The Spunky Kid SisterGiven the many more famous child actors and actresses from the classic era, Virginia Weidler is a name you may not know unless you watch a lot of B movies on TCM. While playing overly inquisitive and sometimes too well informed siblings or daughters of John Barrymore, Warren William, Norma Shearer, Mickey Rooney, Charles Boyer, Katharine Hepburn, Frank Morgan, Ann Rutherford, Henry O’Neill, and Richard Carlson (among others), she often energized her roles with rambunctious tomboy behavior or a sharp-tongued knowing sarcasm.
In one of her first credited roles as 'Little Sister' in director George Stevens’ Laddie (1935), Weidler is said to have stolen the picture from its leads (John Beal in the title role, and Gloria Stuart) by RKO Studios historian Richard B. Jewell, who called her "a disarming elf capable of evoking pathos or humour with equal dexterity." Born March 21, 1926 (or 1927, depending on the source), Weidler first worked for RKO and then Paramount Studios before she was signed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1938. Perhaps the most notable film she appeared in for Paramount was Peter Ibbetson (1935) in which she and Dickie Moore played the fated lovers (Ann Harding and Gary Cooper) as children. But Weidler’s career didn’t really catch wind until she was at MGM, which continued to loan her out to RKO (a handful of times), and even once to Warner Bros. (for the Bette Davis nanny vehicle All This, and Heaven Too (1940); Weidler played one of Boyer’s and Barbara O'Neil’s daughters). In director Garson Kanin’s comedy drama The Great Man Votes (1939), Weidler plays Barrymore’s smart beyond her years daughter (Peter Holden plays his son), whom he’s taught to suffer no fools, which gets the former Harvard professor now drunken widower in trouble with the local political party demagogue (hilariously played by Donald MacBride). However, his children and their teacher (Katharine Alexander) help him to find himself again, and he sobers up in time to learn that he wields newfound power per his vote in the upcoming election. Weidler then played the prankster daughter of William’s reformed jewel thief in The Lone Wolf Spy Hunt (1939), the newly orphaned daughter of a high-wire circus artist for Lee Tracy’s Fixer Dugan (1939), the next door neighbor kid that wants to be like Tim Holt’s Rookie Cop (1939), featuring Ace the Wonder Dog (German Shepherd), Shearer’s namesake daughter in the all female cast of the original The Women (1939), and Morgan’s brother’s wannabe niece in the B comedy Henry Goes Arizona (1939), among three other films in that very busy year.
7 Responses The Spunky Kid Sister
Though I've not seen it Mike, I believe that you're referring to Bad Little Angel (1939):http://www.tcmdb.com/title/title.jsp?stid=2425 Also, I should have mentioned that TCM will be airing several of Miss Weidler's films over the coming months including: The Lone Wolf Spy Hunt (1939), The Philadelphia Story (1940), Out West With the Hardys (1938), Gold Rush Maisie (1940), The Women (1939), and All This, And Heaven Too (1940). What a delight to stumble across this appreciation of one of the least sentimental child actresses of the studio era. Even in underwritten roles, Virginia Weidler managed to incorporate some nuance into her character's usually realistic behavior. I'm particularly fond of the moment in The Philadelphia Story when she sings "Lydia the Tattooed Lady" for one and all. Thanks for writing this! I love Virginia Weidler! She definatly was one of the best child stars. Most of them were hired because they were cute and could dance and sing slightly (such as Shirley Temple, don't get me wrong I love Shirley but she wasn't exactly the best actress). Virginia was cute and could hold her own in scences with very high profile stars like Katherine Hepburn and Joan Crawford. I was watching her in The Women the other day when she is talking to Joan Crawford when Joan is in the tub. I was amazed by how great she was and her comedic timing and everything. She really was a great actress and its a shame that she faded away, but I have a feeling that she didn't mind too much. For some reason I recall reading where she might not have enjoyed acting that much. Oh and I agree with you Mike, Bad Little Angel was a really cute movie! I really thought Virginia Weilder should have got an oscar nomination for her perfomance in The Women. Remember the scene when she doesn't want her mother see her cry and she goes in another room and makes a heartbreaking plea/ prayer for the reconciliation of her parents. Great actress. I loved Virginia Weidler- she was wonderful. One of her last film appearances was in one of my favorite musicals, BEST FOOT FORWARD with Lucille Ball and June Allyson in 1943. And of course her two greatest films were THE WOMEN and THE PHILADELPHIA STORY. And she appeared with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney in BABES ON BROADWAY, which was recently released on DVD. She was fantastic. I just viewed Bad Little Angel today and loved Virginia’s role – I dare say, no one would have the nerve in Hollywood today to depict a youngster with such faith – she was actually a joy to watch in any movie she was in – I was sad to hear that she died such an early death – our loss. Leave a Reply |
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I watch a lot of B movies on TCM and anywhere else I can get them, so I know where you're coming from. Not sure the movie I remember Virginia best from is listed here, but in involves her as a orphan whose adopted parents, mostly elderly, keep dying on her. Finally she believes God tells her to go to "Egypt", where she eventually settles down with a family of her own. That was my favorite Weidler film.