Anne Baxter Filmography


Anne Baxter was born May 7th, 1923 in Michigan City, Indiana.  She was the daughter of a salesman and his wife, Catherine, who herself was the daughter of Frank Lloyd Wright, the world-renowned architect. n 1942 Anne played Joseph Cotten's daughter, Lucy Morgan, in The Magnificent Ambersons (1942). The following year she appeared in The North Star (1943), the first film where she received top billing. In 1946 Anne portrayed Sophie MacDonald in The Razor's Edge (1946), a film that would land her an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. After several films through the 1950s, Anne landed what many considered a plum role--Queen Nefretiri in Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments (1956). Never in her Hollywood career did Anne look as beautiful as she did as the Egyptian queen, opposite Charlton Heston and Yul Brynner.

She died December 12th, 1985 in New York City, New York of a brain aneurysm.


           Icons next to movie title indicate medium if in collection.

The Masks of Death (1984) (TV) .... Irene Adler/Mrs. Norton

Jane Austen in Manhattan (1980) .... Lilliana Zorska

Nero Wolfe (1979) (TV) .... Mrs. Rachael Bruner

Little Mo (1978) (TV) .... Jessamyn Connolly

"Arthur Hailey's the Moneychangers" (1976) (mini) TV Series .... Edwina Dorsey

Lisa, Bright and Dark (1973) (TV) .... Margaret Schilling

The Catcher (1972) (TV) .... Kate

If Tomorrow Comes (1971) (TV) .... Miss Cramer

The Late Liz (1971) .... Liz Addams Hatch

Fools' Parade

1971 - Columbia Pictures

Main Cast: James Stewart, George Kennedy, Anne Baxter, Kurt Russell.   Directed by Andrew V. McLaglen.  Produced by Columbia Pictures.

Just as they did for 1965's Shenandoah and 1968's Bandolero!, director Andrew V. McLaglen and screenwriter James Lee Barrett team up with actor James Stewart for this Western about a band of ex-convicts trying to go straight. Stewart stars as Mattie Appleyard, the leader of the group. After serving his time, Mattie retrieves a 25,000-dollar check from a banker who looked after his funds while he was in prison. Along with his two pals, Mattie intends to use the money to open up a general store and make a fresh start. Unfortunately for them, the banker and a former jailer both look to stand in the way of their dreams. George Kennedy, who also had roles in Shenandoah and Bandolero!, co-stars as Dock Council, the former prison official, and a young Kurt Russell appears in one of his first non-Disney films.

Ritual of Evil (1970) (TV) .... Jolene Wiley

The Challengers (1970) (TV) .... Stephanie York

Companions in Nightmare (1968) (TV) .... Carlotta Mauridge

Stranger on the Run (1967) (TV) .... Valverda Johnson

The Busy Body (1967) .... Margo Foster

Frauen, die durch die Hölle gehen (1966) .... Mary Ann

The Family Jewels (1965) (uncredited) .... Actress in In-Flight Movie

Mix Me a Person (1962) .... Dr. Anne Dyson

Walk on the Wild Side

1962 - Columbia Pictures

Main Cast: Laurence Harvey, Capucine, Jane Fonda, Anne Baxter, Barbara Stanwyck . Directed by Edward Dmytryk.  Produced by Columbia Pictures.

This moody and controversial drama takes place in Depression-era New Orleans. Dove (Laurence Harvey) has traveled by bus from Texas to find his wayward lover Hallie (Capucine). He meets young Kitty Twist (Jane Fonda) as the two get off in the crescent city. Teresina (Anne Baxter) gives him a job at her small cafe. In his free time, Dove searches for Hallie and finds her at work as a prostitute in the Doll's House. Dove implores Hallie to return to him but she refuses. When the lecherous lesbian madame Jo (Barbara Stanwyck) discovers Dove's intentions towards Hallie, she has him beaten to a bloody pulp by her hired goons. He is found by Kitty, now a happy hooker at the Doll House, and is taken back to the cafe where the compassionate Teresina heals his physical and emotional wounds. The film taken from the novel by Nelson Algren is much tamer than the original text. The title track, sung by Brook Benton, was nominated for an Academy Award. The "black-cat stalking" opening and closing sequences (by designer Saul Bass) is a perfect little "film-within-a-film." This footage, with its superb lighting, framing, panning, and editing, should be appreciated by anyone who wants to know more about the art of cinematography.

