All Movies List
Black Spurs

as Sadie

1965
Zero Hour!

as Ellen Stryker

1957
Dakota Incident

as Amy Clarke

1956
This Is My Love

as Vida Dove

1954
Second Chance

as Clare Shepperd, alias Clare Sinclair

1953
Saturday Island

as Lieutenant Elizabeth Smythe

1952
Blackbeard, the Pirate

as Edwina Mansfield

1952
No Way Out

as Edie Johnson - Mrs. John Biddle

1950
Two Flags West

as Elena Kenniston

1950
Slattery's Hurricane

as Mrs. Aggie Hobson

1949
A Letter to Three Wives

as Lora Mae Hollingsway

1949
Unfaithfully Yours

as Daphne de Carter

1948
Forever Amber

as Amber St. Clair

1947
My Darling Clementine

as Chihuahua

1946
Fallen Angel

as Stella

1945
Hangover Square

as Netta Longdon

1945
It Happened Tomorrow

as Sylvia Smith-Stevens

1944
Buffalo Bill

as Dawn Starlight

1944
City Without Men

as Nancy Johnson

1943
Blood and Sand

as Carmen Espinosa

1941
Rise and Shine

as Louise Murray

1941
The Mark of Zorro

as Lolita Quintero

1940
Brigham Young

as Zina Webb - The Outsider

1940
Chad Hanna

as Caroline Tridd Hanna

1940
Day-time Wife

as Jane Norton

1939
Linda Darnell Linda Darnell

Birthday

1923-10-16

Place of Birth

Dallas, Texas, USA

Biography

Linda Darnell  (October 16, 1923 – April 10, 1965) was an American film actress. Darnell was a model as a child, and progressed to theater and film acting as an adolescent. At the encouragement of her mother, she made her first film in 1939, and appeared in supporting roles in big budget films for 20th Century Fox throughout the 1940s. She rose to fame with co-starring roles opposite Tyrone Power in adventure films and established a main character career after her role in Forever Amber (1947). Furthermore, she won critical acclaim for her work in Unfaithfully Yours (1948) and A Letter to Three Wives (1949). Notorious for her unstable personal life, Darnell was incapable of dealing with Hollywood, and landed in a downward spiral of alcoholism, unsuccessful marriages and highly publicized or scandalous affairs. She failed to receive recognition from the industry and its critics, and disappeared from the screen in the 1950s. Darnell died from burns sustained in a house fire. Description above from the Wikipedia article Linda Darnell, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia
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