, Voyager
1943 Lux Radio Theatre Ladies in Retirement
1943 Duffy's Tavern
1943 Command Performance
1943 Burns and Allen
1944 Everything for the Boys The Citadel
1944 Mail Call
1944 Screen Guild Players High Sierra
1944 Suspense The Sisters
1944 Suspense Fugue in C Minor
1944 This Is My Best Brighton Rock
1945 Cavalcade of America Immortal Wife
1945 Lux Radio Theatre Only Yesterday
1945 Screen Guild Players Pillow to Post
1946 Cavalcade of America Star in the West
1946 Theatre of Romance The Hard Way
1946 Encore Theatre Nurse Edith Cavell
1946 Tell Me a Story The Pond
1947 Cavalcade of America Abigail Opens the White House
1947 Cavalcade of America A Lady of Distinction
1947 Cavalcade of America Kitchen Scientist
1947 Lux Radio Theatre The Seventh Veil
1947 Lux Radio Theatre Saratoga Trunk
1948 Lux Radio Theatre Daisy Kenyon
1948 Suspense Summer Night
1948 Lux Radio Theatre The Razor's Edge
1948 Hallmark Playhouse Woman with a Sword
1949 Bill Stern Colgate Sports Newsreel
1949 Suspense The Bullet
1950 Hollywood Calling
1950 Hallmark Playhouse The Love Story of Elizabeth Barrett
1953 Guest Star Fear
1953 Stars over Hollywood Chasten Thy Son
1954 Lux Radio Theatre The Star
1954 Lux Radio Theatre So Big
1959 Suspense On a Country Road

Images for kids

See also

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