Madeleine carroll cause of death

Madeleine Carroll

English actress (1906–1987)

This article is about the British actress. For the American actress, see Madeline Carroll.

Madeleine Carroll

Carroll in 1938

Born

Marie-Madeleine Bernadette O'Carroll


(1906-02-26)26 February 1906

West Bromwich, Staffordshire, England

Died2 October 1987(1987-10-02) (aged 81)

Marbella, Spain

Resting placeSant Antoni de Calonge
Alma materUniversity of Birmingham
OccupationActress
Years active1928–1955
Spouses

Captain Phillip Astley

(m. 1931; div. 1939)​

Sterling Hayden

(m. 1942; div. 1946)​

Henri Lavorel

(m. 1946; div. 1949)​

Andrew Heiskell

(m. 1950; div. 1965)​
Children1

Marie-Madeleine Bernadette O'Carroll (26 February 1906 – 2 October 1987)[1] was an English actress, popular both in Britain and in America in the 1930s a

Madeline Carroll

American actress (born 1996)

This article is about the American actress. For the British film actress, see Madeleine Carroll.

Madeline Carroll (born March 18, 1996) is an American actress known for starring as Juli Baker in Flipped, as Molly Johnson in Swing Vote, as Farren in The Spy Next Door, and as Willow O'Neil in The Magic of Belle Isle.

Early life

Carroll was born and raised in Los Angeles. Her mother is a homemaker and her father is a contractor. She has three brothers: Ned, Jack and Dylan. She began modeling at the age of three.[1] At the age of four, she was discovered by her theatrical agent 'Wendy' in a nail shop in Sherman Oaks.[2] She began her career appearing in numerous commercials for companies such as Allstate, Chef Boyardee, Kmart, Mr. Clean, Subway, Super 8 Motels and Target Corporation.

Career

Her first appearance in a film was in the 2006 horror film When a Stranger Calls. After minor roles in The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause and Resident Evil: Extinction, in 2008 she got

Formerly a school teacher and model, a blonde beauty of ladylike demeanour, Madeleine Carroll was on stage from 1927 and in films the following year.

She made 20 films in Britain, including Victor Saville's WW1 drama, I Was a Spy (1933), in which she was very touching, and The 39 Steps (d. Alfred Hitchcock, 1935, as the hand-cuffed heroine) and Secret Agent (d. Hitchcock, 1936), establishing the prototype for such later Hitchcock heroines as Ingrid Bergman and Grace Kelly.

From the mid-1930s, hers is essentially a Hollywood career, in European-set romances like The Prisoner of Zenda (US, d. John Cromwell, 1937) and comedies like My Favorite Blonde (US, d. Sidney Lanfield, 1942), and she became an American citizen in 1943, when she married Sterling Hayden (her third of four husbands).

Following her sister's death during the blitz, she gave up filming for war relief work and was honoured by France and the US for her wartime and postwar efforts. She made only three further films, including the British alpine-set romance, White Cradle Inn (d. Harold French,

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