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Gale Sondergaard


 

Gale Sondergaard (February 15, 1899 - August 13, 1985) was a US film actress.

Related Topics:
February 15 - 1899 - August 13 - 1985 - US - Film - Actress

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Born Edith Holm Sondergaard in Litchfield, Minnesota to Danish parents, Sondergaard began her acting career in the theater. She made her first film appearance in Anthony Adverse (1936) and became the first recipient of the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for this performance.

Related Topics:
Litchfield, Minnesota - Danish - Theater - Anthony Adverse - 1936 - Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress

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Her career as a supporting actress flourished during the 1930s.

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Walt Disney Studios used her as the main inspiration for the Wicked Queen in the animated film Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937). Originally cast as the Wicked Witch in The Wizard of Oz (1939), she was replaced by Margaret Hamilton when MGM decided to change the Wicked Witch from a glamorous character to an ugly one.

Related Topics:
Walt Disney Studios - Animated - Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs - 1937 - The Wizard of Oz - 1939 - Margaret Hamilton - MGM

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In 1940 she played a role which would become one of her most identifiable, as the exotic and sinister wife in The Letter, who kills murderess Bette Davis. She received a second Academy Award nomination as Best Supporting Actress for her role in Anna and the King of Siam in 1946.

Related Topics:
1940 - The Letter - Bette Davis - Anna and the King of Siam - 1946

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Married to the film director Herbert J. Biberman from 1930, her career suffered irreparable damage during the Red Scare of the early 1950s, when her husband was accused of being a communist and named as one of the Hollywood Ten. With her career stalled, she supported her husband during the production of Salt of the Earth (1954). Highly controversial when it was made, and not a commercial success, its artistic and cultural merit was recognised in 1992 when the National Film Preservation Board selected it for preservation in the National Film Registry. They sold their home in Hollywood and moved to New York, where there was apparently no blacklist, and pursued a career on stage.

Related Topics:
Film director - Herbert J. Biberman - Red Scare - Communist - Hollywood Ten - Salt of the Earth - 1954 - 1992 - National Film Preservation Board - National Film Registry

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Biberman died in 1971, and Sondergaard made a few more film and television appearances, before dying from cerebral vascular thrombosis in Woodland Hills, California at the age of 86.

Related Topics:
Television - Cerebral vascular thrombosis - Woodland Hills, California

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