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A photo of Louise Beavers

Louise Beavers 1902 - 1962

Louise Beavers of Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California United States was born on March 8, 1902 in Cincinnati, Hamilton County, OH. She was married to Leroy Moore, and they were together until Louise's death on October 26, 1962. Louise Beavers was buried on October 30, 1962 at Evergreen Cemetery 204 N Evergreen Ave, in Los Angeles.
Louise Beavers
Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California United States
March 8, 1902
Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, United States
October 26, 1962
Hollywood in Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California, United States
Female
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Louise Beavers' History: 1902 - 1962

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  • Introduction

    Film and television actress Louise Beavers was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, where she was part of an act called “Lady Minstrels” before moving to Los Angeles to begin her film career in the silent films, “Gold Diggers” (1923) and “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” (1927). Beavers appeared in more than 100 films between 1929 and 1960, playing the role most available to the few African American actresses able to work steadily in Hollywood: maid to the white female star. However, in the 1934 adaptation of “Imitation of Life” in 1934, Beavers and Claudette Colbert both played characters dealing with “the demands of single parenthood and careers.” Like her cousin, Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Company co-founder, George Beavers, Jr., Louise Beavers was a prominent and active member of the African American community in Los Angeles. She was involved in community functions, from the People’s Independent Church, where she helped develop the theater program of the Young People’s Lyceum, to the 1939 public ceremonies celebrating the development of the all-black resort, Val Verde County Park. In the 1940s, as a resident of the affluent enclave in the West Adams district of Los Angeles known as “Sugar Hill,” Louise Beavers also played a role in history. Beavers’s neighbors included actors Hattie McDaniel, Ethel Waters, Joel Fluellen and Frances Williams; businessmen Norman O. Houston and Horace Clark; musicians Ben Carter, Pearl Bailey and Juan Tizon. When an association of white homeowners brought suit against black property owners in the area, claiming they were in violation of the city’s racially restrictive covenant system, and demanding that the city enforce the covenants, attorney Loren Miller led the class action suit against the whites. The California Superior Court issued a judgment on December 6, 1945 stating that the black plaintiffs were accorded full rights guaranteed under the 14th amendment of the U.S. Constitution. This helped pave the way for Shelley v. Kramer, the 1948 Supreme Court decision that legally blocked enforcement of racial housing covenants. Louise Beavers’s career culminated in the television roles “Beulah” (1952 –1953) and as the housekeeper on “The Danny Thomas Show” (1953-1954). In 1976, she was inducted posthumously into the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame.
  • 03/8
    1902

    Birthday

    March 8, 1902
    Birthdate
    Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio United States
    Birthplace
  • Professional Career

    Louise Beavers Born March 8, 1902 in Cincinnati, Ohio, USA Died October 26, 1962 in Hollywood, California, USA (heart attack) Height 5' 4" (1.63 m) 1930s and 1940s film actress Louise Beavers was merely one of a dominant gallery of plus-sized and plus-talented African-American character actresses forced to endure blatant, discouraging, and demeaning stereotypes during Depression-era and WWII Hollywood. It wasn't until Louise's triumphant role in Fannie Hurst's classic soaper Imitation of Life (1934) that a film of major significance offered a black role of meaning, substance, and humanity. Louise's servile role as housekeeper Delilah, who works for single white mother Claudette Colbert, was a poignant and touching, three-dimensional character that had its own dramatic story. Brilliantly handling the heartbreaking plot of an appeasing single parent whose light-skinned daughter (played by Fredi Washington) went to cruel and desperate lengths to pass for white. While Louise certainly championed the role and managed to steal the lion's share of reviews right from under the film's superstar, the movie triggered major controversy and just as many complaints as compliments from black and white viewers. This certainly did not help what could have been a major, positive shift in black filmmaking. Instead, for the next two or more decades Louise was again forced back to secondary status. Ms. Beavers was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, on March 8, 1902, and moved with her family to the Los Angeles area at age 11. A student at Pasadena High School and a choir member at her local church, her mother, a voice teacher, trained Louise for the concert stage but instead, the young girl joined an all-female minstrel company called "Lady Minstrels" and even hooked up for a time on the vaudeville circuit. A nursing career once entertained was quickly aborted in favor of acting. Her first break of sorts was earning a living as a personal maid and assistant to Paramount star Leatrice Joy (and later actress Lilyan Tashman). By 1924 she was performing as an extra or walk-on in between her chores. A talent agent spotted her and gave her a more noticeable role in Uncle Tom's Cabin (1927). She went on to gain even more visibility but was invariably stuck in the background cooking or cleaning after the leads. Despite this, her beaming smile and good nature paid off. Following scene-grabbing maid roles to such stars as Mary Pickford in Coquette (1929) Linda Watkins in Good Sport (1931), Mae West in She Done Him Wrong (1933), Constance Bennett in What Price Hollywood? (1932) and Jean Harlow in Bombshell (1933), Louise received the role of her career. Her poignant storyline and final death scene deserved an Oscar nomination and many insiders took her snub as deliberate and prejudicial. Five years later her close friend Hattie McDaniel would become the first black actor to not only earn an Oscar nomination but capture the coveted trophy as well for her subordinate role in Gone with the Wind (1939). Despite their individual triumphs, both ladies continued in stereotyped roles. Occasionally Louise was rewarded with such Hollywood "A" treats as Made for Each Other (1939) with Carole Lombard, Holiday Inn (1942) starring Bing Crosby, and especially Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House (1948) with Cary Grant and Myrna Loy. In The Jackie Robinson Story (1950), she offered lovely moments as the baseball star's mother. Although the film offers dried up in the 1950s, Louise managed to transfer her talents to the new TV medium and was one of a number of character actresses hired to play the wise-cracking, problem-solving maid Beulah (1950) during its run. "Beulah" was one of the first sitcoms to star a black actor. She also had a recurring role in Disney's "The Swamp Fox". In 1957, she made her professional stage debut in San Francisco with the short-lived play "Praise House" as a caregiver who extols the Bible through song. Her last few films, which included The Goddess (1958), All the Fine Young Cannibals (1960), and the Bob Hope comedy The Facts of Life (1960) were typical stereotypes and unmemorable. A long-time bachelor lady who finally married in the 1950s, the short, heavyset actress was plagued by health issues in later years, her obesity and diabetes in particular. She lost her fight on October 26, 1962, at age 60 following a heart attack. Spouse (1) Leroy Moore (1952 - 26 October 1962) (her death)
  • Personal Life & Family

