- Born
- Died
- Birth nameMary Louise Brooks
- Nicknames
- Lulu
- Brooksie
- Scrubbie
- Height5′ 2″ (1.57 m)
- Mary Louise Brooks, also known by her childhood name of Brooksie, was born in the Midwestern town of Cherryvale, Kansas, on November 14, 1906. She began dancing at an early age with the Denishawn Dancers (which was how she left Kansas and went to New York) and then with George White's Scandals before joining the Ziegfeld Follies, but became one of the most fascinating and alluring personalities ever to grace the silver screen. She was always compared to her Lulu role in Pandora's Box (1929), which was filmed in 1928. Her performances in A Girl in Every Port (1928) and Beggars of Life (1928), both filmed in 1928, proved to all concerned that Louise had real talent. She became known, mostly, for her bobbed hair style. Thousands of women were attracted to that style and adopted it as their own. As you will note by her photographs, she was no doubt the trend setter of the 1920s with her Buster Brown-Page Boy type hair cut, much like today's women imitate stars. Because of her dark haired look and being the beautiful woman that she was, plus being a modern female, she was not especially popular among Hollywood's clientele. She just did not go along with the norms of the film society. Louise really came into her own when she left Hollywood for Europe. There she appeared in a few German productions which were very well made and continued to prove she was an actress with an enduring talent. Until she ended her career in film in 1938, she had made only 25 movies. After that, she spent most of her time reading and painting. She also became an accomplished writer, authoring a number of books, including her autobiography. On August 8, 1985, Louise died of a heart attack in Rochester, New York. She was 78 years old.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Denny Jackson
- Louise Brooks was one of the most fascinating personalities of Hollywood, always being compared with her most important characterization as protagonist: Lulu in Georg Wilhelm Pabst's Pandora's Box (1929). Along with her beauty and talent she had an independent streak and refused to accept the restrictive role that women had in American society, and pretty much went her own way, which caused quite a bit of controversy. Not everyone found her rebellious nature off-putting, though; in 1926 she was the inspiration for the comic heroine Dixie Dugan and in the zenith of her fame for Valentina of Guido Crepax. She started her career as a dancer in the Ziegfeld Follies on Broadway, and Hollywood soon came calling. She didn't care for the Hollywood scene at all, though, and traveled to Europe, where she made her most memorable films. Her dissatisfaction with Hollywood in general led her to quit films altogether in 1938; she was at the peak of her career, but just gave it all up. After that she spent her life writing, reading and painting until her death in 1985.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Volker Boehm
- A legendary actress of the silent film era. She epitomized the flapper age with her bobbed hairstyle, while blatantly flaunting the accepted sexual and societal roles of women at the time. She is best known for her starring roles in G.W. Pabst's "Pandora's Box" and "Diary of a Lost Girl," which were both filmed in Weimar Germany in 1929. She quit acting in 1938 at the age of 32. Several of her films are considered lost. She spent many years living in obscurity until her remaining films were rediscovered in the 1950s to great acclaim. Her status as one of the great actresses and beauties of motion pictures continues to this day.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Heidi MacDonald
- SpousesWilliam Deering Davis(October 10, 1933 - December 9, 1937) (divorced)A. Edward Sutherland(July 21, 1926 - June 20, 1928) (divorced)
- ParentsMyra Rude BrooksLeonard Porter Brooks
- Bob hairstyle
- Briefly the mistress of CBS founder William Paley, who secretly provided her with a yearly pension for the rest of her life.
- As a child, one of her best friends was Vivian Vance who played Ethel Mertz on I Love Lucy (1951).
- Trying to make a Hollywood comeback after working in Europe, she turned down an offer to star with James Cagney in the classic The Public Enemy (1931). The role could have revitalized her career.
- By 1946, she had to take a $40-a-week job as a sales girl at Saks Fifth Avenue to make a living.
- After retiring, she went on to write many witty and intelligent essays on the film industry.
- Love is a publicity stunt, and making love - after the first curious raptures - is only another petulant way to pass the time waiting for the studio to call.
- Most beautiful dumb girls think they are smart and get away with it, because other people, on the whole, aren't much smarter.
- I learned how to act by watching Martha Graham dance and I learned how to dance by watching Charles Chaplin act.
- When I went to Hollywood in 1927, the girls were wearing lumpy sweaters and skirts... I was wearing sleek suits and half naked beaded gowns and piles and piles of furs.
- A well dressed woman, even though her purse is painfully empty, can conquer the world.
- Overland Stage Raiders (1938) - $300
- Empty Saddles (1936) - $300
- Windy Riley Goes Hollywood (1931) - $500 for 3 days' work
- The Canary Murder Case (1929) - $250 /week
- A Social Celebrity (1926) - $250 per week
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