Born
30 October 1876 (149)
Place of Birth
San Francisco, California, USA
Also known as
Georgia Cain, Georgia Craine
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Georgia Caine (30 October 1876 – 4 April 1964) was an American actress who performed both on Broadway and in more than 80 films in her 51-year career. Born in San Francisco, California in 1876, the daughter of two Shakespearean actors, George Caine and the former Jennie Darragh, she travelled with them when they toured the country. Caine left school at the age of 17 to join a Shakespearean repertory company. She made her Broadway debut in 1899 as the star ...
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Georgia Caine (30 October 1876 – 4 April 1964) was an American actress who performed both on Broadway and in more than 80 films in her 51-year career. Born in San Francisco, California in 1876, the daughter of two Shakespearean actors, George Caine and the former Jennie Darragh, she travelled with them when they toured the country. Caine left school at the age of 17 to join a Shakespearean repertory company. She made her Broadway debut in 1899 as the star of the musical A Reign of Error. Caine continued to perform continuously on Broadway as a star or featured performer, primarily in musicals, until the mid-1930s, including in George M. Cohan's Little Nellie Kelly, as well as his Mary, and The O'Brien Girls,. She appeared in Franz Lehár's The Merry Widow both on Broadway and in London. Caine was often written about by theater columnists until the 1930s, when her star had started to fade. She made her last Broadway appearance in 1935, in Damon Runyon and Howard Lindsay's A Slight Case of Murder. With her stage career fading, Caine took advantage of the advent of talking pictures to change her focus and moved to California to work in Hollywood. In 1930, Caine made her first film, Good Intentions, and in the next twenty years appeared in 83 films, mostly playing character roles – mothers, aunts, and older neighbors – although she occasionally played against type, such as when she was a streetwalker in Camille (1936). Many of her parts were small and she did not receive screen credit for them. In 1940, Caine appeared as Barbara Stanwyck's mother in the film Remember the Night, which was written by Preston Sturges, and she would go on to become part of Sturges' unofficial "stock company" of character actresses, appearing in seven other films written by Sturges. Caine made her final film appearance in 1950, at the age of 73, in Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye. Caine in the musical Adele (1913) According to Marie Dressler The Unlikeliest Star by Betty Lee, about Caine's friend Marie Dressler, Caine was married to a prominent man from San Francisco by the 1920s, but the book gives no information on what his name was or when or for how long they were married. Georgia Caine died in Hollywood, California on 4 April 1964, at the age of 87, and is buried in Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery in North Hollywood, California.
Bride for Sale
1949
Give My Regards to Broadway
1948
A Double Life
1947
The Sin of Harold Diddlebock
1947
Nora Prentiss
1947
The Miracle of Morgan's Creek
1944
Hail the Conquering Hero
1944
Mr. Skeffington
1944
Gentleman Jim
1942
The Wife Takes a Flyer
1942
Hello, Annapolis
1942
Wild Bill Hickok Rides
1942
Manpower
1941
Hurry, Charlie, Hurry
1941
The Lady and the Lug
1941
Ridin' on a Rainbow
1941
Santa Fe Trail
1940
Nobody's Children
1940
Christmas in July
1940
A Dispatch from Reuters
1940
All This, and Heaven Too
1940
Babies for Sale
1940
The Lone Wolf Meets a Lady
1940
Alex in Wonderland
1940
Remember the Night
1940
Swanee River
1939
A Child is Born
1939
Tower of London
1939
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
1939
Hollywood Cavalcade
1939
Honeymoon in Bali
1939
No Place to Go
1939
Juarez
1939
Dodge City
1939
Boy Trouble
1939
The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse
1938
Women Are Like That
1938
Jezebel
1938
It's Love I'm After
1937
Affairs of Cappy Ricks
1937