Biography
Claire Trevor (née Wemlinger; March 8, 1910 – April 8, 2000) was an American actress. She appeared in 65 feature films from 1933 to 1982, winning the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her role in Key Largo (1948), and received nominations for her roles in The High and the Mighty (1954) and Dead End (1937). Trevor received top billing, ahead of John Wayne, for Stagecoach (1939).
Trevor's acting career spanned more than seven decades and included successes in stage, radio, television, and film. She often played the hard-boiled blonde, and every conceivable type of 'bad girl' role.
She made her stage debut in the summer of 1929 with a repertory company in Ann Arbor, Michigan. She subsequently returned to New York, where she appeared in a number of Brooklyn-filmed Vitaphone short films and performed in summer stock theatre. In 1932, she starred on Broadway as the female lead in Whistling in the Dark.
Trevor made her film debut in Jimmy and Sally (1933). From 1933 to 1938, Trevor starred in 29 films, often having either the lead role or the role of heroine. In 1937, she was the second lead actress (after top-billed Sylvia Sidney) in Dead End, with Humphrey Bogart, which led to her nomination for Best Supporting Actress. From 1937 to 1940, she appeared with Edward G. Robinson in the popular radio series Big Town, while continuing to make movies. In the early 1940s, she also was a regular on The Old Gold Don Ameche Show on the NBC Red Radio Network, starring with Ameche in presentations of plays by Mark Hellinger. In 1939, she was well established as a solid leading lady. One of her more memorable performances during this period includes the Western Stagecoach (1939).
Two of Trevor's most memorable roles were opposite Dick Powell in Murder, My Sweet (1944) and with Lawrence Tierney in Born to Kill (1947). In Key Largo (1948), Trevor played Gaye Dawn, a washed-up, alcoholic nightclub singer and gangster's moll. For that role, she won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. Her third and final Oscar nomination was for her performance in The High and the Mighty (1954). In 1957, she won an Emmy for her role in the Producers' Showcase episode entitled "Dodsworth". Trevor moved into supporting roles in the 1950s, with her appearances becoming very rare after the mid-1960s. She played Charlotte, the mother of Kay (Sally Field) in Kiss Me Goodbye (1982). Her final television role was for the 1987 television film, Norman Rockwell's Breaking Home Ties. Trevor made a guest appearance at the 70th Academy Awards in 1998.
For her contribution to the motion picture industry, she has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6933 Hollywood Boulevard.
[biography (excerpted) from Wikipedia]
Filmography
Cast Credits

1939: Hollywood's Greatest Year
Character: Self (archive footage)
MOVIE • 2009

You Must Remember This: The Warner Bros. Story
Character: Self
MOVIE • 2008

Breaking Home Ties
Character: Grace Porter
MOVIE • 1987

Murder, She Wrote
Character: Judith Harlan
TV • 1984

Going Hollywood: The '30s
Character: (archive footage)
MOVIE • 1984

Kiss Me Goodbye
Character: Charlotte
MOVIE • 1982

The Cape Town Affair
Character: Sam Williams
MOVIE • 1967

How to Murder Your Wife
Character: Edna
MOVIE • 1965

The Stripper
Character: Helen Baird
MOVIE • 1963

The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson
Character: Self
TV • 1962

The Merv Griffin Show
Character: Self
TV • 1962

Two Weeks in Another Town
Character: Clara Kruger
MOVIE • 1962

Dr. Kildare
Character: Nurse Veronica Johnson
TV • 1961

Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse
Character:
TV • 1958

Marjorie Morningstar
Character: Rose Morgenstern
MOVIE • 1958

Wagon Train
Character: C.L. Harding
TV • 1957

If You Knew Elizabeth
Character: Elizabeth Owen
MOVIE • 1957

The Mountain
Character: Marie
MOVIE • 1956

Lucy Gallant
Character: Lady MacBeth
MOVIE • 1955

Alfred Hitchcock Presents
Character: Mary Prescott
TV • 1955