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She received a second Oscar nomination for her role in Love Affair (1939). [8] Ouspenskaya in 1941's The Wolf Man. She portrayed Maleva, an old Romani fortuneteller in the horror films The Wolf Man (1941) and Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man (1943), both with Lon Chaney Jr. and Bela Lugosi.
Academy Awards, USA. 1940 Nominee Oscar. Best Actress in a Supporting Role. Love Affair. 1937 Nominee Oscar. Best Actress in a Supporting Role. Dodsworth.
Maria Ouspenskaya. Actress: The Wolf Man. The daughter of a lawyer, Ouspenskaya studied singing at the Warsaw Conservatory and acting at Adasheff's School of the Drama in Moscow. She received her practical training as an actress touring in the Russian provinces. She later joined the Moscow Art Theatre.
- January 1, 1
- Tula, Russian Empire [now Russia]
- January 1, 1
- Los Angeles, California, USA
Legendary Russian stage and screen actress who was nominated for Academy Awards for Dodsworth (1936) and Love Affair (1939). Name variations: Marie Ouspenskaya. Born in Tula, Russia, on July 29, 1876; died in a fire that also destroyed her home in Hollywood, California, on December 3, 1949.
- Outstanding Production
- Directing
- Actor
- Actress
- Actor in A Supporting Role
- Actress in A Supporting Role
- Writing
- Music
- Film Editing
- Cinematography
Dark Victory – Warner Bros.-First National Gone with the Wind – Selznick International Pictures Goodbye, Mr. Chips – Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Love Affair – RKO Radio Mr. Smith Goes to Washington – Columbia Ninotchka – Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Of Mice and Men – Hal Roach (production company) Stagecoach – Walter Wanger (production company) The Wizard of Oz – M...
Gone with the Wind – Victor Fleming Goodbye, Mr. Chips – Sam Wood Mr. Smith Goes to Washington – Frank Capra Stagecoach – John Ford Wuthering Heights– William Wyler
Robert Donat – Goodbye, Mr. Chips Clark Gable – Gone with the Wind Laurence Olivier – Wuthering Heights Mickey Rooney – Babes in Arms James Stewart – Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
Bette Davis – Dark Victory Irene Dunne – Love Affair Greta Garbo – Ninotchka Greer Garson – Goodbye, Mr. Chips Vivien Leigh – Gone with the Wind
Brian Aherne – Juarez Harry Carey – Mr. Smith Goes to Washington Brian Donlevy – Beau Geste Thomas Mitchell – Stagecoach Claude Rains – Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
Olivia de Havilland – Gone with the Wind Geraldine Fitzgerald – Wuthering Heights Hattie McDaniel – Gone with the Wind Edna May Oliver – Drums along the Mohawk Maria Ouspenskaya – Love Affair
Bachelor Mother – Felix Jackson Love Affair – Mildred Cram, Leo McCarey Mr. Smith Goes to Washington – Lewis R. Foster Ninotchka – Melchior Lengyel Young Mr. Lincoln– Lamar Trotti
“Faithful Forever” – Gulliver’s Travels – Music by Ralph Rainger; Lyrics by Leo Robin “I Poured My Heart Into A Song” – Second Fiddle – Music, Lyrics by Irving Berlin “Over The Rainbow” – The Wizard of Oz – Music by Harold Arlen; Lyrics by E. Y. Harburg “Wishing” – Love Affair– Music, Lyrics by Buddy de Sylva
Gone with the Wind – Hal C. Kern, James E. Newcom Goodbye, Mr. Chips – Charles Frend Mr. Smith Goes to Washington – Gene Havlick, Al Clark The Rains Came – Barbara McLean Stagecoach– Otho Lovering, Dorothy Spencer
First Love – Joseph Valentine The Great Victor Herbert – Victor Milner Gunga Din – Joseph H. August Intermezzo – Gregg Toland Juarez – Tony Gaudio Lady of the Tropics – George Folsey Of Mice and Men – Norbert Brodine Only Angels Have Wings – Joseph Walker The Rains Came – Arthur Miller Stagecoach – Bert Glennon Wuthering Heights– Gregg Toland
Feb 17, 2019 · Maria Ouspenskaya, the famed Russian actress and teacher, who moved to Hollywood in the 1930s, was nominated for two Best Supporting Actress Oscars. She received her first nomination in 1936 for William Wyler’s Dodsworth, in which she practically has only one scene–albeit a very good one.
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Maria Ouspenskaya, the willowy Eastern European actress who never weighed more than 90lb all her life, created one of the most satisfying characters in any of the films featuring the beloved classic monsters.