Home Video Artist Biography: Wynne Gibson

Wynne Gibson

Wynne Gibson ( July 3rd, 1905 - May 15th, 1987)
a.k.a. Winifred Gibson


Wynne Gibson ran away from home at the age of 15, almost immediately securing work as a chorus girl. She went the vaudeville-stock-Broadway route before making her talking-picture bow in the 1929 film version of Nothing But the Truth. Gibson spent the first half of the 1930s under contract to Paramount, where she played golden-hearted sporting ladies, slinky "other women" and occasional murderesses. Film buffs will instantly recall Gibson as the waterfront prostitute in If I Had a Million (1932), who, upon being given a million-dollar check, immediately rents a lavish hotel room, where she spends her first night in bed alone--but not before disdainfully removing her stockings. Her career in eclipse in the 1940s, Gibson accepted a few lower-paying assignments in such "B"s as The Falcon Strike Back (1942) before retiring from films altogether in 1943. Wynne Gibson then embarked on a long career as an actor's agent, occasionally accepting TV and radio roles and serving as the chairperson of New York's Equity Library Theatre. Hal Erickson

Bestselling Movie

Cover Image

Carole Lombard: the Glamour Collection
DVD

  • List Price: $26.99
    Online Price: $26.99
    Members Pay: $24.29
  • skip to cart
    • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=25192845420&productCode=DV&maxCount=100&threshold=3
.