Dorothy Gish


Actor
Dorothy Gish

About

Also Known As
Dorothy Elizabeth Carter, Dorothy Elizabeth Gish
Birth Place
Dayton, Ohio, USA
Born
March 11, 1898
Died
June 04, 1968
Cause of Death
Bronchial Pneumonia

Biography

Though not as popular or successful as her older sister, actress Dorothy Gish nonetheless enjoyed a good run in the silent era as a pert and talented leading lady who seemed most at home in comedy. Gish made a number of pictures with her sister and director D.W. Griffith, starting with "An Unseen Enemy" (1912), before having her big breakthrough role in the World War I epic, "Hearts of ...

Family & Companions

Robert Harron
Companion
Actor. Appeared together in films.
James Rennie
Husband
Actor. Eloped December 26, 1920; divorced in 1935 over Rennie's alcoholism.
Louis Calhern
Companion
Actor. After affair had ended, acted together on Broadway in "The Magnificent Yankee".

Notes

"I have a crooked face. I always think of myself as a squirrel, with two nuts stored in one cheek, and only one in the other." --Dorothy Gish, quoted in undated newspaper article.

"You miss the old feeling. Making movies used to be fun. A medium is always more fun when it's new." --Dorothy Gish, quoted in newspaper interview, c. 1950.

Biography

Though not as popular or successful as her older sister, actress Dorothy Gish nonetheless enjoyed a good run in the silent era as a pert and talented leading lady who seemed most at home in comedy. Gish made a number of pictures with her sister and director D.W. Griffith, starting with "An Unseen Enemy" (1912), before having her big breakthrough role in the World War I epic, "Hearts of the World" (1918). After signing a contract with Paramount Pictures that same year, Gish starred in a string of successful films that made her one of the top comic performers in Hollywood. She made her last film with her sister and Griffith in the epic "Orphans of the Storm" (1922), and moved to England in the mid-1920s to make her final silent-era films, including the international hit "Nell Gywnn" (1926). Gish made the transition to talkies with "Wolves" (1930), but stepped away from movies for 14 years to perform on the stage. She returned to pictures as a character actress in "Our Hearts Were Young and Gay" (1944) and "Centennial Summer" (1946), and made her last movie "The Cardinal" (1963), before succumbing to ill health. Though overshadowed by her sister, Gish was certainly remembered as a popular star in her own right.

Born on March 11, 1898 in Dayton, OH, Gish was raised by her father, James, a traveling salesman and her mother, Mary, a former actor and department store clerk. Before she ever really knew him, her alcoholic father abandoned the family and later died in 1912. Because her mother acted to support the family, Gish and her older sister Lillian were introduced to the stage and modeling at an early age. Also in 1912, childhood friend Mary Pickford introduced both sisters to D.W. Griffith, who was directing films for Biograph Studios. Both sisters debuted in Griffith's "An Unseen Enemy" (1912) and Gish went on to make a number of pictures as one of Biograph's leading comic ingénues alongside Lillian, including in "The Painted Lady" (1912), "Oil and Water" (1913), "The Lady and the Mouse" (1913), and "Just Gold" (1913). Of course, Gish made a number of pictures without her sister, often co-starring opposite Lionel Barrymore in movies like "My Hero" (1912), "The Perfidy of Mary" (1913), and "The House of Discord" (1913). As was the case with countless films from the silent era, many of these pictures were later lost.

In 1914 alone, Gish appeared in 30-odd films, including "The Better Way," "Silent Sandy," "The Suffragettes' Battle in Nuttyville" and "Judith of Bethulia," a four-reel biblical epic directed by Griffith. As the decade worn on, Gish's films became longer and her parts grew more significant, as she starred in "Minerva's Mission" (1915), "The Little Catamount" (1915), "Little Meena's Romance" (1916) and "Gretchen, the Greenhorn" (1916). She finally had her big breakthrough with the Griffith-directed World War I epic, "Hearts of the World" (1918), in which she played a French peasant girl caught up in battle and between two romances. Meanwhile, Gish signed with Paramount in 1918, and over the next four years starred in 14 successful comedies, including "Battling Jane" (1918), "I'll Get Him Yet" (1919), which was a loose precursor to 1934's "It Happened One Night," the comic Western "Nugget Nell" (1919), and "Remodeling Her Husband" (1920), which was reportedly directed by Lillian, though Griffith did claim to be at least a co-director. Meanwhile, Gish married actor James Rennie in 1920 and stayed married to him until 1935, when they divorced over his alcoholism. They had no children together.

