24 January 2026

Maureen O’Hara

Irish-born Maureen O’Hara (1920-2015) was one of the icons of Hollywood’s Golden Age. The feisty and fearless actress starred in John Ford’s Oscar-winning drama How Green Was My Valley (1941), set in Wales, and Ford’s Irish-set The Quiet Man (1952) opposite John Wayne. The famously red-headed actress also worked successfully with Charles Laughton at Jamaica Inn (1939) and The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1939), starred in the perennial Christmas classic Miracle on 34th Street (1947), and appeared in the Disney children’s hit The Parent Trap (1961).

Maureen O´Hara
Italian postcard by Rotalfoto, Milano, no. 314. Photo: Universal International.

Maureen O'Hara (1920-2015)
British postcard, London, no. FS 200. Photo: Pommer-Laughton 'Mayflower' production. Publicity still for Jamaica Inn (Alfred Hitchcock, 1939).

Maureen O'Hara (1920-2015)
British postcard in the Picturegoer Series, London, no. W 561. Photo: 20th Century Fox.

Maureen O'Hara
Italian postcard by Bromofoto, Milano, no. 297. Photo: Universal International. Collection: Marlene Pilaete.

Maureen O´Hara
Italian postcard by Rotalcolor / Rotalfoto, Milano, no. N. 152.

Alfred Hitchcock


Maureen O’Hara was born Maureen FitzSimons in the Dublin suburb of Ranelagh, Ireland, in 1920. Her mother, Marguerita Lilburn FitzSimons, was an accomplished contralto. Her father, Charles FitzSimons, managed a business in Dublin and also owned part of the renowned Irish soccer team, The Shamrock Rovers.

From the age of 6 to 17, Maureen trained in drama, music and dance, and at the age of 10, she joined the Rathmines Theatre Company and worked in amateur theatre in the evenings after her lessons. O'Hara's dream at this time was to be a stage actress. By age 14, she was accepted to the prestigious Abbey Theatre and pursued her dream of classical theatre and operatic singing.

Her first screen test was for a British film called Kicking the Moon Around (Walter Forde, 1938) at Elstree Studios. It was arranged by American bandleader Harry Richman, who was then appearing in Dublin. The result was deemed unsatisfactory, but when Charles Laughton later saw it, he was intrigued by her large and expressive eyes.

Laughton arranged for her to co-star with him in the British film Jamaica Inn (Alfred Hitchcock, 1939). Laughton was so pleased with O'Hara's performance that she was cast in the role of Esmeralda opposite him in the Hollywood production of The Hunchback of Notre Dame (William Dieterle, 1939). The epic film was an extraordinary success, and international audiences were now alerted to her natural beauty and talent.

From there, she went on to enjoy a long and highly successful career in Hollywood. Director John Ford cast her as Angharad in How Green Was My Valley (1941), which won the Academy Award for Best Picture. O’Hara was often an example of noble and defiant womanhood, like in This Land Is Mine (Jean Renoir, 1943). In this film, she was reunited with Laughton, who plays a mother-dominated schoolteacher secretly in love with O’Hara, a colleague who is working for the wartime resistance.

Maureen O´Hara
Italian postcard by Rotalfoto, Milano, no. 314. Photo: Universal International.

Maureen O'Hara (1920-2015)
Dutch postcard by J.S.A. Photo: M.P.E.

Maureen O'Hara (1920-2015)
French postcard by Editions P.I., Paris, no. 715. Photo: H.P.S.

Maureen O´Hara
French postcard by Editions P.I., Paris, no. 400. Photo: Paramount, 1952.

Maureen O´Hara
Italian postcard by Rotalfoto, Milano, no. 154. Photo: RKO Radio.

John Wayne


Maureen O'Hara starred in Swashbucklers such as The Black Swan (Henry King, 1942), opposite Tyrone Power, and Sinbad the Sailor (Richard Wallace, 1947), with Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. She also starred as Doris Walker and the mother of a young Natalie Wood in Miracle on 34th Street (George Seaton, 1947), which became a perennial Christmas classic.

