Shirley Temple

From New World Encyclopedia

Shirley Temple
ShirleyTempleMackenzieKing2b.jpg
16-year-old Temple in 1944 in Ottawa at a ceremony to raise money for Canadian Victory bonds
BornShirley Temple[note 1]
April 23 1928(1928-04-23)
Santa Monica, California, U.S.
DiedFebruary 10 2014 (aged 85)
Woodside, California, U.S.
EducationTutors, private high school
Alma materWestlake School for Girls (1940–45)
OccupationFilm actress (1932–50)
TV actress/entertainer (1958–65)
Public servant (1969–92)
Years active1932–65 (as actress)
1967–92 (as public servant)
Known forJuvenile film roles
Political partyRepublican
Spouse(s)
{{#invoke:Message box|ambox}}
(m. 1945; div. 1950)
; 1 child
{{#invoke:Message box|ambox}}
(m. 1950; Template:Dc2005)
; 2 children
Children
  • Linda Susan Agar (b. 1948)
  • Charles Alden Black, Jr. (b. 1952)
  • Lori Alden Black (b. 1954)
Website
www.shirleytemple.com

Shirley Temple Black (née Temple; April 23, 1928 – February 10, 2014) was an American film and television actress, singer, dancer and public servant, most famous as a child star in the 1930s. As an adult, she entered politics and became a diplomat, serving as United States Ambassador to Ghana and later to Czechoslovakia, and as Chief of Protocol of the United States.

Temple began her film career in 1932 at the age of three. In 1934, she found international fame in Bright Eyes, a feature film designed specifically for her talents. She received a special Juvenile Academy Award in February 1935 for her outstanding contribution as a juvenile performer to motion pictures during 1934, and film hits such as Curly Top and Heidi followed year after year during the mid-to-late 1930s. Licensed merchandise that capitalized on her wholesome image included dolls, dishes and clothing. Her box office popularity waned as she reached adolescence, and she left the film industry in her teens.[1] She appeared in a few films of varying quality in her mid-to-late teens, and retired completely from films in 1950 at the age of 22. She was the top box-office draw four years in a row (1935–38) in a Motion Picture Herald poll.[2][3]

Temple returned to show business in 1958 with a two-season television anthology series of fairy tale adaptations. She made guest appearances on television shows in the early 1960s and filmed a sitcom pilot that was never released. She sat on the boards of corporations and organizations including The Walt Disney Company, Del Monte Foods and the National Wildlife Federation. She began her diplomatic career in 1969, with an appointment to represent the United States at a session of the United Nations General Assembly. In 1988, she published her autobiography, Child Star.[4]

Temple was the recipient of numerous awards and honors including the Kennedy Center Honors and a Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award. She ranks 18th on the American Film Institute's list of the greatest female American screen legends of all time.

Early years

In Glad Rags to Riches, 1933

Shirley Temple was born on April 23, 1928, in Santa Monica, California. She was the daughter of Gertrude Amelia Temple (née Krieger), a homemaker, and George Francis Temple, a bank employee. The family was of English, German and Dutch ancestry.[5][6] She had two brothers, George Francis, Jr. and John Stanley.[6][7][8] Temple's mother encouraged her infant daughter's singing, dancing, and acting talents, and in September 1931 enrolled her in Meglin's Dance School in Los Angeles.[9][10][11] About this time, Temple's mother began styling her daughter's hair in ringlets similar to those of silent film star Mary Pickford.[12]

Whilst at Meglin's she was spotted by Charles Lamont, a casting director for Educational Pictures. Although Shirley hid behind the piano whilst in the studio Lamont took a shine to her, inviting her to audition, and in 1932 signed her to a contract. Educational Pictures were about to launch their Baby Burlesks,[13][14][15][16] series of short films satirizing recent film and political events, using pre-school children in every role. Because the children were dressed as adults and given mature dialogue the series was eventually seen as dated and exploitive.