Gish's most oft-revived film made during this period was "Orphans of the Storm" (1922), in which she played a visually impaired woman who goes to Paris during the French Revolution with her sighted sister (Lillian Gish) in search of a doctor who might be able to restore her vision. The film was a big hit with critics and at the box office, though it proved to be the last she made with both Griffith and her sister. After playing a maid at a flophouse in Henry King's "Fury" (1923), Gish - who spent much of the 1920s commuting between the United States and London - played a Cuban dancer in "The Bright Shawl" (1923), a tragic peasant in "Romola" (1924), a nagging wife in "Clothes Make the Pirate" (1925), and the title role in "Nell Gywnn" (1926), the first British film to find worldwide success. Following a turn as a cabaret star in "Tip Toes" (1927), Gish tried making the transition to talkies with the British-made melodrama, "Wolves" (1930), but the film failed at the box office and triggered Gish's 14-year hiatus from making movies.

Gish returned to the stage after leaving the movie business and performed in a number of successful productions, including "Life with Father," "Morning's at Seven," "The Inspector General," and "Getting Married." She returned to the big screen as a middle-aged character actress with the well-received light comedy "Our Hearts Were Young and Gay" (1944), starring Gail Russell and Diana Lynn. Preferring the stage, Gish would only make three more films in her career: "Centennial Summer" (1946), a rare musical comedy from the serious-minded Otto Preminger; "The Whistle at Eaton Falls" (1951), which starred Lloyd Bridges in an early dramatic role as a reluctant union leader; and "The Cardinal" (1963), Preminger's Oscar-nominated look at race and religion. Having suffered from failing health for several years, Gish went into hospice at a clinic in Rapallo, Italy, where she spent two years as a patient. On June 4, 1968, Gish died from bronchial pneumonia with Lillian by her side. She was 70 years old. Her older sister went on to outlive Gish by another 25 years. The two were eventually interred together at St. Bartholomew's Episcopal Church in New York.

By Shawn Dwyer

Filmography

 

Cast (Feature Film)