O'Hara made a number of films with John Wayne. She met Wayne through director John Ford, and the two hit it right off. O'Hara: "I adored him, and he loved me. But we were never sweethearts. Never, ever.”

Opposite Wayne, she played Mary Kate Danaher in The Quiet Man (John Ford, 1952), an iconic film that is still very much celebrated in Ireland and abroad. In total, they made five films together between 1948 and 1972, also including Rio Grande (John Ford, 1950), The Wings of Eagles (John Ford, 1957), McLintock! (Andrew V. McLaglen, 1963) and Big Jake (George Sherman, 1971).

O’Hara most often played strong and wilful women, but offscreen, she was the same. In 1957, her career was threatened by scandal when the tabloid Confidential magazine claimed she and a man had engaged in 'the hottest show in town' in the back row of Hollywood’s Grauman’s Chinese Theatre. However, as she later told the Associated Press, at the time she “was making a movie in Spain, and I had the passport to prove it”.

Maureen O'Hara testified against the gossip magazine in a criminal libel trial and brought a lawsuit that was settled out of court. Confidential magazine eventually went out of business.

Maureen O´Hara
Italian postcard by Bromofoto, Milano, no. 955. Photo: Columbia. Maureen O’Hara in The Long Gray Line (John Ford, 1955). The Italian title was La lunga linea grigia.

Maureen O'Hara (1920-2015)
Dutch postcard by Gebr. Spanjersberg N.V., Rotterdam, no. 2028. Photo: Columbia Film / Ufa.

Maureen O'Hara (1920-2015)
Dutch postcard by Gebr. Spanjersberg N.V., Rotterdam, no. 2029. Photo: Columbia Film / Ufa.

Maureen O´Hara
Dutch postcard. Photo: Paramount.

Maureen O´Hara
German postcard by Starfoto Hasemann, no. 748. Photo: RKO Radio.

John Candy's domineering mother


Maureen O'Hara was married three times. In 1939, at the age of 19, O'Hara secretly married Englishman George H. Brown, a film producer, production assistant and occasional scriptwriter, whom she had met on the set of Jamaica Inn. The marriage was annulled in 1941.

Later that year, O'Hara married William Houston Price, the dialogue director of The Hunchback of Notre Dame, but the union ended in 1953, reportedly as a result of his alcohol abuse. They had one child, a daughter named Bronwyn FitzSimons Price (1944).

In later life, Maureen O’Hara married her third husband, Brigadier General Charles Blair. The couple lived in the US Virgin Islands, where he operated an airline. He died in a plane crash in 1978, and O’Hara took over management of the airline, which she eventually sold. “Being married to Charlie Blair and travelling all over the world with him, believe me, was enough for any woman,” she said in 1995. “It was the best time of my life.”

O'Hara remained retired from acting until 1991, when she starred in the film Only the Lonely (Chris Columbus, 1991), playing Rose Muldoon, the domineering mother of a Chicago cop played by John Candy. Ronald Bergan in his obituary in The Guardian: "She acted everyone else off the screen, a reminder of just how much the cinema had missed her." In the following years, she continued to work, starring in several made-for-TV films.

Her autobiography, ''Tis Herself', was published in 2004 and was a New York Times Bestseller. In 2005, she moved back to Ireland, settling in her house on a 35-acre estate, Lugdine Park, in West Cork, which she had bought with Blair in 1970. In 2012, she returned to the US to be closer to her family as her health declined. She was never nominated for an Oscar, instead being given an honorary award in 2014. After accepting her statuette from a wheelchair, the then 94-year-old star protested when her speech of thanks was cut short. Maureen O'Hara died in her sleep at home in Boise, Idaho. She is survived by her daughter, Bronwyn, and by a grandson and two great-grandchildren.

The Quiet Man (1952)
Italian collector card by G.B. Pezziol, Padova / Stab. Pezzini, Milano. Photo: Republic Pictures. John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara in The Quiet Man (John Ford, 1952), released in Italy as Un uomo tranquillo.