Baby Burlesks was a series of one-reelers; another series of two-reelers called Frolics of Youth followed, with Temple playing Mary Lou Rogers, a youngster in a contemporary suburban family.[17] To underwrite production costs at Educational, Temple and her child co-stars modeled for breakfast cereals and other products.[18][19] She was loaned to Tower Productions for a small role in her first feature film (Red-Haired Alibi) in 1932[20][21] and, in 1933, to Universal, Paramount, and Warner Bros., for various bit parts.[22][23]

Fox films

Temple's hand and foot prints at Grauman's Chinese Theater

Educational Pictures declared bankruptcy in 1933, and Temple signed with Fox Film Corporation in February 1934.[24][25] She appeared in bit parts and was loaned to Paramount and Warner Bros for bit parts.[26] In April 1934, Stand Up and Cheer! became Temple's breakthrough film. Her charm was evident to Fox heads, and she was promoted well before the film's release. Within months, she became the symbol of wholesome family entertainment.[27] Her salary was raised to $1,250 a week, and her mother's to $150 as coach and hairdresser.[28] In June, her success continued with a loan-out to Paramount for Little Miss Marker.[29][30]

On December 28, 1934, Bright Eyes was released. It was the first feature film crafted specifically for Temple's talents and the first in which her name appeared above the title.[31][32] Her signature song, "On the Good Ship Lollipop," was introduced in the film and sold 500,000 sheet music copies. The film demonstrated Temple's ability to portray a multi-dimensional character and established a formula for her future roles as a lovable, parentless waif whose charm and sweetness mellow gruff older men.[33] In February 1935, Temple became the first child star to be honored with a miniature Juvenile Oscar for her 1934 film accomplishments,[34][35][36][note 2] and she added her foot- and handprints to the forecourt at Grauman's Chinese Theatre a month later.[37]

20th Century Fox

Fox Films merged with Twentieth Century Pictures to become 20th Century Fox in 1934. Producer and studio head Darryl F. Zanuck focused his attention and resources upon cultivating Temple's superstar status. With four successful films to her credit, she was the studio's greatest asset. Nineteen writers known as the Shirley Temple Story Development team created 11 original stories and some adaptations of the classics for her.[38][note 3]

Biographer Anne Edwards writes about the tone and tenor of Temple films under Zanuck, "This was mid-Depression, and schemes proliferated for the care of the needy and the regeneration of the fallen. But they all required endless paperwork and demeaning, hours-long queues, at the end of which an exhausted, nettled social worker dealt with each person as a faceless number. Shirley offered a natural solution: to open one's heart."[39] Edwards points out that the characters created for Temple would change the lives of the cold, the hardened, and even the criminal with positive results.[39] Edwards quotes a nameless filmographer: "She assaults, penetrates, and opens [the flinty characters] making it possible for them to give of themselves. All of this returns upon her at times forcing her into situations where she must decide who needs her most. It is her agony, her Calvary, and it brings her to her most despairing moments ... Shirley's capacity for love ... was indiscriminate, extending to pinched misers or to common hobos, it was a social, even a political, force on a par with democracy or the Constitution."[40] Temple films were seen as generating hope and optimism, and President Franklin D. Roosevelt said, "It is a splendid thing that for just fifteen cents an American can go to a movie and look at the smiling face of a baby and forget his troubles."[41][note 4]

Photograph of Eleanor Roosevelt seated with Temple immediately to her left. The two are looking at each other apparently engaged in conversation.
First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt and Shirley Temple in July 1938

Most films Temple starred in were cheaply made at $200,000 or $300,000 per picture and were comedy-dramas with songs and dances added, sentimental and melodramatic situations aplenty, and little in the way of production values. Her film titles are a clue to the way she was marketed—Curly Top and Dimples, and her "little" pictures such as The Little Colonel and The Littlest Rebel. Temple often played a fixer-upper, a precocious Cupid, or the good fairy in these films, reuniting her estranged parents or smoothing out the wrinkles in the romances of young couples. She was very often motherless, sometimes fatherless, and sometimes an orphan confined to a dreary asylum.[42] Elements of the traditional fairy tale were woven into her films: wholesome goodness triumphing over meanness and evil, for example, or wealth over poverty, marriage over divorce, or a booming economy over a depressed one.[43] As Temple matured into a pre-adolescent, the formula was altered slightly to encourage her naturalness, naïveté, and tomboyishness to come forth and shine while her infant innocence, which had served her well at six but was inappropriate for her tweens (or later childhood years), was toned down.[42]

