Chloe Franks


Biography

Chloe Franks began her entertainment career as a 11-year-old child actress. Franks started off her career in film with roles in the Joan Crawford sci-fi flick "Trog" (1970) and the Dustin Hoffman dramatic adaptation "Straw Dogs" (1971). Later, she acted in the Shelley Winters thriller "Who Slew Auntie Roo?" (1971), "All the Right Noises" (1973) and the adventure "Escape From The D...

Biography

Chloe Franks began her entertainment career as a 11-year-old child actress. Franks started off her career in film with roles in the Joan Crawford sci-fi flick "Trog" (1970) and the Dustin Hoffman dramatic adaptation "Straw Dogs" (1971). Later, she acted in the Shelley Winters thriller "Who Slew Auntie Roo?" (1971), "All the Right Noises" (1973) and the adventure "Escape From The Dark" (1976) with Alastair Sim. She also appeared in "A Little Night Music" (1977) with Elizabeth Taylor and "Ivanhoe" (CBS, 1981-82). Later in her career, Franks acted on "Death of an Expert Witness" (PBS, 1985-86).

Life Events

Videos

Movie Clip

Little Women (1994) -- (Movie Clip) I'm Hopelessly Flawed Now working as a governess in New York and fresh off another publisher’s rejection of her stories, Jo March (Winona Ryder) collides with fellow boarding-house resident, Gabriel Byrne as German immigrant philosopher Friedrich Bhaer, a propitious moment, as in the Louisa May Alcott novel, in Little Women, 1994.
Little Women (1994) -- (Movie Clip) We've Been Expectorating You! With Winona Ryder narrating as Jo March, and language, including from young Amy (Kirsten Dunst), straight from the Louisa May Alcott novel, director Gillian Armstrong begins her widely praised adaptation, with Trini Alvarado as Meg, Claire Danes as Meg, and Susan Sarandon as Marmee, in Little Women, 1994.
Little Women (1994) -- (Movie Clip) I Never Know The Rules Evading a less interesting beau, Winona Ryder as Jo March at a society party in Civil War-era Concord, Mass., bumps (as will be her habit) into Christian Bale, as “Laurie,” the handsome, mysterious and affluent new neighbor who has fascinated her and her sisters, including Meg (Trini Alvarado), in director Gillian Armstrong’s Little Women, 1994.
Little Women (1994) -- (Movie Clip) The Most Elegant Family In Concord Reading together from magazine serials, using their adopted performance names, in what they consider the “March Family Theater,” sisters Jo, Meg, Beth and Amy (Winona Ryder, Trini Alvarado, Claire Danes and Kirsten Dunst) speculate about the future and their new neighbor (Christian Bale), in Little Women, 1994.
Little Women (1933) -- (Movie Clip) March Dining Room Theatre Author, producer and performer Jo (Katharine Hepburn) organizing sisters (Joan Bennett, Jean Parker, Frances Dee) for the Massachusetts March family Christmas pageant, staged by George Cukor in Little Women, 1933.
House That Dripped Blood, The (1970) -- (Movie Clip) I Was Glad When She Died Chloe Franks is young Jane, previously afraid of fire, Nyree Dawn Porter her governess Ann, and Christopher Lee the father Reid, the third occupants of the house noted in the title, very much opposed to his daughter seeing other kids or having toys, in the four-part horror anthology The House That Dripped Blood, 1970.
Little Women (1949) -- (Movie Clip) You're On Fire! Jo (June Allyson) in her first rather forward visit with Laurie (Peter Lawford), the well-to-do but lonesome young man next door to the March girls of Concord, Mass., in MGM's Little Women, 1949, from the Louisa May Alcott novel.
Little Women (1949) -- (Movie Clip) We'll Storm The Citadel! March sisters Meg, Jo, Amy and Beth (Janet Leigh, June Allyson, Elizabeth Taylor, Margaret O'Brien) spending Christmas dollars with Grace (Will Wright), then returning to mother (Mary Astor), in MGM's Little Women, 1949.
Little Women (1933) -- (Movie Clip) Christopher Columbus! Jo (Katharine Hepburn) agape at the neighbor's house, meeting Laurie (Douglass Montgomerie) and his scary grandfather (Henry Stephenson), a rousing scene from George Cukor's version of Louisa May Alcott's Little Women, 1933.
Little Women (1949) -- (Movie Clip) Wicked Intentions! Christmas coming, Civil War era Massachusetts, the March sisters Jo (June Allyson), Meg (Janet Leigh), Amy (Elizabeth Taylor) and Beth (Margaret O'Brien) frolicking and spying the new neighbor (Peter Lawford), in MGM's Little Women, 1949.
Little Women (1933) -- (Movie Clip) Neat Gloves And Boots The March sisters together, Jo (Katharine Hepburn), Amy (Joan Bennett), Meg (Frances Dee) and Beth (Jean Parker), discussing their Christmas dollars and Jo's play, early in George Cukor's Little Women, 1933.
Little Women (1933) -- (Movie Clip) Waltzing Off To War Director George Cukor with his introduction of heroine Josephine (Katharine Hepburn), managing her difficult Aunt March (Edna May Oliver), Civil War era Concord, Massachusetts in Little Women, 1933.

Bibliography