Maureen O'Hara and Jeff Chandler in War Arrow (1953)
Yugoslav postcard by Sedma Sila. Photo: IOM, Beograd. Maureen O'Hara and Jeff Chandler in War Arrow (George Sherman, 1953).

Maureen O´Hara in Lady Godiva of Coventry (1955)
Dutch postcard, no. 198. Photo: Universal-International. Publicity still for Lady Godiva of Coventry (Arthur Lubin, 1955).


Trailer for Jamaica Inn (Alfred Hitchcock, 1939). Source: Cohen Film Collection (YouTube).


Trailer for The Quiet Man (John Ford, 1952). Source: Eurekaentertainment (YouTube).

Maureen O'Hara in Lisbon (1956)
German flyer, cover of a special issue ofIllustrierte Film-Bühne, no. 3496. Photos: Republic. Maureen O'Hara and Ray Milland in Lisbon (Ray Milland, 1956). The film was distrubuted in Germany under the title Geheimzentrale Lissabon by Gloria / Naturama.

Sources: Ronald Bergan (The Guardian), Wikipedia and IMDb.

23 January 2026

Silvana Pampanini

Stunning Italian actress Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016) enjoyed enormous popularity in the 1950s and 1960s. In the early 1950s, before Sophia Loren and Gina Lollobrigida reached stardom, Pampanini was one of the most well-known symbols of Italian beauty.

Silvana Pampanini
Italian postcard by B.F.F. Edit. (Casa Editr. Ballerini & Fratini, Firenze), no. 2844. Photo: Minerva Film.

Silvana Pampanini
French postcard by Editions du Globe (E.D.U.G.), no. 462. Photo: Sam Lévin.

Silvana Pampanini
French postcard by Editions du Globe (E.D.U.G.), no. 348. Photo: Sam Lévin.

Silvana Pampanini
French postcard by Editions P.I., Paris, no. 494. Photo: Sam Lévin.

Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016)
Belgian collector card by Merbotex, Bruxelles / Ciné Rio, Flénu, no. 30. Photo: Unitalia Films.

Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016)
Belgian collector card by Merbotex, Bruxelles / Palace Izegem, no. 19. Photo: Unitalia Films.

Silvana Pampanini
Italian postcard by Bromofoto, Milano, no. 970. Photo: ENIC.

The toast of weeklies and film magazines


Silvana Pampanini was born in Rome in 1925. Her family had moved there from the Veneto some three centuries ago.

Pampanini got her law degree during the war and visited the Conservatory of Santa Cecilia, where she got a degree in piano and song. As a singer, the young Pampanini made a career in entertainment music. Her songs were widespread on unique records, and she even got an audience with Pope Pio XII. Over the years, she was also a frequent visitor to the opera seasons. Her cousin was the soprano Rosetta Pampanini.

When the Second World War was over, her singing master inscribed her for the Miss Italia contest in Stresa in September 1946. She ended second, but the public reacted fiercely against the decision of the jury to elect Rossana Martini. For the public, Silvana should have been the winner, but the jury did not change its decision, and Martini stayed the official Miss Italia. However, for Pampanini, her Miss Italia Runner-up title was her introduction to a career in the cinema.

Pampanini made her debut in the film L’Apocalisse / Apocalypse (Giuseppe Maria Scottese, 1948) and went on to perform in various films, often musicals. She also became the toast of weeklies and film magazines. Her father, who originally had been against his daughter's acting career, became her agent. Even if she was dubbed in her first roles, Pampanini became a star.

The sexy actress performed with all the great actors of the postwar Italian cinema: Totò, Peppino De Filippo, Alberto Sordi, Vittorio De Sica, Marcello Mastroianni, Nino Manfredi, Vittorio Gassman, Walter Chiari, Amedeo Nazzari, Raf Vallone, Massimo Girotti, Ugo Tognazzi, Rossano Brazzi, and Massimo Serato.

Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016)
Italian postcard by Bromofoto, Milano, no. 274.

Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016)
Italian postcard by Bromofoto, Milano, no. 339. Photo: Minerva Film.

Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016)
Italian postcard by Bromofoto, Milano, no. 668. Sent by mail in 1966. Photo: Minerva Film.

