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Although Dutch-born silent screen star Jetta Goudal (pronounced Zah-hetta Goo-doll) may be pretty much forgotten, she was, in her glorious Hollywood heyday, a star rivaling that of Gloria Swanson and Nita Naldi. She began her career in Europe, traveling with various theater companies. Arriving in America following the WWI armistice (1918), she first appeared on Broadway and eventually tested for film. She attracted immediate attention with her first two small film roles and caught the eye of legendary producer/director Cecil B. DeMille. He hired her for what turned out to be some of her (and his) greatest critical successes, including her emotional roles in The Coming of Amos (1925), The Road to Yesterday (1925), White Gold (1927) and The Forbidden Woman (1927). Unfortunately, the exotic allure and element of mystery that made Goudal so popular on-screen came with a price. She was an unrepentant theatrical "grand dame" and possessed a fierce temper well known to the film community. Her extreme difficulty on the set led to DeMille breaking her contract, which in turn led Goudal to file a landmark lawsuit against him. She charged him with breach of contract, while he claimed her diva-like tirades over every detail of production, from costumes and scenery to mere entrances, caused a multitude of delays and severe financial setbacks for the studio. Goudal, however, won the suit--one reason being that neither DeMille nor the studio could furnish financial records to back up their claims that she cost them untold thousands of dollars--and it set a precedent regarding actors` rights vs. studios` rights. The damage to her career and reputation, however, was sealed and she never recaptured her former glory. Moreover, with the arrival of sound her very thick French accent left her with limited offers. She married art director Harold Grieve in 1930 and retired from the screen permanently three years later. Along with her husband, she went into interior design and faded from the Hollywood scene. Plagued by health problems in the 1960s, she suffered a serious fall in the 1970s and became an invalid. She died in 1985.
IMDb Mini Biography By: Gary Brumburgh
Biography Credit: www.imdb.com/name/nm0332135/bio
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