| The
Hottie:
Marie Dressler |
The
Ranking (Circa 1930):
Breasts - 60/100
Body - 62/100
Face - 68/100
Eyes - 63/100
Talent - 58/100
Overall - 65/100 |
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| The
Writeup: It may not be kind, but Marie Dressler was
rather unattractive, even ugly, and yet she managed to become,
for a short time at least, one of the biggest box office stars
in the country. She began her career in silent films, starring
opposite Charlie Chaplin in Tillie's Punctured Romance (1914),
plus it's sequels Tillie's Tomato Surprise (1915) and Tillie
Wakes Up (1917). She would spend the next 10 years off the
screen, but was signed in 1927 by MGM and made her triumphant
return as a supporting comedienne in The Callahans and the
Murphys, a role, comedienne that is, that she would make her
bread and butter over the next several years. Other films
of hers include The Divine Lady (1929), Chasing Rainbows (1930),
The Girl Said No (1930), Caught Short (1930), Min and Bill
(1930, for which she won a Best Actress Oscar), Reducing (1931),
Emma (1932, for which she was nominated for a Best Actress
Oscar), Tugboat Annie (1933), and Dinner at Eight (1933).
In 1934 she died from cancer. |
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