Cimarron (1960) .... Dixie Lee (owner, Dixie's Social Club)

Summer of the Seventeenth Doll (1959) .... Olive

Three Violent People (1957) .... Lorna Hunter Saunders

Chase a Crooked Shadow (1957) .... Kimberley Prescott

The Ten Commandments

1956 - Paramount

Main Cast: Charlton Heston, Yul Brynner, Edward G. Robinson, Anne Baxter. Directed by Cecil B. DeMille. Produced by Paramount.

Based on the Holy Scriptures, with additional dialogue by several other hands, The Ten Commandments was the last film directed by Cecil B. DeMille. The story relates the life of Moses, from the time he was discovered in the bullrushes as an infant by the pharoah's daughter, to his long, hard struggle to free the Hebrews from their slavery at the hands of the Egyptians. Moses (Charlton Heston) starts out "in solid" as Pharoah's adopted son (and a whiz at designing pyramids, dispensing such construction-site advice as "Blood makes poor mortar"), but when he discovers his true Hebrew heritage, he attempts to make life easier for his people. Banished by his jealous half-brother Rameses (Yul Brynner), Moses returns fully bearded to Pharoah's court, warning that he's had a message from God and that the Egyptians had better free the Hebrews post-haste if they know what's good for them. Only after the Deadly Plagues have decimated Egypt does Rameses give in. As the Hebrews reach the Red Sea, they discover that Rameses has gone back on his word and plans to have them all killed. But Moses rescues his people with a little Divine legerdemain by parting the Seas. Later, Moses is again confronted by God on Mt. Sinai, who delivers unto him the Ten Commandments. Meanwhile, the Hebrews, led by the duplicitous Dathan (Edward G. Robinson), are forgetting their religion and behaving like libertines. "Where's your Moses now?" brays Dathan in the manner of a Lower East Side gangster. He soon finds out. A remake of his 1923 silent film, DeMille's The Ten Commandments may not be the most subtle and sophisticated entertainment ever concocted, but it tells its story with a clarity and vitality that few Biblical scholars have ever been able to duplicate. It is very likely the most eventful 219 minutes ever recorded to film--and who's to say that Nefertiri (Anne Baxter) didn't make speeches like, "Oh, Moses, Moses, you splendid, stubborn, adorable fool"?

The Come On (1956) .... Rita

The Spoilers (1955) .... Cherry Malotte

One Desire

1955 - Ross Hunter Productions / Universal

Main Cast: Anne Baxter, Rock Hudson, Julie Adams, Natalie Wood, William Hopper, Betty Garde, Barry Curtis.  Directed by Jerry Hooper.  Produced by Ross Hunter Productions / Universal.

The "one desire" of ex-gamblers Rock Hudson and Anne Baxter is to escape their shady former lives and settle down to respectability. Rock and Baxter move to a small town, with Hudson's younger brother (Barry Curtis) and an orphaned girl (Natalie Wood) in tow. Julie Adams, daughter of the town banker, set her sights on Hudson and tries to win him away from Baxter. Adams dies in a convenient-to-the-plotline fire, but everybody else lives happily ever after. Conrad Richter's novel Tracey Cromwell was the base for this 1890s soap opera, produced by Ross Hunter with a veneer of class that the material itself lacks.

Bedevilled (1955) .... Monica Johnson

Rummelplatz der Liebe (1954) (uncredited)

Carnival Story (1954) .... Willie

The Blue Gardenia (1953) .... Norah Larkin

I Confess

1953 - Warner Brothers

Main Cast: Montgomery Clift, Anne Baxter, Karl Malden, Brian Aherne, O.E. Hasse. Directed by Alfred Hitchcock.  Produced by Warner Brothers.

Based on the turn-of-the-century play Our Two Consciences by Paul Anthelme, Hitchcock's I Confess is set in Quebec. Montgomery Clift plays a priest who hears the confession of church sexton O.E. Hasse. "I...killed...a man" whispers Hasse in tight closeup--and, bound by the laws of the Confessional, Clift is unable to turn Hasse over to the police. But police-inspector Karl Malden has a pretty good idea who the guilty party is: all evidence points to Clift. It seems that the dead man had been blackmailing Anne Baxter, who was once in a factually innocent, but seemingly exploitable compromising position with Clift. Tried for murder, Clift is released due to lack of evidence, but he is ruined in the eyes of the community. Then it is Hasse's turn to make that One Fatal Error. I Confess is frequently dismissed as a lesser Hitchcock, due mainly to the quirky performance of Montgomery Clift (who, it is said, steadfastly refused to take direction). Today, four decades removed from its on-set intrigues, the film has taken its place as one of the best of Hitchcock's "between the classics" efforts.

