Here is a very rare very early autographed oversize 11" by 14" photo of actress Blanche Yurka (1887-1974), from 1941. This imposing-looking stage star of early 20th century Broadway was born Blanche Jurka to Bohemian immigrants in 1887, on either June 18 or June 19 (sources differ but most favor the latter date) in St. Paul, Minnesota. Some references claim that she was brought to the United States as an infant and then raised in St. Paul. Her Czech parents saw a blossoming singing talent in their daughter and used their modest income to help pay for opera lessons. When the family moved to New York, Blanche earned a scholarship at age 15 and studied voice and ballet. She made her debut as a flower girl in the Metropolitan Opera school-sponsored production of "Parsifal", and then at the Met itself in a Czech-language version of "The Bohemian Girl". Within a few years, however, she experienced a different calling and found a stronger passion for legitimate acting. Initially a protégé of playwright, producer, and director David Belasco, she took her first Broadway bow in a minor role in the 1907 play "Mrs. Warren's Profession", and, under the careful guidance of its star-turned-friend and mentor Jane Cowl, moved to increasingly larger roles. Following appearances throughout the next decade in such Broadway productions as "An Old New Yorker" (1911), "The House of Bondage" (1914), "Our American Cousin" (the play Lincoln was watching in 1865 when he was assassinated at the Ford's Theater) (1915), and "Enter Madame" (1920), she enjoyed her first resounding success portraying Queen Gertrude opposite John Barrymore's Hamlet in 1922. During this time she married younger actor Ian Keith (her junior by 12 years), but the intimidation of her star stature and celebrity eventually broke up the marriage in 1926 after only four years. She never remarried. Blanche continued in her classic vein and earned high marks for her late 20s productions of Ibsen's "The Wild Duck" and "Hedda Gabler", both of which she also directed. In 1932 alone, she added to her Shakespearean repertoire with "Troilus and Cressida", directed the Broadway show "Carry Nation", and appeared in the title role of Sophocles' "Electra". She then wrote and appeared in the Broadway play "Spring in Autumn" (1933) and went on to play the Nurse to Katharine Cornell's Juliet. As an established theatre tragedienne, Blanche gave lectures on the theatre and enjoyed many national tours with plays. Her reputation preceding her, she finally turned to films at age 47 and what an entrance she made! In a stunning feature film debut, she played the vengeful revolutionary Madame DeFarge in the now-classic A Tale of Two Cities (1935), starring Ronald Colman. However, she was unable to capitalize on this and did not return to films for another five years. The foreboding, strong-willed parts that eventually did come to her, however, would not live up to her early promise. Despite a flashy Ma Barker-styled title role in the "B"-level cult film Queen of the Mob (1940), she remained trapped in secondary, often inferior fare. If she wasn't caught up in dreadful Maria Ouspenskaya gypsy attire, such as in Cry of the Werewolf (1944), she was served with small undignified parts that wasted her talents (City for Conquest (1940), Escape (1940)). Sometimes she was not even billed (Keeper of the Flame (1942), Hitler's Madman (1943)). Her sharp, austere looks did invite a minor gallery of domineering and/or villainous ladies to play, as testified by her scheming aunt in Lady for a Night (1942), and her shady maid paired up with Bela Lugosi's butler in the horror comedy One Body Too Many (1944). Deglamorized for many of her roles, Blanche abandoned Hollywood in the post-war years and refocused on her first love, the theater, where she enhanced such plays as "The Carefree Tree" (1951), "Diary of a Scoundrel" (1956), "Prometheus Bound" (1957), "Jane Eyre" (1958) and "Dinner at Eight" (1966). In 1969, she scored a personal triumph as the title role in the London production of "The Madwoman of Chaillot". The New York critics, however, were less ecstatic in their reviews of the 1970 off-Broadway version. Dismayed, she retired from acting not long after. Drama students took to heart Blanche's inspiring, highly instructional book on acting technique entitled "Dear Audience" in 1959. She also penned her autobiography "Bohemian Girl" in 1970. Suffering from failing health in years to come, she was diagnosed with arteriosclerosis and retired to her Manhattan apartment, appearing only occasionally at women's clubs and colleges in a programmed reading format. She died June 6, 1974. Paper loss upper left and lower left corners, creasing left side, right side, corner and edge wear. Very rare.
