Jessie Ralph

Jessie Ralph

If you know more information about Jessie Ralph help us to improve this page
Birthday: 
November 5, 1870 in Gloucester, Massachusetts, USA
Birth Name: 
Jessie Ralph Chambers
Height: 
165 cm
Jessie Ralph was a sailor's daughter, who first came to the stage at the age of 16, performing with a stock company in either Boston, Massachusetts, or Providence, Rhode Island (accounts differ). The year was 1880, and it took Jessie another 26 years to make her debut on the Great White Way in "The Kreutzer Sonata". Already a seasone... Show more »
Jessie Ralph was a sailor's daughter, who first came to the stage at the age of 16, performing with a stock company in either Boston, Massachusetts, or Providence, Rhode Island (accounts differ). The year was 1880, and it took Jessie another 26 years to make her debut on the Great White Way in "The Kreutzer Sonata". Already a seasoned actress, she enjoying third billing. Her screen career started with one and two reelers as early as 1915, but her proper entry into Hollywood did not come about until 1933.For more than 20 years, plump, down-to-earth Jessie made her reputation as a character actress on Broadway playing an assortment of nurses, maids and aunts. She was used in musicals by George M. Cohan and acted in Shakespearean roles, from "Twelfth Night" to "Romeo and Juliet". She was nurse to Jane Cowl's Juliet in the 1923 play which ran for an unprecedented 174 performances and co-starred Eva Le Gallienne and Katharine Cornell (amazing, when considering that the star was already 39 years old!). Like other successful actresses of the stage, Jessie was brought to Hollywood to reprise a Broadway hit role, in this case her Aunt Minnie in Child of Manhattan (1933).After half a lifetime in the theatre, Jessie's sojourn in Hollywood was relatively brief but marked by a series of memorable performances. She was the definitive incarnation of the endearing nurse Peggotty in David Copperfield (1935) and played Greta Garbo's loyal maid Nanine in Le roman de Marguerite Gautier (1936). She was the matriarch of the Whiteoaks of Jalna (1935), an adaptable society matron in San Francisco (1936) and harridan of a mother-in-law to W.C. Fields, Hermisillo Brunch, in Mines de rien (1940). Whether in comedy or drama, as a Chinese aunt in both stage and screen versions of La terre chinoise (1937), or a kindly sorceress in L'oiseau bleu (1940), Jessie gave consistently good value for money. The New York Times review of October 12, 1935, wrote of her performance in Vivre sa vie (1935): "Jessie Ralph as the tyrannical head of the family, proves again that she is the best of the screen grandmothers".Jessie retired from acting in 1941 after having a leg amputated and died three years later. Show less «

Jessie Ralph's FILMOGRAPHY

The Bank Dick

SD

The Blue Bird

SD

Drums Along the Mohawk

HD

The Good Earth

HD

Double Wedding

HD

The Last of Mrs. Cheyney

HD

After the Thin Man

HD

Camille

HD

San Francisco

HD

Captain Blood

HD

Les Misérables

HD

Mark of the Vampire

HD

Evelyn Prentice

SD

Elmer, the Great

HD
Example Example Example
HD
Country:
Genre: