Marian Marsh


Violet Ethelred Krauth, better known by the stage name Marian Marsh, was a Trinidad-born American film actress and later an environmentalist.

Early life

Violet Ethelred Krauth was born on October 17, 1913 in Trinidad, British West Indies, the youngest of four children of a German chocolate manufacturer and, as noted by encyclopaedist Leslie Halliwell in his book The Filmgoer's Companion, his French-English wife.
Due to World War I, Marsh's father moved his family to Boston, Massachusetts. By the time she was 10, the family had relocated to Hollywood, California. Her older sister, an actress who went by the name of Jean Fenwick, landed a job as a contract player with FBO Studios. Another sister, Harriet, was a chorus girl who danced in Earl Carroll's Vanities. She changed her name to Jeanne Morgan.
Marsh attended Le Conte Junior High School and Hollywood High School. In 1928 she was approached by silent screen actress Nance O'Neil who offered her speech and movement lessons, and with her sister Jean's help, she soon entered the movies. She secured a contract with Pathé where she was featured in many short subjects under the name Marilyn Morgan.
She was seen in small roles in Howard Hughes's classic Hell's Angels and Eddie Cantor's lavish Technicolor musical Whoopee!. The part in Whoopee! resulted from Marsh's visit to a film studio with her sister. Not long afterwards, she was signed by Warner Bros. and her name was changed to Marian Marsh.
In 1930, at age 17, Marsh had the female lead in Young Sinners, a play at the Belasco Theater. A contemporary news article reported that she "has scored a distinct hit" in her first stage production.

Hollywood success

In 1931, after appearing in a number of short films, Marsh landed one of her most important roles in Svengali opposite John Barrymore. Marsh was chosen by Barrymore for the role of Trilby. Barrymore, who had selected her partly because she resembled his wife, coached her performance throughout the picture's filming. Svengali was based on the 1894 novel Trilby written by George du Maurier. A popular play, likewise titled Trilby, followed in 1895.
In the film version, Marsh plays the artist's model Trilby, who is transformed into a great opera star by the sinister hypnotist, Svengali. The word "Svengali'" has entered the English language, defining a person who, with sometimes evil intent, tries to persuade another to do what he desires.
Marsh was awarded the title of WAMPAS Baby Stars in August 1931 even before her second movie with Warner Brothers was released. With her ability to project warmth, sincerity and inner strength on the screen along with critical praise and the audience's approval of Svengali, she continued to star in a string of successful films for Warner Bros. including Five Star Final with Edward G. Robinson, The Mad Genius with Barrymore, The Road to Singapore with William Powell, Under 18 with Warren William, Alias the Doctor with Richard Barthelmess, and Beauty and the Boss with Warren William.
In 1932, in the midst of a grueling work schedule, Marsh left Warner Bros. and moved to RKO where she made Strange Justice with Norman Foster and The Sport Parade with Joel McCrea. After which she took several film offers in Europe which lasted until 1934. She enjoyed working in England and Germany, as well as vacationing in Paris. While in England, she appeared in a musical comedy film Over the Garden Wall. Back in the United States, she appeared as the heroine, Elnora, in a popular adaptation of the perennial favorite A Girl of the Limberlost.
In 1935, Marsh signed a two-year pact with Columbia Pictures. During this time, she starred in such films as The Black Room regarded as one of Boris Karloff's best horror films of the decade, Josef von Sternberg's classic Crime and Punishment with Peter Lorre where she played the sympathetic prostitute Sonya, Lady of Secrets with Ruth Chatterton, Counterfeit with Chester Morris, The Man Who Lived Twice with Ralph Bellamy, and Come Closer, Folks with James Dunn.
When her contract expired in 1937, Marsh once again freelanced, appearing steadily in movies for RKO Radio Pictures where she made Saturday's Heroes with Van Heflin, and for Paramount Pictures where she played a young woman caught up in a mystery in The Great Gambini. She appeared with comic Joe E. Brown in When's Your Birthday?, and Richard Arlen in Missing Daughters. In the 1940s, Marsh played the secretary of Wallace Ford in Murder by Invitation, the self-willed wife in Gentleman from Dixie and, in her last screen appearance, Marsh portrayed the daughter of an inventor in the comedy/mystery House of Errors which starred Harry Langdon.
In the late 1950s, she appeared with John Forsythe in an episode of his TV series Bachelor Father and in an episode of the TV series Schlitz Playhouse of Stars before retiring in 1959.

Personal life

Marsh married a stockbroker named Albert Scott on March 29, 1938 and had two children with him, Catherine Mary Scott and Albert Parker Scott Jr.. They divorced in 1959. In 1960, Marsh married Cliff Henderson, an aviation pioneer and entrepreneur whom she had met in the early 1930s. They moved to Palm Desert, California, a town Henderson founded in the 1940s.
In the 1960s Marsh founded Desert Beautiful, a non-profit, all-volunteer conservation organization to promote environmental and beautification programs.
Cliff Henderson died in 1984 and Marsh remained in Palm Desert until her death.

Death

On November 9, 2006, Marsh died of respiratory arrest while sleeping at her home in Palm Desert. She was 93. She is buried at Desert Memorial Park in Cathedral City, California.

Legacy

October 17, 2015, was designated as Marian Marsh-Henderson Day by the city of Palm Desert, California.

Complete filmography