    Beavers was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, to school teacher Ernestine Monroe Beavers and William M. Beavers, who was originally from Georgia. Due to her mother's illness, Louise and her parents moved to Pasadena, California. In Pasadena, she attended school and engaged in several after-school activities, such as basketball and church choir. Her mother also worked as a voice teacher and taught Louise how to sing for concerts.[4] In June 1920, she graduated from Pasadena High School. She worked as a dressing room attendant for a photographer and served as a personal maid to film star Leatrice Joy. There is uncertainty as to how Beavers began her acting career. She was in a group called the Lady Minstrels who were a group of young women who staged amateur productions and appeared on stage at the Loews State Theatre. Her acting career began either with her performance in the Lady Minstrels or in a contest at the Philharmonic Auditorium, which occurred later. Charles Butler from the Central Casting Bureau, who was known for being an agent for African-American actors, saw the performance and recommended that Louise try out for a role for a movie. At first, she was hesitant to try out for movies because of how African Americans were portrayed in movies and how Hollywood encouraged these roles. She once said, "In all the pictures I had seen… they never used colored people for anything except savages." Despite this, she tried out for a role in the film Uncle Tom's Cabin in 1927 and landed the part. Louise Beavers started her career in the 1920s. At the time, black people in films were limited to acting in only very few roles, usually as slaves or domestic help. She played the "mammy" in many of the movies in which she acted. She started to gain more attention in the acting world after she played the role of Julia in Coquette, which starred Mary Pickford. In this film, she played the black maid and mother figure to a young white woman. She once received a review that stated, "Personally, Miss Beavers is just splendid, just as fine as she appears on screen, but she also has a charm all her own, which needs no screen role for recognition. She has a very pleasing personality, one that draws people to her instantly and makes them feel that they are meeting a friend instead of a Hollywood Star." Beavers had an attractive personality and often played roles in which she helps a white protagonist mature in the course of the movie. In 1934, Beavers played Delilah in Imitation of Life in a dramatic role. Her character again plays a black housekeeper, but instead of the usual stereotypical comedic or purely functional role, Delilah's storyline is a secondary parallel plot. The public reacted positively to Beavers's performance. It was not only a breakthrough for Beavers but was also "the first time in American cinema history that a black woman's problems were given major emotional weight in a major Hollywood motion picture". Some in the media recognized the unfairness of Hollywood's double standard regarding race. For example, California Graphic Magazine wrote, "the Academy could not recognize Miss Beavers. She is black!" In the 1942 movie Holiday Inn, in a celebration of Lincoln's Birthday, there was a big minstrel show number, "Abraham," which featured musical performances by Beavers as Mamie and Bing Crosby as Jim Hardy (who performs in traditional blackface makeup). This number, as well as the scene itself, are sometimes cut from the film's showings on television, presumably because of the controversial nature of blackface. Beavers, who was raised in the North and in California, had to learn to speak the Southern Negro dialect. As Beavers's career grew, some criticized her for the roles she accepted, alleging that such roles institutionalized the view that blacks were subservient to whites. Beavers dismissed the criticism. She acknowledged the limited opportunities available but said: "I am only playing the parts. I don't live them." As she became more famous, Beavers began to speak against Hollywood's portrayal and treatment of black Americans, both during production and after promoting the films. Beavers became active in public life, seeking to help support African Americans. She endorsed Robert S. Abbott, the editor of the Chicago Defender, who fought for black Americans' civil rights. She supported Richard Nixon, who she believed would help black Americans in the United States in the civil rights battle.[3] Beavers was one of three actresses (including Hattie McDaniel and Ethel Waters) to portray housekeeper Beulah on the Beulah television show. That show was the first television sitcom to star a black person. She also played a maid, Louise, for the first two seasons of The Danny Thomas Show (1953–1955). Marriage Beavers married Robert Clark in 1936. He later became her manager. She not only worked in movies but also on "twenty-week tours of theaters that she conducted annually". Beavers and Clark later divorced and remarried. Much later, in 1952, Beavers married Leroy Moore, who was either an interior designer or a chef (varying sources); they remained married until her death in 1962. She had no children.
  • 10/26
    1962