My Wife's Best Friend (1952) .... Virginia Mason

O. Henry's Full House (1952) .... Joanna Goodwin (The Last Leaf)

The Outcasts of Poker Flat (1952) .... Cal

Follow the Sun

1951 - 20th Century Fox

Main Cast: Glenn Ford, Anne Baxter. Directed by Sidney Lanfield. Produced by 20th Century Fox.

Follow the Sun is the filmed biography of golf champion Ben Hogan. Glenn Ford, no mean duffer himself, stars as Hogan, here depicted as a single-purposed individual to whom golf is everything. Anne Baxter co-stars as Hogan's supportive wife Valerie, who sticks with him through thick and thin. On the brink of his greatest success, Hogan is seriously injured in an auto accident. His recovery and return to the links provides the dramatic momentum of the film's final reels. Co-starring as themselves in Follow the Suns are such golfing legends as Sam Snead, Jimmy Demaret, and Dr. Cary Middlecoff. An uncredited Harold Blake appears as Ben Hogan at the age of 14.

All About Eve

1950 - 20th Century Fox

Main Cast: Bette Davis, Anne Baxter, George Sanders, Celeste Holm, Gary Merrill, Hugh Marlowe, Thelma Ritter, Marilyn Monroe . Directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz.  Produced by 20th Century Fox.

Based on the story The Wisdom of Eve by Mary Orr, All About Eve is an elegantly bitchy backstage story revolving around aspiring actress Eve Harrington (Anne Baxter). Tattered and forlorn, Eve shows up in the dressing room of Broadway mega-star Margo Channing (Bette Davis), weaving a melancholy life story to Margo and her friends. Taking pity on the girl, Margo takes Eve as her personal assistant. Before long, it becomes apparent that naïve Eve is a Machiavellian conniver who cold-bloodedly uses Margo, her director Bill Sampson (Gary Merill), Lloyd's wife Karen (Celeste Holm), and waspish critic Addison De Witt (George Sanders) to rise to the top of the theatrical heap. Also appearing in All About Eve is Marilyn Monroe, introduced by Addison De Witt as "a graduate of the Copacabana school of dramatic art." This is but one of the hundreds of unforgettable lines penned by writer/director Joseph L. Mankiewicz, the most famous of which is Margo Channing's lip-sneering admonition, "Fasten your seat belts. It's going to be a bumpy night." All About Eve received 6 Academy Awards, including Best Picture.

A Ticket to Tomahawk (1950) .... Kit Dodge Jr.

You're My Everything (1949) .... Hannah Adams

Yellow Sky (1948) .... Constance Mae 'Mike'

The Luck of the Irish

1948 - 20th Century Fox

Main Cast: Tyrone Power, Anne Baxter, Cecil Kellaway, Lee J. Cobb, James Todd, Jayne Meadows. Directed by Henry Koster.  Produced by 20th Century Fox.

A semi-fantasy with sociological overtones, The Luck of the Irish stars Tyrone Power as an American journalist named Stephen Fitzgerald visiting the home of his ancestors in Ireland. Power encounters a jolly old man (Cecil Kellaway) who claims to be a leprechaun -- and proves it to the journalist's satisfaction. The leprechaun trails Stephen to New York, smooths the path of romance between Stephen and lovely Nora (Anne Baxter), and watches in dismay as Stephen becomes the tool of a quasi-fascistic publisher. The journalist comes to his senses thanks to the leprechaun's intervention and goes to work for a more liberal publication. He heads back to Ireland with new wife, Nora, and the beneficent leprechaun. The Luck of the Irish was based on a novel by Guy and Constance Jones, who probably would have been blacklisted when the political winds of Hollywood shifted a few years later.

The Walls of Jericho (1948) .... Julia Norman

Homecoming

1948 - MGM / Sidney Franklin Productions

Main Cast: Clark Gable, Lana Turner, Anne Baxter. Directed by Mervyn LeRoy. Produced by MGM / Sidney Franklin Productions.