1935–1937

At Zanuck's request, Temple's parents agreed to four films a year from their daughter (rather than the three they wished), and the child star's contract was reworked with bonuses to sweeten the deal. A succession of films followed: The Little Colonel, Our Little Girl, Curly Top (with the signature song "Animal Crackers in My Soup"), and The Littlest Rebel in 1935. Curly Top and The Littlest Rebel were named to Variety's list of top box office draws for 1935.[44] In 1936, Captain January, Poor Little Rich Girl, Dimples,[note 5] and Stowaway were released.

Based on Temple's many screen successes, Zanuck increased budgets and production values for her films. In 1937, John Ford was hired to direct the sepia-toned Wee Willie Winkie (Temple's own favorite) and an A-list cast was signed that included Victor McLaglen, C. Aubrey Smith and Cesar Romero.[45][46] The film was a critical and commercial hit,[45] but British writer and critic Graham Greene muddied the waters in October 1937 when he wrote in a British magazine that Temple was a "complete totsy" and accused her of being too nubile for a nine-year-old:

Her admirers—middle-aged men and clergymen—respond to her dubious coquetry, to the sight of her well-shaped and desirable little body, packed with enormous vitality, only because the safety curtain of story and dialogue drops between their intelligence and their desire.[47]

Temple and Twentieth Century-Fox sued for libel and won. The settlement remained in trust for Temple in an English bank until she turned twenty-one, when it was donated to charity and used to build a youth center in England.[48][49]

The only other Temple film released in 1937 was Heidi, which, according to Edwards, was a story suited to Temple's "slightly more mature personality".[48] Edwards points out that Temple's hair had darkened and her ringlets brushed back into curls. Temple's theatrical instincts had sharpened, Edwards observes, and she suggested the Dutch song and dance dream sequence.[50] After minor disagreements about the dance steps with the other children in the scene, director Allan Dwan had badges made reading 'Shirley Temple Police'. Every child was issued one after swearing allegiance and obedience to Temple. Shirley wore one reading 'Chief'.[51]

1938–1940

Temple in The Little Princess

The Independent Theatre Owners Association paid for an advertisement in the Hollywood Reporter in May 1938 that included Temple on a list of actors who deserved their salaries while others, such as Katharine Hepburn and Joan Crawford, were described as "whose box-office draw is nil".[52] That year Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, Little Miss Broadway and Just Around the Corner were released. The latter two were panned by the critics, and Corner was the first Temple film to show a slump in ticket sales.[53] The following year, Zanuck secured the rights to the children's novel, A Little Princess, believing the book would be an ideal vehicle for Temple. He budgeted the film at $1.5 million (twice the amount of Corner) and chose it to be her first Technicolor feature. The Little Princess was a 1939 critical and commercial success with Temple's acting at its peak. Convinced Temple would successfully move from child star to teenage actress, Zanuck declined a substantial offer from MGM to star Temple as Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz and cast her instead in Susannah of the Mounties, her last money-maker for Twentieth Century-Fox.[54][55] The film was successful, but because she made only two films in 1939 instead of the usual three or four, Temple dropped from number one box-office favorite in 1938 to number five in 1939.[56]

In 1939, Temple was the subject of the Salvador Dalí painting Shirley Temple, The Youngest, Most Sacred Monster of the Cinema in Her Time.

