Known for Acting

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Margaret St. John Field (4 November 1917 – 2 January 1992), known professionally as Virginia Field, was a British-born film actress. The niece of stage actress and director Auriol Lee, she took her first film role as a teenager in the 1934 British mystery-comedy The Lady Is Willing before signing a Hollywood contract. Field first went to the US to appear in David O. Selznick's Little Lord Fauntleroy (1936). In the late 1930s, she appeared in various parts in 20th Century Fox's Mr. Moto film series. Field then played a ballerina alongside Vivien Leigh in Waterloo Bridge (1940), an estranged wife in Dorothy Arzner's Dance, Girl, Dance (1940) and Stuart-era performer Nell Gwyn in the historical Western Hudson's Bay (1941). She also performed in the noir genre, with films like Repeat Performance (1947), Dial 1119 (1950) and Appointment with a Shadow (1957). She made frequent appearances on television in the 1950s and '60s. Field married three times. Her spouses included actors Willard Parker and Paul Douglas, with whom she had a daughter, as well as composer and musician Howard Grode. She died of cancer on 2 January 1992 and was cremated, with her ashes scattered at sea. Field has a star at 1751 Vine Street on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles, dedicated 8 February 1960.
1940
as Kitty
1964
as Peggy
1936
as Miss Herbert
1940
as Elinor Harris
1937
as Bessie
1947
as Paula Costello
1949
as Morgan Le Fay
1939
as Lola De Vere
1936
as Polly
1943
as Virginia Field
1947
as Variety Girl
1940
as Nell Gwyn
1957
as Florence Knapp
1937
as Dinah/Dina
1937
as Evelyn Gray
1937
as Gloria Danton/Tanya Boriv
1943
as Jo Ainsley
1939
as Connie Porter
1939
as Eleanor Kirke
1950
as Freddy