
Cecil Cunningham
Born: 1888-08-02
Place of Birth: Saint Louis, Missouri, USA
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Cecil Cunningham (August 2, 1888 – April 17, 1959) was an American film and stage actress. With whitish hair cut like a man's, she was a Hollywood character actress, often cast in roles as a general "know-it-all". She made more than 80 appearances in movies between 1929 and 1946, many of them uncredited. Cunningham started her working life as a switchboard operator in a commerce bank and did some sittings as a photographer's model. Her first show business job was in the chorus line of 'Mademoiselle Modiste' at the age of eighteen. Cunningham trained as a singer and appeared in opera. She worked as a vaudeville comedian at the Palace Theatre in New York City until the commencement of her movie career in 1929.
Known For

People Will Talk

The Family Next Door

The Age for Love

Paramount on Parade

My Reputation

Artists & Models

Kitty Foyle

Daughter of Shanghai

The Life of Vergie Winters

Mata Hari

Cowboy Serenade

Kentucky Moonshine

Girls' School

Back Street

Winter Carnival

College Swing

It's a Wonderful World

Cairo

The Impatient Maiden

New Moon

Love Me Tonight

Twin Beds

Play Girl

Mr. Deeds Goes to Town

Blond Cheat

Du Barry Was a Lady

Anybody's Woman

Those We Love

You and Me

The Awful Truth

Blonde Venus

The Hidden Hand

Love Is a Racket

In Old Oklahoma

Marie Antoinette

Blossoms in the Dust

If I Had a Million

Above Suspicion

Hurry, Charlie, Hurry

Night Club Scandal

The Rich Are Always with Us

Abe Lincoln in Illinois

Come and Get It

The Wet Parade

This Way Please

Lady of the Tropics

Ladies They Talk About

Wives Under Suspicion

Safe in Hell

Their Own Desire

Is My Face Red?

King of Gamblers

Susan Lenox (Her Fall and Rise)

Four Men and a Prayer

Manhattan Love Song

Complicated Women

We Live Again

Scandal Street

My Heart Belongs to Daddy

The Affairs of Martha

From Hell to Heaven

The Captain Is a Lady

The Wife Takes a Flyer

Repent at Leisure

Lillian Russell

The Feminine Touch

Return of the Terror

Swing High, Swing Low
