Mini-Biography:
Margaret Sullavan was born on May 16, 1911 in Norfolk, Virginia, US. She was an American Actress, known for The shop around the corner (1940), So red the Rose (1935), The Mortal storm (1940), Margaret Sullavan's first movie on record is from 1933. Margaret Sullavan died on January 1, 1960 in New Haven, CT, US. Her last motion picture on file dates from 1950.
FilmographyFilmography [Auszug]
1950: No sad songs for me (Cast: Mary Scott ), Directed by Rudolph Maté, with Wendell Corey, Viveca Lindfors,
1944: Cry 'Havoc' (Cast: Lieutenant Smith), Directed by Richard Thorpe, with Ann Sothern, Joan Blondell,
1941: Appointment for Love (Amore per appuntamento, Cita de Amor) (Cast: Jane Alexander), Directed by William A. Seiter, with Roman Bohnen, Charles Boyer, Reginald Denny,
1940: So ends our Night (Cast), Directed by John Cromwell, with Frances Dee, Anna Sten,
1940: The shop around the corner (Cast: Klara Novak), Directed by Ernst Lubitsch, with William Tracy, James Stewart,
1940: The Mortal storm (Cast: Freya Roth), Directed by Frank Borzage, with Dan Daily, Tom Drake, William Edmunds,
1939: The Shining Hour (Cast: Judy Linden), Directed by Frank Borzage, with Joan Crawford, Robert Young,
1938: The shopworn angel (Cast: Daisey Heath), Directed by H.C. Potter, with James Stewart, Walter Pidgeon,
1938: Three Comrades (Cast: Pat Hollmann), Directed by Frank Borzage, with Robert Taylor, Franchot Tone,
1936: Next time we love (Cast: Cecily Tyler), Directed by Edward H. Griffith, with Hattie McDaniel, Ray Milland,
1936: The Moon's Our Home (Cast: Cherry Chester / Sarah Brown ), Directed by William A. Seiter, with Henry Fonda, Charles Butterworth,
1935: So red the Rose (Cast: Vallette Bedford), Directed by King Vidor, with Janet Beecher, Walter Connolly, Robert Cummings,
1934: The good fairy (Cast: Luisa 'Lu' Ginglebuscher), Directed by William Wyler, with Herbert Marshall, Frank Morgan,
1934: Little Man, What Now? (Cast: Lämmchen Pinneberg), Directed by Frank Borzage, with Douglass Montgomery, Alan Hale,
1933: Only Yesterday (Cast: Mary Lane), Directed by John M. Stahl, with John Boles, Edna May Oliver,