In 1940, Temple starred in two consecutive flops at Twentieth Century-Fox, The Blue Bird and Young People.[57][58] Temple's parents bought up the remainder of her contract and sent her at the age of 12 to Westlake School for Girls, an exclusive country day school in Los Angeles.[59] At the studio, Temple's bungalow was renovated, all traces of her tenure expunged, and the building reassigned as an office complex.[58]

Last films and retirement

Within a year of her departure from Twentieth Century-Fox,[note 6] MGM signed Temple for her comeback, and made plans to team her with Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney first for the Andy Hardy series, and then when that idea was quickly abandoned, teaming Temple with Garland and Rooney for the musical Babes on Broadway. However, realizing that both Garland and Rooney could easily upstage Temple, MGM replaced her in that film with Virginia Weidler. As a result, Temple's only film for Metro became Kathleen in 1941, a story about an unhappy teenager. The film was not a success and her MGM contract was canceled after mutual consent. Miss Annie Rooney followed for United Artists in 1942, but it too was unsuccessful.[note 7] The actress retired for almost two years from films, throwing herself into school life and activities.[60]

In 1944, David O. Selznick signed Temple to a personal four-year contract. She appeared in two wartime hits for him: Since You Went Away and I'll Be Seeing You. Selznick however became involved with Jennifer Jones and lost interest in developing Temple's career. She was loaned to other studios with Kiss and Tell, The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer,[note 8] and Fort Apache being her few good films at the time.[61]

According to biographer Robert Windeler, her 1947–49 films neither made nor lost money, but "had a cheapie B look about them and indifferent performances from her".[62] Selznick suggested she move abroad, gain maturity as an actress, and even change her name. She had been typecast, he warned her, and her career was in perilous straits.[62][63] After auditioning for and losing the role of Peter Pan on the Broadway stage in August 1950,[64] Temple took stock, admitted her recent movies had been poor fare, and announced her official retirement from films on December 16, 1950.[62][65]

Temple-related merchandise and endorsements

Temple leaving the White House offices with her mother and her bodyguard Grif, 1938

Many Temple-inspired products were manufactured and released during the 1930s. Ideal Toy and Novelty Company in New York City negotiated a license for dolls with the company's first doll wearing the polka-dot dress from Stand Up and Cheer!. Shirley Temple dolls realized $45 million in sales before 1941.[66] A mug, a pitcher, and a cereal bowl in cobalt blue with a decal of Temple were given away as a premium with Wheaties.

Successfully-selling Temple items included a line of girls' dresses and accessories, soap, dishes, cutout books, sheet music, mirrors, paper tablets, and numerous other items. Before 1935 ended, Temple's income from licensed merchandise royalties would exceed $100,000, doubling her income from her movies. In 1936, her income would top $200,000 from royalties. She endorsed Postal Telegraph, Sperry Drifted Snow Flour, the Grunow Teledial radio, Quaker Puffed Wheat,[66] General Electric and Packard automobiles.[33][note 9]

Marriages and children

In 1943, 15-year-old Temple met John Agar (1921–2002), an Army Air Corps sergeant, physical training instructor, and a member of a Chicago meat-packing family.[67][68] On September 19, 1945, when Temple was 17 years old, they were married before 500 guests in an Episcopal ceremony at Wilshire Methodist Church.[25][69][70] On January 30, 1948, Temple gave birth to their daughter, Linda Susan.[25][71][72] Agar became a professional actor and the couple made two films together: Fort Apache (1948, RKO) and Adventure in Baltimore (1949, RKO).[72] The marriage became troubled,[72][73] and Temple divorced Agar on December 5, 1949.[33][72] She received custody of their daughter and the restoration of her maiden name.[72][74][75] The divorce was finalized on December 5, 1950.