When Homecoming was first released in 1948, some observers felt that Clark Gable's unusually sensitive performance was based on his own memories of losing his wife Carole Lombard in a 1942 plane crash. Intriguingly, Gable's Homecoming co-star is Lana Turner, with whom it was rumored that he was having an affair at the time of Lombard's death. Told in flashback, the story concerns the romance of war-time army surgeon Ulysses Delby Johnson (Gable) and Red Cross nurse Lt. Jane "Snapshot" McCall (Turner). Though married, Johnson cannot help to be drawn to Jane as they slog through the hellish battlegrounds of Italy and France. As the war draws to a close, Johnson is faced with a dilemma: how can he find happiness with Jane without bringing misery to his beloved wife Penny (Anne Baxter). As it turns out, Fate intervenes to solve Johnson's problem. Though well-acted and directed, Homecoming is just too thin to be spread out over 12 reels.

Mother Wore Tights (1947) (voice) (uncredited) .... Narrator

Blaze of Noon (1947) .... Lucille Stewart

The Razor's Edge

1946 - 20th Century Fox

Main Cast: Tyrone Power, Gene Tierney, Walter Bonn, John Payne, Anne Baxter, Eugene Borden, Clifton Webb. Directed by Edmund Goulding. Produced by 20th Century Fox.

After several years' service with the Marines in World War II, Tyrone Power made his much anticipated return to the screen in The Razor's Edge. Power is appropriately cast as disillusioned World War I vet Larry Darrell, who returns from hostilities questioning his old values. To find himself, Larry joins several other members of the Lost Generation in Paris. He is disillusioned once more when the society deb whom he loves, Isabel Bradley (Gene Tierney), marries another for wealth and position. She returns to Larry's life to break up his romance with unstable, alcoholic Sophie MacDonald (Anne Baxter in a powerhouse Oscar-winning performance). After Sophie's death, Larry determines that the life offered him by Isabel is not to his liking, and continues seeking his true place in the scheme of things. Acting as a respite between the plot's various intrigues is Clifton Webb as a waspish social arbiter, who ends up a lonely, dying man, imperiously dictating arrangements for his own funeral. The Razor's Edge was based on the novel by W. Somerset Maugham, who appears onscreen in the form of Herbert Marshall. The film would be remade in 1984, with Bill Murray in the Tyrone Power role. This film re-teamed Tierney and Webb two years after their appearance together in Laura.

Angel On My Shoulder

1946 - United Artists

Main Cast: Paul Muni, Anne Baxter, Claude Rains, Onslow Stevens, George Cleveland. Directed by Archie Mayo.  Produced by United Artists.

In this comedy, Paul Muni plays a recently murdered gangster who finds himself roasting in Hell. Muni can't believe that he's in for All Eternity and keeps trying to "bust out," which brings him to the attention of the Head Man (Claude Rains), who calls himself Nick. Nick strikes a bargain with Muni: There's a troublesome honest judge on Earth who's been shipping too many souls to Hell; if Muni will take over the judge's body and begin performing bad deeds, Nick will set him free. Muni readily agrees, eager to settle the score with the ex-partner (Hardie Albright) who bumped him off. Once he "becomes" the judge, however, Muni discovers that he is utterly incapable of performing any misdeeds--and when he falls in love with the judge's fiancee (Anne Baxter), Muni becomes determined to wriggle out of his agreement. Angel on My Shoulder is based on a story by Harry Segall, whose previous play Heaven Can Wait was filmed as Here Comes Mr. Jordan, also with Claude Rains.

Smoky (1946) .... Julie Richards

A Royal Scandal (1945) .... Countess Anna Jaschikoff

Guest in the House (1944) .... Evelyn Heath

Sunday Dinner for a Soldier

1944 - 20th Century Fox

Main Cast: Anne Baxter, John Hodiak, Charles Winninger, Anne Revere, Chill Wills. Directed by Lloyd Bacon.  Produced by 20th Century Fox.

