Mary Astor
Mary Astor, born Lucile Vasconcellos Langhanke in 1906 in Illinois, had a pretty wild ride to stardom. Her folks were super ambitious—like, pushy stage parents before it was even a thing. They saw her good looks and basically shoved her into every beauty contest they could find, hoping to score something big. And hey, it worked: one of those contests caught the eye of Hollywood big shots, and suddenly, teenage Mary had a ticket to Tinseltown.
Her first movie gig? A blink-and-you’ll-miss-it bit in The Scarecrow (1920). Not exactly glamorous, but it cracked the door open. She kept hustling through the early ‘20s, snagging small roles until 1924 hit. That’s when she landed a juicy part opposite John Barrymore in Beau Brummel. Boom—career launched. And yeah, she and Barrymore had a thing, but that fizzled out before they could light up the screen together again.
Astor wasn’t just another pretty face who faded when the talkies rolled in. Her voice and screen presence kept her in the game. Through the ‘30s, she racked up hits—Red Dust, Convention City, Man of Iron, The Prisoner of Zenda, you name it. By 1941, she snagged an Oscar for The Great Lie and showed up in The Maltese Falcon. But life got rocky: divorces, losing her first husband in a plane crash, struggles with booze and health issues. Her star faded, roles slowed down, and after her last film in 1964, she’d knocked out 123 movies. She spent her later years at the Motion Picture Country Home, passing away in 1987 at 81.