Marie Dressler Movies and Career Information
Nov 09, 1868
Cobourg
Actor
Marie Dressler (November 9, 1868 – July 28, 1934) was a Canadian actress and Depression-era film star. She won the Academy Award for Best Actress in 1932 in Min and Bill. Born Leila Marie Koerber in Cobourg, Ontario, to parents Alexander Rudolph Koerber (who was Austrian) and Anna Henderson, the young Dressler was able to hone her talents to make people laugh, and began her acting career when she was fourteen. In 1892 she made her debut on Broadway. At first she hoped to make a career of singing light opera, but then gravitated to vaudeville. In vaudeville she was known for her full-figured body—fashionable at the time—and had buxom contemporaries such as her friends Lillian Russell, Fay Templeton, May Irwin and Trixie Friganza. She used the services of 'body sculptor to the stars' Sylvia of Hollywood to keep herself at a steady weight. She appeared in a play called Robber of the Rhine which was written by Maurice Barrymore. Barrymore gave Dressler some positive advice about furthering her career and she later acknowledged his help. Years later she would appear with his sons, Lionel and John, in motion pictures. During the early 1900s, she became a major vaudeville star, although
- Marie Dressler Movies before 2012
- Dinner at Eight 1933
- Reducing (1931) 1931
- Min and Bill (1930) 1930
- Anna Christie (1930) 1930
- Divine Lady 1929
- Bringing Up Father (1928) 1928
- Breakfast at Sunrise (1927) 1927
- Tillie's Punctured Romance (1914) 1914
- Anna Christie (1923)