Marcia Mae Jones
Birth Name:
Marsha Mae Jones
Marcia Mae Jones was born on August 1, 1924, to an acting family. Her mother, Freda Jones, was an actress, and all three of her siblings - Margaret Jones, Macon Jones, and Marvin Jones - were child actors. But Marcia Mae had the most successful career, and she was the only one of her siblings to become a child star. She made her acting debut when s...
Show more »
Marcia Mae Jones was born on August 1, 1924, to an acting family. Her mother, Freda Jones, was an actress, and all three of her siblings - Margaret Jones, Macon Jones, and Marvin Jones - were child actors. But Marcia Mae had the most successful career, and she was the only one of her siblings to become a child star. She made her acting debut when she was just six months old, when director James Cruze saw her in her baby carriage and immediately cast her as the baby in his film Marisa, l'enfant volée (1926). Her first major role was in Night Nurse (1931), in which she played a sick child that a sinister hospital staff was trying to murder. By age 10, Marcia Mae had appeared in several dramatic films. In 1936, she played a terrified victim of school bullying in Ils étaient trois (1936), a role that brought her much attention. In 1937, she played the crippled Klara in Heidi la sauvageonne (1937). The film starred two other child actors, Delmar Watson (as with Marcia Mae, all of Delmar's siblings were actors) and Shirley Temple. Despite a four-year age difference, Marcia Mae and Shirley acted well with each other, and they appeared together again in Petite princesse (1939). Besides Shirley Temple and Delmar Watson, Marcia Mae worked with several other child stars of the 1930s, including Jane Withers, Bonita Granville, Jackie Moran, Sybil Jason, and her favorite, Jackie Cooper. Marcia Mae's film career began to slow down in the early 1950s, after which she largely appeared in television roles. Her adult life was marred by the suicide of her second husband, Bill Davenport, and problems with alcohol. She eventually conquered her alcohol dependency and became a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Show less «
[on her parents] I wasn't allowed to do what most kids were allowed to do. My mother pushed me, but my father was kind of in awe of me. He r...Show more »
[on her parents] I wasn't allowed to do what most kids were allowed to do. My mother pushed me, but my father was kind of in awe of me. He really didn't know quite what to do with it all. But my mother was definitely a motion picture mother. She loved the motion picture. Show less «
[on her education] Schooling brought me a lot of confusion when I was very small because I was still in public school. When I was in school ...Show more »
[on her education] Schooling brought me a lot of confusion when I was very small because I was still in public school. When I was in school I wanted to be back acting, and when I was acting I wanted to be back in public school. Later on we had schooling on the lot. For Shirley Temple it worked great, for Jane Withers it worked great, but I was one of those kids who didn't like school. Show less «
[on her family] I don't know if I could have done as well as my mother did had the tables been reversed, but she did love me way too much an...Show more »
[on her family] I don't know if I could have done as well as my mother did had the tables been reversed, but she did love me way too much and it did cause trouble and jealousy with my brothers and sister. I can understand today how they must have felt. It was always, "Marcia Mae has to go to work, Marcia Mae's making the money". Show less «