In January 1950, Temple met Charles Alden Black, a WWII United States Navy intelligence officer and Silver Star recipient who was Assistant to the President of the Hawaiian Pineapple Company.[76][77] Conservative and patrician, he was the son of James B. Black, the president and later chairman of Pacific Gas and Electric, and reputedly one of the richest young men in California.[77] Temple and Black were married in his parents' Del Monte, California, home on December 16, 1950, before a small assembly of family and friends.[25][77][78]

The family relocated to Washington, D.C., when Black was recalled to the Navy at the outbreak of the Korean War.[79] Temple gave birth to their son, Charles Alden Black, Jr., in Washington, D.C., on April 28, 1952.[25][80][81] Following the war's end and Black's discharge from the Navy, the family returned to California in May 1953. Black managed television station KABC-TV in Los Angeles, and Temple became a homemaker. Their daughter Lori was born on April 9, 1954.[25] Lori went on to be a bassist in the grunge band the Melvins. In September 1954, Charles, Sr. became director of business operations for the Stanford Research Institute and the family moved to Atherton, California.[82] The couple remained married for 54 years until his death on August 4, 2005, at home in Woodside of complications from a bone marrow disease.[83]

Television

Between January and December 1958, Temple hosted and narrated a successful NBC television anthology series of fairy tale adaptations called Shirley Temple's Storybook. Temple acted in three of the sixteen hour-long episodes, and her son made his acting debut in the Christmas episode, "Mother Goose".[84][85] The series was popular but faced some problems. The show lacked the special effects necessary for fairy tale dramatizations, sets were amateurish, and episodes were telecast in no regular time-slot, making it difficult to generate a following.[86] The show was reworked and released in color in September 1960 in a regular time-slot as The Shirley Temple Show.[87][88] It faced stiff competition from Maverick, Lassie, Dennis the Menace, the 1960 telecast of The Wizard of Oz, and the Walt Disney anthology television series however, and was canceled at season's end in September 1961.[89]

Temple continued to work on television, making guest appearances on The Red Skelton Show, Sing Along with Mitch, and other shows.[87] In January 1965, she portrayed a social worker in a sitcom pilot called Go Fight City Hall that was never released.[90] In 1999, she hosted the AFI's 100 Years... 100 Stars awards show on CBS, and, in 2001, served as a consultant on an ABC-TV production of her autobiography, Child Star: The Shirley Temple Story.[91]

Motivated by the popularity of Storybook and television broadcasts of Temple's films, the Ideal Toy Company released a new version of the Shirley Temple doll and Random House published three fairy tale anthologies under Temple's name. Three hundred thousand dolls were sold within six months and 225,000 books between October and December 1958. Other merchandise included handbags and hats, coloring books, a toy theater, and a recreation of the Baby, Take a Bow polka-dot dress.[92]

Life after Hollywood

Shirley Temple Black in Prague in 1990


Political ambitions

Following her venture into television, Temple became active in the Republican Party in California. In 1967, she ran unsuccessfully in a special election in California's 11th congressional district to fill the seat left vacant by the death of eight-term Republican J. Arthur Younger from leukemia.[93][94] She ran as a conservative and lost to law school professor Pete McCloskey, a liberal Republican who was a staunch opponent of the Vietnam War.[95][96]

She was appointed Representative to the 24th United Nations General Assembly by President Richard M. Nixon (September – December 1969),[97][98] and was appointed United States Ambassador to Ghana (December 6, 1974 – July 13, 1976) by President Gerald R. Ford.[99] She was appointed first female Chief of Protocol of the United States (July 1, 1976 – January 21, 1977), and was in charge of arrangements for President Jimmy Carter's inauguration and inaugural ball.[99][100] She served as the United States Ambassador to Czechoslovakia (August 23, 1989 – July 12, 1992), having been appointed by President George H. W. Bush.[33]

Breast cancer

In 1972, Temple was diagnosed with breast cancer. The tumor was removed and a modified radical mastectomy performed. Following the operation, she announced it to the world via radio, television, and a February 1973 article for the magazine McCall's. In doing so, she became one of the first prominent women to speak openly about breast cancer.[101]

Corporation commitments

Temple served on numerous boards of directors of large enterprises and organizations including The Walt Disney Company, Del Monte, Bank of America, the Bank of California, BANCAL Tri-State, Fireman's Fund Insurance, the United States Commission for UNESCO, the United Nations Association and the National Wildlife Federation.[102]

