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IMDbPro

Louise Fazenda(1895-1962)

  • Actress
  • Soundtrack
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Louise Fazenda
When top "working girl" silent screen comedienne Mabel Normand would gripe to Mack Sennett about making classier films, Sennett's quippy retort would always be, "I'll send for Fazenda." This pretty, oval-faced, highly popular Keystone comedy cut-up put in her time first in comic two-reelers from 1913 on, but soon unleashed her real gift "dressing down" for laughs with her best known character types as frizzy-haired country bumpkins complete with spit curls, multiple pigtails and calico dresses, a look that went on to inspire bucolic comics Judy Canova and Minnie Pearl.

Louise was born on June 17, 1895, in Lafayette, Indiana, the daughter of a merchandise broker. Raised in California, she attended Los Angeles High School and St. Mary's Convent. She found odd jobs working a dentist, a candy store owner, and a tax collector. While performing in a high school show, lucky Louise was discovered by a Sennett talent agent and taken immediately to films. The 18-year-old hopeful made her first films with Joker Studios and went on to be highly featured in a slew of "Mike and Jake" comedy shorts starring Max Asher and Harry McCoy. She would also co-star in a number of burlesque-style features with Asher and Bobby Vernon in such vehicles as Heaven Will Protect the Working Girl (1914), A Freak Temperance Wave (1914), The Tender Hearted Sheriff (1914), Love and Electricity (1914), The Diamond Nippers (1914) and Schultz the Paperhanger (1914).

Soon silent kingpin Sennett himself began incorporating the funny girl's gift for slapstick comedy in his highly popular "Keystone Kops" shorts. Between the years 1915 to 1917, she rose quickly up the front ranks as an early plain-Jane Carol Burnett goofball playing an assortment of serviles -- maid, cook, janitress, flower girl, nurse and fortune teller types. In A Hash House Fraud (1915) she played a flirty cashier; in Her Fame and Shame (1917) she played a star-struck daughter who attempts burlesque to save her pop's mortgage; in The Betrayal of Maggie (1917) and Maggie's First False Step (1917) she portrayed the eager title roles; and in Her Torpedoed Love (1917), she plays a daffy cook whose life is in danger when a greedy butler (Ford Sterling) learns her boss is leaving her his entire estate.

During this peak time, Louise got to work alongside the most brilliant of silent male screen clowns, including Sterling himself, and Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle, Ben Turpin, Charley Chase, Charles Murray, Harry Booker, Edgar Kennedy, Mack Swain, Chester Conklin, James Finlayson, Slim Summerville, Billy Bevan, Jack Cooper, Billy Armstrong and Hugh Fay. Other popular Sennett comic outings for Louise would include Ambrose's Nasty Temper (1915), Fatty's Tintype Tangle (1915), A Game Old Knight (1915), A Versatile Villain (1915), The Judge (1916), Bombs! (1916), Are Waitresses Safe? (1917), Those Athletic Girls (1918), The Village Chestnut (1918) Hearts and Flowers (1919), Back to the Kitchen (1919), The Gingham Girl (1920), Bungalow Troubles (1921) and Made in the Kitchen (1921).

Sennett's Down on the Farm (1920) is a silent film feature-length rural comedy featuring an all-star cast of funsters with Louise playing a typical role as the farmer's daughter. Louise eventually left Sennett's company in the early 1920s and, in a change of pace, progressed on her own in both comic and dramatic outings. She appeared in the comedy drama Quincy Adams Sawyer (1922) starring John Bowers, Blanche Sweet and Lon Chaney; three dramatic pieces, The Beautiful and Damned (1922), The Wanters (1923) and Being Respectable (1924), all starring Marie Prevost; the social drama Main Street (1923) starring Florence Vidor; the historical drama (as a country gal) The Dramatic Life of Abraham Lincoln (1924); the tearjerker This Woman (1924) starring Irene Rich and Julliet Akinyi; the canine family adventure The Lighthouse by the Sea (1924) featuring Rin Tin Tin; the Raymond Griffith comedy vehicle The Night Club (1925); the melodramas The Price of Pleasure (1925) starring Virginia Valli and Déclassé (1925) starring Corinne Griffith; and a rare comedy Bobbed Hair (1925) starring Ms. Prevost; Occasional star roles during this silent period included the comedies Listen Lester (1924), Footloose Widows (1926), The Gay Old Bird (1927) and The Cradle Snatchers (1927).

Coming the advent of sound, Louise had no problem whatsoever adjusting to sound where her eccentric talents were greatly utilized in (mostly) Warner Bros. musicals, dramas and knockabout comedies. She provided comedy relief/support in such films as the mystery thriller The Terror (1928); the adventure film The Lady of the Harem (1926); the romantic comedy The Red Mill (1927) starring Marion Davies; the W.C. Fields talking remake of the silent comedy Tillie's Punctured Romance (1928); the sports comedy Babe Comes Home (1927) starring legendary ballplayer Babe Ruth; the war comedy Ham and Eggs at the Front (1927); the Will Rogers comedy A Texas Steer (1927); the comedy Heart to Heart (1928); the dramedy Vamping Venus (1928) which reunited her with Charles Murray and co-starred a rising Thelma Todd; the war drama Noah's Ark (1928); the action adventure Stark Mad (1929) the musicals On with the Show! (1929) and No, No, Nanette (1930) (as Sue Smith); the comedy Wide Open (1930); and the light romantic comedy Loose Ankles (1930).

On November 24, 1927, Louise married renowned Warner Bros. producer Hal B. Wallis who went on to produce several movies that she later appeared in, including Colleen (1936), First Lady (1937), Ready, Willing and Able (1937) and Swing Your Lady (1938). They had one child, Brent, who would grow up to become a psychiatrist. Ending her career on a dramatic note, Wallis would produce Louise's effort -- a supporting role in the Bette Davis/Miriam Hopkins soaper The Old Maid (1939) in the role of, what else, a maid!

Away from the limelight, Louise remained socially prominent and became a noted humanitarian and art collector. In 1958, she received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. The 66-year-old former actress suffered a brain hemorrhage in Beverly Hills and died on April 17, 1962. She was survived by her husband, who, in 1966, married actress Martha Hyer. Louise was interred at the Inglewood Park Cemetery in Inglewood, California.
BornJune 17, 1895
DiedApril 17, 1962(66)
BornJune 17, 1895
DiedApril 17, 1962(66)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
  • Awards
    • 4 wins total

Photos128

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Known for

The Bat (1926)
The Bat
6.5
  • Lizzie Allen
  • 1926
Louise Fazenda, Mitzi Green, Edna May Oliver, and Jackie Searl in Newly Rich (1931)
Newly Rich
6.1
  • Maggie Tiffany
  • 1931
Faro Nell (1929)
Faro Nell
5.4
Short
  • Faro Nell
  • 1929
Kay Francis and Al Jolson in Wonder Bar (1934)
Wonder Bar
6.5
  • Pansy Pratt
  • 1934

