
Frieda Inescort
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Frieda Inescort (born Frieda Wrightman, 29 June 1901 – 26 February 1976) was a Scottish-born actress best known for creating the role of Sorel Bliss in Noël Coward's play Hay Fever on Broadway. She also played the shingled lady in John Galsworthy's 1927 Broadway production Escape. Inescort's acting debut came in The Truth About Blayds (1922), which was...
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Frieda Inescort (born Frieda Wrightman, 29 June 1901 – 26 February 1976) was a Scottish-born actress best known for creating the role of Sorel Bliss in Noël Coward's play Hay Fever on Broadway. She also played the shingled lady in John Galsworthy's 1927 Broadway production Escape. Inescort's acting debut came in The Truth About Blayds (1922), which was...
Known For
A Place in the Sun
as Mrs. Ann Vickers
The Letter
as Dorothy Joyce
Pride and Prejudice
as Miss Caroline Bingley
Cast Credits
The Crowded Sky
as Mrs. Mitchell
Juke Box Rhythm
as Aunt Margaret
The Alligator People
as Mrs. Lavinia Hawthorne
Senior Prom
as Mrs. Sherridan
The She-Creature
as Mrs. Chappel
The Eddy Duchin Story
as Edith Wadsworth
Flame of the Islands
as Evelyn Hammond
Foxfire
as Mrs. Lawrence
Casanova's Big Night
as Signora Di Gambetta
Never Wave at a WAC
as Lily Mae Gorham
A Place in the Sun
as Mrs. Ann Vickers
The Underworld Story
as Mrs. Eldridge
The Judge Steps Out
as Evelyn Bailey
Heavenly Days
as Ettie Clark
The Return of the Vampire
as Lady Jane Ainsley
Mission to Moscow
as Madame Molotov (uncredited)
It Comes Up Love
as Portia Winthrop
The Amazing Mrs. Holliday
as Karen Holliday
Street of Chance
as Alma Diedrich
Sweater Girl
as Mrs. Menard
The Courtship of Andy Hardy
as Olivia Nesbit
Remember the Day
as Mrs. Dewey Roberts
You'll Never Get Rich
as Mrs. Julia Cortland
Sunny
as Elizabeth Warren
Shadows on the Stairs
as Mrs. Stella Rosabelle Armitage
The Trial of Mary Dugan
as Mrs. Wayne
Father's Son
as Ruth Emory
The Letter
as Dorothy Joyce
Pride and Prejudice
as Miss Caroline Bingley
Convicted Woman
as Attorney Mary Ellis