Known for Acting

Joan Geraldine Bennett (February 27, 1910 – December 7, 1990) was an American stage, film and television actress. Besides acting on the stage, Bennett appeared in more than 70 motion pictures from the era of silent movies well into the sound era. She is possibly best-remembered for her film noir femme fatale roles in director Fritz Lang's movies such as The Woman in the Window (1944) and Scarlet Street (1945). Bennett had three distinct phases to her long and successful career, first as a winsome blonde ingenue, then as a sensuous brunette femme fatale (with looks that movie magazines often compared to those of Hedy Lamarr), and finally as a warmhearted wife/mother figure. In 1951, Bennett's screen career was marred by scandal after her third husband, film producer Walter Wanger, shot and injured her agent Jennings Lang. Wanger suspected that Lang and Bennett were having an affair, a charge which she adamantly denied. In the 1960s, she achieved success for her portrayal of Elizabeth Collins Stoddard on TV's Dark Shadows, for which she received an Emmy nomination. For her final movie role, as Madame Blanc in Suspiria (1977), she received a Saturn Award nomination. Description above from the Wikipedia article Joan Bennett, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
1977
as Madame Blanc
1955
as Amelie Ducotel
1929
as Lady Clarissa Pevensey
1950
as Ellie Banks
1930
as Faith
1944
as Alice Reed
1940
as Stephanie Richardson
1956
as Marion Groves
1945
as Katherine 'Kitty' March
1933
as Amy
1947
as Celia Lamphere
1987
as Self (archive footage)
1936
as Julia Wayne
1932
as Jane Miller
1988
as Self (archive footage)
1939
as Princess Maria Theresa
1972
as Claire Ramsey
1936
as Eve Fallon
1981
as Rag Lady
1935
as Sally MacGregor