Born Irene Luther on October 13, 1891, silent-screen femme Irene Rich came from a once well-to-do family in Buffalo, New York. Her father had a reversal
of fortune while she was quite young and the family subsequently had to move
to California. Following her education, Irene pursued a career as a
realtor. She had already married twice by the time she decided to
become an actress and, by the "ripe old age" of 27, had begun working
as a movie extra.
Success came quickly for Irene and her first part of
real substance was in
The Girl in His House (1918).
She continued on as a poised, resourceful co-star and became a
particular favorite of
Will Rogers,
who used her in
Water, Water, Everywhere (1920),
The Strange Boarder (1920),
Jes' Call Me Jim (1920),
Boys Will Be Boys (1921) and
The Ropin' Fool (1922). Her array
of leading men ran the gamut -- from
Harry Carey in
Desperate Trails (1921) to
Lon Chaney in
The Trap (1922) to
John Barrymore in
Beau Brummel (1924) to movie mutt
Strongheart the Dog in
Brawn of the North (1922).
Irene's true screen persona, however, arrived in the form of
tearjerkers, nobly portraying the ever-suffering, well-coiffed
"doormat" in her own plush, domestic dramas. Somewhat reminiscent in
both looks, style and demeanor of
Irene Dunne, she became a favorite in
women's pictures throughout the 1920s, one of her best known roles
being in
Lady Windermere's Fan (1925).
With age Irene moved into more motherly roles, and by the coming of
sound she was playing
Will Rogers' pushy wife in a few of his social
comedies, including
So This Is London (1930) and
Down to Earth (1932). At around the
same time Irene enjoyed a spectacular new career on radio. In 1933 she
began her nationwide anthology program entitled "Dear John" (also
called "The Irene Rich Show"), which lasted over a decade. Her leading
man on that show for many of those years was
Gale Gordon, who later played
Lucille Ball's apoplectic boss and nemesis on 1960s
TV.
Irene also enjoyed some success on stage in such productions as "Seven
Keys to Baldpate" (1935), which starred
George M. Cohan. Eventually she left it
all, marrying a fourth time to businessman George Henry Clifford in
1950, and settling in comfortable retirement. She died at age 96
quietly of heart failure and was survived by two daughters, one of
whom,
Frances Rich, was an actress briefly
on the 1930s stage and screen before becoming a noted sculptor.