The Cardinal (1963)
Celia
The Whistle at Eaton Falls (1951)
Helen Doubleday
Centennial Summer (1946)
Harriet Rogers
Our Hearts Were Young and Gay (1944)
Mrs. Skinner
Wolves (1930)
Tiptoes (1927)
Madame Pompadour (1927)
Romola (1925)
Tessa
The Beautiful City (1925)
Mollie
Clothes Make the Pirate (1925)
Betsy Tidd, his wife
Night Life of New York (1925)
Meg
The Bright Shawl (1923)
La Clavel, an Andalusian dancer
Fury (1923)
Minnie
The Cynic Effect (1922)
Jolanda
The Country Flapper (1922)
Jolanda, The Flapper
Orphans of the Storm (1921)
Louise
Oh, Jo (1921)
The Ghost in the Garret (1921)
Delsie O'Dell
Flying Pat (1920)
Patricia Van Nuys
Little Miss Rebellion (1920)
Grand Duchess Marie Louise
Remodelling Her Husband (1920)
Janie Wakefield
Mary Ellen Comes to Town (1920)
Mary Ellen
I'll Get Him Yet (1919)
Susy Faraday Jones
Nobody Home (1919)
Frances Wadsworth
Peppy Polly (1919)
Polly
Turning the Tables (1919)
Doris Pennington
Nugget Nell (1919)
Nugget Nell
Boots (1919)
The Hope Chest (1918)
Sheila Moore
The Hun Within (1918)
Beth
Battling Jane (1918)
Jane
Hearts of the World (1918)
The Little Disturber
Her Official Fathers (1917)
Janice Webster
The Little Yank (1917)
Sallie Castleton
Stagestruck (1917)
Ruth Colby
Children of the Feud (1916)
Sairy Ann
Susan Rocks the Boat (1916)
Susan Johnstone
Betty of Graystone (1916)
Betty Lockwood
Atta Boy's Last Race (1916)
Lois Brandon
The Little School Ma'am (1916)
Nan
Little Meena's Romance (1916)
Meena Bauer
Gretchen, the Greenhorn (1916)
Gretchen
Jordan Is a Hard Road (1915)
Cora Findlay
Old Heidelberg (1915)
Kathie
Bred in the Bone (1915)
Mercy
The Lost Lord Lovell (1915)
How Hazel Got Even (1915)
Her Grandparents (1915)
Victorine (1915)
The Mountain Girl (1915)
An Old-Fashioned Girl (1915)
Minerva's Mission (1915)
Her Mother's Daughter (1915)
Out of Bondage (1915)
The Little Catamount (1915)
Judith of Bethulia (1914)
Crippled beggar
The Mountain Rat (1914)
Nell, "The Mountain Rat"
Liberty Belles (1914)
The Floor Above (1914)
Stella Ford
Home, Sweet Home (1914)
His Sister
The Tavern of Tragedy (1914)
A Fair Rebel (1914)
The Suffragette Battle of Nuttyville (1914)
Down the Hill to Creditville (1914)
Silent Sandy (1914)
Back to the Kitchen (1914)
Man's Enemy (1914)
A Question of Courage (1914)
The Availing Prayer (1914)
Arms and the Gringo (1914)
The Saving Grace (1914)
Her Old Teacher (1914)
Her Mother's Necklace (1914)
Granny (1914)
The Mysterious Shot (1914)
The Sisters (1914)
Their First Acquaintance (1914)
The Newer Woman (1914)
Her Father's Silent Partner (1914)
Sands of Fate (1914)
A Lesson in Mechanics (1914)
The Adopted Brother (1913)
Just Gold (1913)
A Cure For Suffragettes (1913)
For the Son of the House (1913)
Almost a Wild Man (1913)
The House of Discord (1913)
The Suffragette Minstrels (1913)
Oil and Water (1913)
Her Mother's Oath (1913)
The Perfidy of Mary (1913)
Pa Says (1913)
Those Little Flowers (1913)
A Fallen Hero (1913)
The Lady and the Mouse (1913)
The Widow's Kids (1913)
The Blue or the Gray (1913)
The Vengeance of Galora (1913)
Gold and Glitter (1912)
The Musketeers of Pig Alley (1912)
The New York Hat (1912)

Life Events

1902

Stage debut in stock

1912

Film acting debut, "An Unseen Enemy"; sister Lillian also featured

1912

Acted with Biograph, Majestic-Mutual and Fine Arts studios

1912

Teamed with Lillian in "The Musketeers of Pig Alley", directed by D.W. Griffith

1914

Featured in Griffith's "Judith of Bethulia"

1920

Starred in and co-wrote (with sister Lillian) "Remodeling Her Husband", directed by Lillian Gish

1922

Last film with Griffith and her sister, "Orphans of the Storm"

1923

Featured in "Fury", directed by Henry King

1925

Starred opposite Lillian in "Romola"

1930

First talking film, "Wolves"; last film for 14 years

1944

Return to films after 14 years onstage, "Our Hearts Were Young and Gay"

1946

Enjoyed a stage success in "The Magnificent Yankee", opposite Louis Calhern

1956

Last stage play with sister, "The Chalk Garden

1963

Final film, "The Cardinal"

Family

James Leigh Gish
Father
Traveling salesman. Born c. 1875; alcoholic; separated from family; died in 1912.
Mary Robinson McConnell
Mother
Actor, department store worker. Born in September 1876; died in 1948.
Lillian Gish
Sister
Actor, director. Born on October 14, 1893; died on February 27, 1993.

Companions

Robert Harron
Companion
Actor. Appeared together in films.
James Rennie
Husband
Actor. Eloped December 26, 1920; divorced in 1935 over Rennie's alcoholism.
Louis Calhern
Companion
Actor. After affair had ended, acted together on Broadway in "The Magnificent Yankee".

Bibliography

Notes

"I have a crooked face. I always think of myself as a squirrel, with two nuts stored in one cheek, and only one in the other." --Dorothy Gish, quoted in undated newspaper article.

"You miss the old feeling. Making movies used to be fun. A medium is always more fun when it's new." --Dorothy Gish, quoted in newspaper interview, c. 1950.