Death

Shirley Temple died of natural causes on February 10, 2014, at the age of 85. She was at her home in Woodside, California, surrounded by family and caregivers.[103][104] She is survived by her three children, as well as grandchildren and great-grandchildren.[105]

Awards and honors

Temple was the recipient of many awards and honors including a special Juvenile Academy Award,[25] the Life Achievement Award from the American Center of Films for Children,[99] the National Board of Review Career Achievement Award,[106] Kennedy Center Honors,[107][108] and the Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award.[109] On September 11, 2002, a life-size bronze statue of the child Temple by sculptor Nijel Binns was erected on the Fox Studio lot.[110]

On March 14, 1935, Temple left her footprints and handprints in the wet cement at the forecourt of Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood. She was the Grand Marshal of the New Year's Day Rose Parade in Pasadena, California three times in 1939, 1989, and 1999.

On February 8, 1960, she received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her work in films.

Filmography

Features

Year Film Role
1932 The Red-Haired Alibi Gloria Shelton
1933 Out All Night Child (as Shirley Jane Temple)
To the Last Man Mary Stanley (uncredited)
1934 Carolina Joan Connelly (uncredited)
Mandalay (scenes deleted)
As the Earth Turns Child (uncredited)
Stand Up and Cheer! Shirley Dugan
Change of Heart Shirley - Girl on airplane (uncredited)
Little Miss Marker Marthy 'Marky' Jane
Now I'll Tell Mary Doran
Baby Take a Bow Shirley Ellison
Now and Forever Penelope 'Penny' Day
Bright Eyes Shirley Blake
1935 The Little Colonel Lloyd Sherman
Our Little Girl Molly Middleton
Curly Top Elizabeth Blair
The Littlest Rebel Virginia 'Virgie' Cary
1936 Captain January Helen 'Star' Mason
Poor Little Rich Girl Barbara Berry
Dimples Sylvia 'Dimples' Dolores Appleby
Stowaway Barbara 'Ching-Ching' Stewart
1937 Wee Willie Winkie Priscilla 'Winkie' Williams

Year Film Role
1937 Heidi Heidi Kramer
Ali Baba Goes to Town Herself (uncredited cameo)
1938 Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm Rebecca Winstead
Little Miss Broadway Betsy Brown Shea
Just Around the Corner Penny Hale
1939 The Little Princess Sarah Crewe
Susannah of the Mounties Susannah 'Sue' Sheldon
1940 The Blue Bird Mytyl
Young People Wendy Ballantine
1941 Kathleen Kathleen Davis
1942 Miss Annie Rooney Annie Rooney
1944 Since You Went Away Bridget 'Brig' Hilton
I'll Be Seeing You Barbara Marshall
1945 Kiss and Tell Corliss Archer
1947 Honeymoon Barbara Olmstead
The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer Susan
That Hagen Girl Mary Hagen
1948 Fort Apache Philadelphia Thursday
1949 Mr. Belvedere Goes to College Ellen Baker
Adventure in Baltimore Dinah Sheldon
The Story of Seabiscuit Margaret O'Hara Knowles
A Kiss for Corliss Corliss Archer

Short subjects

Most of the films from 1933 and 1934 were produced as part of the Baby Burlesks series.

Year Film Role
1932 Kid's Last Stand Girl
Runt Page Lulu Parsnips (uncredited)
War Babies Charmaine
The Pie-Covered Wagon Shirley
1933 Glad Rags to Riches Nell/La Belle Diaperina
Kid in Hollywood Morelegs Sweettrick
The Kid's Last Fight Shirley
Polly Tix in Washington Polly Tix
Kid 'in' Africa Madame Cradlebait
Merrily Yours Merry Lou Rogers
New Deal Rhythm Girl who dislikes spinach (uncredited)

