Norma profile picture

Norma

I'm in an orgy, wallowing...

About Me

My name is Norma Shearer. I was born in Montréal, Canada, with the name Edith Norma Shearer, on the 10th of August, 1902. I started acting in New York in the early 1910s and began to get better and better roles. Eventually, I moved with my mother and sister Athole out to Los Angeles. Irving Thalberg spotted me and gave me a very good contract. After we married, he took an even more personal interest in my career. I made my first sound film, The Trial of Mary Dugan, and then won an Academy Award for The Divorcée in 1929. I made scores of films in the early 1930s, my favorites being Private Lives, Smilin' Through, Strange Interlude, Riptide, and A Free Soul. In all I was nominated for six Best Actress Academy Awards (two were in one year!!!).Following the insitution of the production code, my roles began to change. My first post-code movie was The Barretts of Wimpole Street. Then I made Romeo and Juliet, just before the death of my husband Irving. It was after his death that I made my favorite of my pictures, Marie Antoinette. It was my last Oscar nomination. In 1939, I made The Women and Idiot's Delight, and in 1940 I made a picture entitled Escape with Alla Nazimova and Robert Taylor. Two more pictures followed, Her Cardboard Lover and We Were Dancing, but their mediocrity and poor reviews convinced me to retire and let my legend live on without me tarnishing it.I left film and remarried, to a ski instructor named Martin Arrougé. And I lived happily ever after...until

My Interests

I love acting, shopping, and many athletic activities like skiing, swimming, and playing tennis.

Music:

I play the piano rather well, and I love dancing to hot jazz tunes, like Stairway to Paradise and Charleston...

Movies:

HE Who Gets Slapped, The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg, The Trial of Mary Dugan, The Hollywood Revue of 1929, The Last of Mrs. Cheyney, Their Own Desire (Oscar nomination), The Divorcée (Oscar win), Let Us Be Gay, A Free Soul (Oscar nomination), Strangers May Kiss, Private Lives, Smilin' Through, Strange Interlude, Riptide, The Barretts of Wimpole Street (Oscar nomination), Romeo and Juliet (Oscar nomination), Marie Antoinette (Oscar nomination), Idiot's Delight, The Women, Escape, We Were Dancing, and Her Cardboard Lover...

Television:

Kill your television.

Heroes:

Irving, Irving, and Irving Thalberg, Frances Marion, George Cukor, Adrian, Cedric Gibbons, Claudine West, Ray June, Clarence Brown, William Daniels, Samuel Marx, and Sidney Franklin.