Credits

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IMDbPro

Actress



  • Wedding Yells
    Short
    • Louise - the Farmer's Daughter
    • 1942
  • Bette Davis, George Brent, and Miriam Hopkins in The Old Maid (1939)
    The Old Maid
    7.4
    • Dora
    • 1939
  • Spring Byington, June Carlson, George Ernest, Louise Fazenda, Russell Gleason, Kenneth Howell, Jed Prouty, and Florence Roberts in Down on the Farm (1938)
    Down on the Farm
    5.3
    • Aunt Ida
    • 1938
  • Humphrey Bogart, Louise Fazenda, Allen Jenkins, Frank McHugh, Nat Pendleton, Penny Singleton, June Weaver, Frank Weaver, and Leon Weaver in Swing Your Lady (1938)
    Swing Your Lady
    5.0
    • Sadie Horn
    • 1938
  • Preston Foster and Kay Francis in First Lady (1937)
    First Lady
    6.2
    • Mrs. Lavinia Mae Creevey
    • 1937
  • Mischa Auer, Billy House, and Jimmy Savo in Merry-Go-Round of 1938 (1937)
    Merry-Go-Round of 1938
    5.1
    • Mrs. Penelope Updike
    • 1937
  • Marion Davies and Robert Montgomery in Ever Since Eve (1937)
    Ever Since Eve
    6.6
    • Abbie Belldon
    • 1937
  • Noah Beery Jr., Richard Cromwell, Andy Devine, Louise Fazenda, John 'Dusty' King, Maurice Murphy, Barbara Read, and Slim Summerville in The Road Back (1937)
    The Road Back
    6.3
    • Angelina
    • 1937
  • Lee Dixon and Ruby Keeler in Ready, Willing and Able (1937)
    Ready, Willing and Able
    5.8
    • Clara Heineman
    • 1937
  • Pat O'Brien and Josephine Hutchinson in I Married a Doctor (1936)
    I Married a Doctor
    6.1
    • Bea Sorenson
    • 1936
  • Maude Eburne, Louise Fazenda, and Ann Rutherford in Doughnuts and Society (1936)
    Doughnuts and Society
    6.2
    • Kate Flannagan
    • 1936
  • Joan Blondell, Ruby Keeler, Jack Oakie, and Dick Powell in Colleen (1936)
    Colleen
    6.0
    • Alicia Ames
    • 1936
  • Dolores Del Río and Warren William in The Widow from Monte Carlo (1935)
    The Widow from Monte Carlo
    6.1
    • Rose Torrent
    • 1935
  • Bad Boy (1935)
    Bad Boy
    6.5
    • Mrs. Harris - Landlady
    • 1935
  • Joan Blondell, Louise Fazenda, Adolphe Menjou, Donald Mills, Harry Mills, Herbert Mills, John Mills, Dick Powell, and The Mills Brothers in Broadway Gondolier (1935)
    Broadway Gondolier
    6.4
    • Mrs. Flaggenheim
    • 1935

Soundtrack



  • Humphrey Bogart, Louise Fazenda, Allen Jenkins, Frank McHugh, Nat Pendleton, Penny Singleton, June Weaver, Frank Weaver, and Leon Weaver in Swing Your Lady (1938)
    Swing Your Lady
    5.0
    • Soundtrack ("Dig Me a Grave in Missouri" (1937), uncredited)
    • 1938
  • Joan Blondell, Ruby Keeler, Jack Oakie, and Dick Powell in Colleen (1936)
    Colleen
    6.0
    • lyrics: "You Gotta Know How to Dance" (1936)
    • performer: "You Gotta Know How to Dance" (1936) (uncredited)
    • 1936
  • Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Edward J. Nugent, and Loretta Young in Loose Ankles (1930)
    Loose Ankles
    5.9
    • performer: "Heaven Will Protect Us"
    • 1930
  • Edward Everett Horton and Patsy Ruth Miller in Wide Open (1930)
    Wide Open
    6.0
    • performer: "Nobody Cares If I'm Blue" (uncredited)
    • 1930
  • Show of Shows (1929)
    Show of Shows
    5.7
    • performer: "Your Mother and Mine" (1929) (uncredited)
    • 1929
  • Dolores Costello and George O'Brien in Noah's Ark (1928)
    Noah's Ark
    6.6
    • performer: "Du, du liegst mir im Herzen" (uncredited)
    • 1928

Personal details

Edit
  • Height
    • 5′ 6″ (1.68 m)
  • Born
    • June 17, 1895
    • Lafayette, Indiana, USA
  • Died
    • April 17, 1962
    • Beverly Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA(cerebral hemorrhage)
  • Spouses
      Hal B. WallisNovember 24, 1927 - April 17, 1962 (her death, 1 child)
  • Other works
    Vaudeville actress.
  • Publicity listings
    • 26 Articles
    • 1 Magazine Cover Photo

Did you know

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  • Trivia
    Her husband, Hal B. Wallis, was nicknamed "The Prisoner of Fazenda" around the studio.

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