Year Film Role
1933 Dora's Dunking Doughnuts Shirley
What's to Do? Mary Lou Rogers
1934 Pardon My Pups Mary Lou Rogers
Managed Money Mary Lou Rogers
The Hollywood Gad-About Herself
1939 The Autograph Hound Herself
1942 Our Girl Shirley Herself
1946 American Creed

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

Notes

  1. Shirley Temple. biography.com. Retrieved August 15, 2012.
  2. Balio 227
  3. Windeler 26
  4. (1998) Child Star. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 9780070055322. 
  5. Edwards 15, 17
  6. 6.0 6.1 Windeler 16
  7. Edwards 15
  8. Burdick 3
  9. Edwards 29–30
  10. Windeler 17
  11. Burdick 6
  12. Edwards 26
  13. Edwards 31
  14. Black 14
  15. Edwards 31–4
  16. Windeler 111
  17. Windeler 113, 115, 122
  18. Black 15
  19. Edwards 36
  20. Black 28
  21. Edwards 37, 366
  22. Edwards 267–9
  23. Windeler 122
  24. Black 31
  25. 25.0 25.1 25.2 25.3 25.4 25.5 25.6 Edwards 355
  26. Edwards 370–4
  27. Barrios 421
  28. Windeler 135
  29. Edwards 62
  30. Windeler 122, 127
  31. Edwards 67
  32. Windeler 143
  33. 33.0 33.1 33.2 33.3 Thomas; Scheftel
  34. Black 98–101
  35. Edwards 80
  36. Windeler 27–8
  37. Black 72
  38. Edwards 74–5
  39. 39.0 39.1 Edwards 75
  40. Edwards 76
  41. Edwards 75–6
  42. 42.0 42.1 Balio 227–8
  43. Zipes 518
  44. Balio 228
  45. 45.0 45.1 Windeler 183
  46. Edwards 104–5
  47. Edwards 105, 363
  48. 48.0 48.1 Edwards 106
  49. Windeler 35
  50. Edwards 107
  51. Edwards 111
  52. "Box-office Busts/Boys and Girls", Life, pp. 13, 28. Retrieved September 8, 2012.
  53. Edwards 120–1
  54. Edwards 122–3
  55. Windeler 207
  56. Edwards 124
  57. Burdick 268
  58. 58.0 58.1 Edwards 128
  59. Windeler 38
  60. Windeler 43–5
  61. Windeler 49, 51–2
  62. 62.0 62.1 62.2 Windeler 71
  63. Edwards 206
  64. Edwards 209
  65. Black 479–81
  66. 66.0 66.1 Black 85–6
  67. Edwards 147
  68. Windeler 53
  69. Edwards 169
  70. Windeler 54
  71. Black 419–21
  72. 72.0 72.1 72.2 72.3 72.4 Windeler 68
  73. Edwards 199–200
  74. Black 449
  75. Edwards 199
  76. Edwards 207
  77. 77.0 77.1 77.2 Windeler 72
  78. Edwards 211
  79. Edwards 215
  80. Edwards 217
  81. Windeler 72–3
  82. Windeler 74
  83. Dawicki 2005
  84. Edwards 231, 233, 393
  85. Windeler 255
  86. Burdick 112–3
  87. 87.0 87.1 Edwards 393
  88. Burdick 115
  89. Burdick 115–6
  90. Edwards 235–6, 393
  91. Child Star: The Shirley Temple Story (2001). rotten tomatoes. Retrieved August 15, 2012.
  92. Edwards 233
  93. Edwards 243ff
  94. Windeler 80ff
  95. Sean Howell (July 1, 2009). Documentary salutes Pete McCloskey. The Almanac Online. Embarcadero Publishing Co.. Retrieved February 12, 2014.
  96. Romney, Lee (June 11, 2012). Between two public servants, Purple Heart-felt admiration. LATimes.com. The Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on June 15, 2012. Retrieved February 11, 2014.
  97. Edwards 356
  98. Windeler 85
  99. 99.0 99.1 99.2 Edwards 357
  100. Windeler 105
  101. Thornton, Michael (April 18, 2008). Shirley Temple: the superstar who had her childhood destroyed by Hollywood. Daily mail. Retrieved August 15, 2012.
  102. Edwards 318, 356–7
  103. "Hollywood star Shirley Temple dies", 11 February 2014. Retrieved February 11, 2014.
  104. Shirley Temple, former Hollywood child star, dies at 85. Reuters. Retrieved February 11, 2014.
  105. Shirley Temple Dead At 85. Retrieved February 12, 2014.
  106. Shirley Temple Black. The National Board of Review. Archived from the original on 2011-07-27. Retrieved February 12, 2014.
  107. History of Past Honorees. The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. Retrieved February 12, 2014.
  108. Burdick 136
  109. Shirley Temple Black: 2005 Life Achievement Recipient. Screen Actors Guild. Archived from the original on 2008-09-07. Retrieved February 12, 2014.
  110. The Shirley Temple Monument. Nijart. Retrieved February 12, 2014.

