This page will contain wikis about Mae Murray, as they become available.Mae MurrayMae Murray is featured in the 1987 novel, Bootleg Skies(c) by Paul Berge (Performance Publications ISBN 0-9625859-0-4) This page about Mae Murray includes information from a Wikipedia article. Additional articles about Mae Murray News stories about Mae Murray External links for Mae Murray Videos for Mae Murray Wikis about Mae Murray Discussion Groups about Mae Murray Blogs about Mae Murray Images of Mae Murray |
|
Mae Murray is featured in the 1987 novel, Bootleg Skies(c) by Paul Berge (Performance Publications ISBN 0-9625859-0-4). Susan Peters has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her contribution to Motion Pictures, at 1601 Vine St. Her health continued to deteriorate until her death, in Visalia, California, from kidney disease and pneumonia, complicated by anorexia nervosa. Her career began to falter, and as her marriage ended, Peters began to suffer from depression. She toured in stage productions of The Glass Menagerie and The Barretts of Wimpole Street, and her performances were highly regarded, but her disability made her a difficult actress to cast. An unsympathetic role in The Sign of the Ram (1948) failed to win an audience, and a starring role as a detective in the television series Miss Susan (1951) was also unsuccessful. The accident left her permanently paralysed from the waist down and confined to a wheel chair, however she attempted to continue her acting career. Married to the actor Richard Quine, she was with him on a hunting vacation in early 1945, when a rifle accidentally discharged, causing a bullet to be lodged in her spine. A starring role in Song of Russia (1943) earned her critical acclaim but the film was not a commercial success. MGM began to groom her for starring roles, casting her in several lesser productions that allowed her to learn her craft. Her first substantial role, in Random Harvest (1942), earned her an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress nomination. For the first two years she used her given name and played small, often uncredited parts in films such as Meet John Doe (1941), before adopting her stage name. Before long she had impressed studio executives with her own talent, and they began casting her in films. Her first job was to read with potential actors in their screen tests. Born Suzanne Carnahan in Spokane, Washington, Peters began working for MGM Studios after completing high school. Susan Peters (July 3, 1921 - October 23, 1952) was an American film actress. |