Charles Winninger plays an old seaman who rules the roost in his family, which resides on a Florida houseboat. His oldest granddaughter (Anne Baxter) draws up plans to invite a serviceman for Sunday dinner, just before the boy will be shipped out. Because of their ramshackle lifestyle, Winninger's brood has trouble getting a soldier to accept their hospitality until lonely, defensive GI John Hodiak comes along. Nothing much happens thereafter that isn't totally expected, including Hodiak's changing his outlook on life and falling in love with the granddaughter. Sunday Dinner for a Soldier is the sort of laid-back, anecdotal film that was indigenous to Hollywood's "feel-good" brand of wartime entertainment.

The Eve of St. Mark (1944) .... Janet Feller

The Fighting Sullivans

1944 - 20th Century Fox

Main Cast: Edward Ryan, John Campbell, James B. Cardwell, John Alvin, George Offerman Jr., Thomas Mitchell, Selena Royle, Anne Baxter. Directed by Lloyd Bacon. Produced by 20th Century Fox.

The Sullivans attempts to find the positives in one of the most tragic chapters of World War II. Edward Ryan, John Campbell, James B. Cardwell, John Alvin and George Offerman Jr. play the Sullivan brothers, sons of an Iowa railroad worker (Thomas Mitchell) and his wife (Selena Royle). The film traces the boys from childhood, maintaining a relatively lighthearted tone until the Sullivans sign up en masse for the navy at the outbreak of the war. Refusing to be separated, the boys are all assigned to the cruiser Juneau--and all are killed when the vessel goes down at Guadalcanal. This appalling incident (which made something of a celebrity of the brothers' grieving father when he went on a nationwide patriotic lecture tour) resulted in the Navy's decision to never again allowed all the enlisted members of one family to serve on the same ship. Even from the vantage point of fifty years, the scene in which the family receives the wire from the war department is impossible to watch with a dry eye.

The North Star

1943 - RKO Radio Pictures

Main Cast: Anne Baxter, Walter Huston, Dana Andrews, Erich Von Stroheim. Directed by Lewis Milestone. Produced by RKO Radio Pictures.

In this bit of WWII propaganda (designed to boost support of America's alliance with Russia against Germany), Kolya (Dana Andrews), Kurin (Walter Huston), Damian (Farley Granger), and Marina (Anne Baxter) are members of a farming collective in the Ukraine known as the North Star. The hard-working but happy members of the North Star find their way of life shattered when Germany, in defiance of previous treaties, storms the nation and begins a brutal occupation. Dr. Otto Von Harden (Erich Von Stroheim) begins gathering children -- who are to be used for blood transfusions and medical experiments. Many of the outraged farmers take to the hills to fight with the anti-Nazi resistance, while those who stay behind bravely destroy precious crops and materiel rather than turn them over to the Nazi war machine. Producer Samuel Goldwyn made The North Star at the request of President Franklin D. Roosevelt (whose son James was an executive at Goldwyn's studio). Ironically, several members of the film's creative team (including screenwriter Lilian Hellman) later found their motivations for making the film questioned by the House Un-American Activities Committee, who declared it Communist propaganda.

Five Graves to Cairo (1943) .... Mouche

Crash Dive

1943 - 20th Century Fox

Main Cast: Tyrone Power, Anne Baxter, Minor Watson, Dana Andrews. Directed by Archie Mayo. Produced by 20th Century Fox.

Tyrone Power made his last screen appearance before a three-year stretch in the Marines in this World War II drama. Lt. Ward Stewart (Tyrone Power) has served with distinction as the commander of a PT boat, so his uncle, Adm. Bob Stewart (Minor Watson), gives him a new and more challenging assignment aboard a submarine. Before shipping out, Ward enjoys a night on the town, where he meets and romances a pretty schoolteacher, Jean Hewlett (Anne Baxter). However, when Ward reports for duty, he discovers he'll be serving under Lt. Cmdr. Dewey Connors (Dana Andrews), who happens to be Jean's boyfriend. On leave and on land, Ward and Dewey are soon caught up in a romantic rivalry, while on duty and under the water they must work together to ferret out Nazi U-boats. Crash Dive received an Academy Award nomination for the special effects work in the film's battle sequences.

The Magnificent Ambersons (1942) .... Lucy

The Pied Piper (1942) .... Nicole Rougeron

Swamp Water (1941) .... Julie

Charley's Aunt (1941) .... Amy Spettigue

The Great Profile (1940) .... Mary Maxwell

20 Mule Team (1940) .... Joan Johnson