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Filmography:
Walter Matthau and Frank McGee in The DuPont Show of the Week (1961)
The DuPont Show of the Week
6.1
TV Series
The Landlady
1962
1 episode
Witchcraft (1961)
Witchcraft
6.3
TV Movie
Madame Tirelou
1961
Great Ghost Tales (1961)
Great Ghost Tales
7.9
TV Series
1961
1 episode
Susan Hayward and Jeff Chandler in Thunder in the Sun (1959)
Thunder in the Sun
5.5
Louise Dauphin
1959
Gertrude Berg in The Goldbergs (1949)
The Goldbergs
7.4
TV Series
Blanche Marlowe
1956
1 episode
Dan Duryea in Climax! (1954)
Climax!
6.5
TV Series
Margaret
1956
1 episode
Ponds Theater (1953)
Ponds Theater
7.6
TV Series
1954
1 episode
Kraft Theatre (1947)
Kraft Theatre
7.9
TV Series
Queen of Hearts
1950–1954
6 episodes
Zachary Scott in Medallion Theatre (1953)
Medallion Theatre
6.8
TV Series
1953
1 episode
The Philip Morris Playhouse (1953)
The Philip Morris Playhouse
7.0
TV Series
1953
1 episode
Dan Dailey and Constance Smith in Taxi (1953)
Taxi
6.5
Mrs. Nielson
1953
The Web (1950)
The Web
7.3
TV Series
1952
1 episode
Lux Video Theatre (1950)
Lux Video Theatre
7.3
TV Series
Mother-in-Law
1952
1 episode
Maureen O'Hara and Cornel Wilde in At Sword's Point (1952)
At Sword's Point
6.0
Madame Michom
1952
Crime Photographer (1951)
Crime Photographer
4.9
TV Series
1951
1 episode
Pulitzer Prize Playhouse (1950)
Pulitzer Prize Playhouse
7.3
TV Series
1950
1 episode
Masterpiece Playhouse
TV Series
1950
1 episode
Judith Anderson, Barbara Stanwyck, Wendell Corey, Thomas Gomez, Walter Huston, and Gilbert Roland in The Furies (1950)
The Furies
7.2
Herrera Mother
1950
The Chevrolet Tele-Theatre (1948)
The Chevrolet Tele-Theatre
7.8
TV Series
1949
1 episode
John Carroll, Robert Paige, and Vera Ralston in The Flame (1947)
The Flame
6.4
Aunt Margaret
1947
13 Rue Madeleine (1947)
13 Rue Madeleine
6.9
Madame Thillot (uncredited)
1947
Betty Field and Zachary Scott in The Southerner (1945)
The Southerner
7.1
Mama
1945
Jack Haley and Jean Parker in One Body Too Many (1944)
One Body Too Many
5.4
Matthews
1944
Nina Foch, Stephen Crane, Osa Massen, and Blanche Yurka in Cry of the Werewolf (1944)
Cry of the Werewolf
5.3
Bianca
1944
Lynn Bari, Francis Lederer, and Alla Nazimova in The Bridge of San Luis Rey (1944)
The Bridge of San Luis Rey
5.5
The Abbess
1944
Jennifer Jones in The Song of Bernadette (1943)
The Song of Bernadette
7.6
Aunt Bernarde Casterot
1943
Hitler's Madman (1943)
Hitler's Madman
6.5
Frau Anna Hanka (uncredited)
1943
Annabella and John Sutton in Tonight We Raid Calais (1943)
Tonight We Raid Calais
6.3
Widow Grelieu
1943
Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy in Keeper of the Flame (1942)
Keeper of the Flame
6.7
Mrs. Anna Taylor (uncredited)
1942
A Night to Remember (1942)
A Night to Remember
6.6
Mrs. Salter (uncredited)
1942
Lee Bowman, Mona Maris, and Jean Rogers in Pacific Rendezvous (1942)
Pacific Rendezvous
5.8
Mrs. Savarina
1942
John Wayne, Joan Blondell, and Ray Middleton in Lady for a Night (1942)
Lady for a Night
6.0
Julia Alderson
1942
Ralph Bellamy and Margaret Lindsay in Ellery Queen and the Murder Ring (1941)
Ellery Queen and the Murder Ring
5.9
Mrs. Augusta Stack
1941
Robert Taylor and Norma Shearer in Escape (1940)
Escape
7.0
Nurse
1940
James Cagney and Ann Sheridan in City for Conquest (1940)
City for Conquest
7.2
Mrs. Nash
1940
Ralph Bellamy in Queen of the Mob (1940)
Queen of the Mob
6.4
Ma Webster
1940
Elizabeth Allan, Ronald Colman, and Donald Woods in A Tale of Two Cities (1935)
A Tale of Two Cities
7.8
Madame Therese De Farge
1935
Montagu Love and Enid Markey in She's Everywhere (1919)
She's Everywhere
Short
1919
National Red Cross Pageant (1917)
National Red Cross Pageant
7.1
Truth - Final episode
1917