    Death

    October 26, 1962
    Death date
    Heart attack.
    Cause of death
    Hollywood in Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California United States
    Death location
  • 10/30
    1962

    Gravesite & Burial

    October 30, 1962
    Funeral date
    Evergreen Cemetery 204 N Evergreen Ave, in Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California 90033, United States
    Burial location
  • Obituary

    FIND A GRAVE MEMORIAL. Louise Beavers died in 1962 in Hollywood at 60 years of age. She was born in 1902 in Cincinnati, Ohio. BIRTH 8 Mar 1900 Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, USA DEATH 26 Oct 1962 (aged 62) Hollywood, Los Angeles County, California, USA BURIAL Evergreen Cemetery Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California, USA Show Map PLOT Section A, Lot 2424. (She is interred with her mother, E. Monroe Beavers) MEMORIAL ID 5559 · View Source Actress. A character player in Hollywood films, she is best remembered for her performance in "Imitation of Life" (1934), as a pancake maker whose light-skinned daughter abandons her to pass for white in society. Her 160 other screen appearances include "What Price Hollywood?" (1932), "She Done Him Wrong" (1933), "Made for Each Other" (1939), "Reap the Wild Wind" (1942), "Holiday Inn" (1942), "The Jackie Robinson Story" (1950), "Tammy and the Bachelor" (1957), and "All the Fine Young Cannibals" (1960). Beavers was born in Cincinnati and moved with her mother to Los Angeles as a child. After graduating from Pasadena High School she was employed as a maid by actress Leatrice Joy, who helped her break into the movies. She sang with a ladies' minstrel show in the mid-1920s and began her film career in earnest with the silent "Uncle Tom's Cabin" (1927). From 1952 to 1953 she starred in the TV series "The Beulah Show", taking over the title role following the death of original star Hattie McDaniel. Unlike McDaniel, Beavers was not naturally hefty and had to overeat to stay in "type" for the good-natured servant roles she was invariably given. This created health problems in her later years and she died of a heart attack at 60. She was inducted into the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame in 1976. Bio by: Bobb Edwards Family Members Parents Photo William Beavers 1876–1963 Photo Ernestine Monroe Beavers 1878–1938
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12 Memories, Stories & Photos about Louise

Louise Beavers
Louise Beavers
Louise Beavers and Mary Pickford.
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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Louise Beavers
Louise Beavers
Louise Beavers as a cook.
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Louise Beavers and Myrna Loy.
Louise Beavers and Myrna Loy.
From a film.
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Louise Beavers
Louise Beavers
Television and Movie Star.
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On the first day of Black History Month it's appropriate to celebrate this actress and activist from the first half of the 20th century.

Anyone who is a fan of black and white movies or early television will recognize Louise Beavers (1902-1962) - if not her name then likely her face. She was an incredible human being.

Discover some of what she did with her life and contribute to her biography
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02/01/2022
Yes; we recently re-watched Holiday Inn and I remembered that she was also in Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House. It's a shame she was typecast and that she died so young. She was a great actress.
Louise Beavers and Claudette Colbert.
Louise Beavers and Claudette Colbert.
In a movie together.
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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Louise Beavers and Fredi Washington.
Louise Beavers and Fredi Washington.
In a movie together.
Date & Place: Not specified or unknown.
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Louise Beavers' Family Tree & Friends

Louise Beavers' Family Tree

Parent
Parent
Partner
Child
Sibling
Marriage

Leroy Moore

&

Louise Beavers

Louise's Death
Cause of Separation
October 26, 1962
Louise's death date
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Friendships

Louise's Friends

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2 Followers & Sources
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Other Biographies

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