Footnotes

Works cited

  • Balio, Tino [1993] (1995). Grand Design: Hollywood as a Modern Business Enterprise, 1930–1939. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-20334-8. 
  • Barrios, Richard (1995). A Song in the Dark: The Birth of the Musical Film. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-508810-7. 
  • Black, Shirley Temple [1988] (1989). Child Star: An Autobiography. Warner Books, Inc.. ISBN 0-446-35792-8. 
  • Burdick, Loraine (2003). The Shirley Temple Scrapbook. Jonathan David Publishers, Inc.. ISBN 0-8246-0449-0. 
  • Dawicki, Shelley (August 10, 2005). In Memoriam: Charles A. Black. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Retrieved February 10, 2011.
  • Edwards, Anne (1988). Shirley Temple: American Princess. William Morrow and Company, Inc.. ISBN 068806051X. 
  • Life Staff (1946-09-16). Tempest Over Temple: Shirley sips liquor and the W.C.T.U. protests. Life 21 (12).
  • (1996) Shirley Temple: The Biggest Little Star, Biography. A&E Television Networks. ISBN 0-7670-8495-0. 
  • Windeler, Robert [1978] (1992). The Films of Shirley Temple. Carol Publishing Group. ISBN 0-8065-0725-X. 
  • (2000) in Zipes, Jack: The Oxford Companion to Fairy Tales. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-9653635-7-0. 


Bibliography

  • Basinger, Jeanine (1993). A Woman's View: How Hollywood Spoke to Women, 1930–1960. Wesleyan University Press, 262ff. ISBN 0394563514. 
  • Bogle, Donald [1974] (2001). Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, Mammies, and Bucks: An Interpretive History of Blacks in American Films. The Continuum International Publishing Group Inc., 45–52. ISBN 0-8264-1267-X. 
  • Cook, James W. (2008). The Cultural Turn in U.S. History: Past, Present, and Future. University of Chicago Press, 186ff. ISBN 978-0-226-11506-1. 
  • Everett, Charles (2004). Shirley Temple and the House of Rockefeller. Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary Media (2): 1, 17–20.
  • (1996) in Thomson, Rosemarie Garland: Freakery: Cultural Spectacles of the Extraordinary Body. New York University Press, 185–203. ISBN 0-8147-8217-5. 


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Preceded by:
None
Academy Juvenile Award
1934
Succeeded by:
Deanna Durbin and Mickey Rooney
1938
Preceded by:
James Garner
Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award
2005
Succeeded by:
Julie Andrews
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by:
Fred L. Hadsel
United States Ambassador to Ghana
1974–1976
Succeeded by:
Robert P. Smith
Preceded by:
Henry E. Catto, Jr.
Chief of Protocol of the United States
1976–1977
Succeeded by:
Evan Dobelle
Preceded by:
Julian Niemczyk
United States Ambassador to Czechoslovakia
1989–1992
Succeeded by:
Adrian A. Basora

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