Silvana Pampanini in Un giorno in pretura (1954)
Italian postcard by Bromofoto, Milano, no. 669. Photo: Minerva Film. Silvana Pampanini in Un giorno in pretura / A Day in Court (Steno, 1954).

Silvana Pampanini in La presidentessa (1952)
Italian postcard by Bromofoto, Milano, no. 715. Photo: Minerva Film. Silvana Pampanini in La presidentessa / Mademoiselle Gobete (Luciano Salce, 1952).

Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016)
Italian postcard by Rotalfoto, Milano, no. 125. Photo: Ponti - De Laurentiis.

Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016)
Italian postcard by Rotalfoto, Milano, no. 482. Sent by mail in 1960.

Silvana Pampanini
Italian postcard by Rotalfoto, Milano, no. 643.

Beauty on a bike


In the 1950s, Silvana Pampanini played in one film after another, and many of her films were distributed worldwide. Well known was, for instance, the Dino de Laurentiis production I pompieri di Viggiù / The Firemen of Viggiù (Mario Mattoli, 1949), with Totò. Ennio Flaiano considered it rather a series of Vaudeville acts than a film, and thus, preceding TV Vaudeville.

With the Quo vadis? parody OK Nerone/O.K. Nero (Mario Soldati, 1951), Pampanini had her first international success as Empress Poppea, opposite Gino Cervi as Nero, and Walter Chiari and Carlo Campanini as two American sailors who dream that they are in Nero’s Rome. In the romantic comedy Bellezze in bicicletta / Beauties on a Bike (Carlo Campogalliani, 1951), she formed a pair with Delia Scala and sang one of the most beloved songs of the time: 'Bellezza in bicicletta'.

In 1952, Pampanini performed in the much awarded Processo alla città / The City Stands Trial (Luigi Zampa, 1952), starring Amedeo Nazzari; La presidentessa / Mademoiselle Gobete (Pietro Germi, 1952), and La tratta delle bianche / White Slave Trade (Luigi Comencini, 1952). Her co-stars were Eleonora Rossi-Drago, Tamara Lees and (in a smaller part) Sophia Loren, but the leading men, Vittorio Gassman and Marc Lawrence, both had set their eyes on Silvana.

In 1953, Pampanini played in an episode of Un giorno in pretura / A Day in Court (Steno, 1953) for which her make-up man transformed her into a lady 30 years older. That year, she was also the title character in the melodrama Un marito per Anna Zaccheo / A Husband for Anna (Giuseppe de Santis, 1953), which costarred Amedeo Nazzari and Massimo Girotti.

In 1955, Pampanini performed opposite Alberto Sordi and Paolo Stoppa in the comedy La bella di Roma / The Belle of Rome (Luigi Comencini, 1955), and she played in the box office hit Racconti romani / Roman Tales (Gianni Franciolini, 1955), based on a story by Alberto Moravia, and starring Franco Fabrizi. Finally, Pampanini played in the Italian-Yugoslav coproduction La strada lunga un anno / The Year Long Road (Giuseppe De Santis, 1958), an Oscar candidate in 1959 and Golden Globe winner for Best Foreign Picture.

Silvana Pampanini
West German postcard by Netter's Starverlag, Berlin. Photo: Generalcine Film.

Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016)
German postcard by Ufa, Berlin-Tempelhof, no. FK 493. Photo: Vaselli, Roma / Generalcine Film. Publicity still for La donna che inventò l'amore / The Woman Who Invented Love (Ferruccio Cerio, 1952).

Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016)
German postcard by Ufa, Berlin-Tempelhof, no. FK 2246. Photo: Teddy Piaz, Paris.

Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016)
German postcard by Ufa, Berlin-Charlottenburg, no. FK 2247. Photo: Dial - Unitalia Film, Roma.

Silvana Pampanini
Franco-German card by Ufa, Berlin/ Editions P.I., Paris. Photo: Unitalia Film.

Silvana Pampanini in Bufere (1953)
German postcard by Kunst und Bild, Berlin, no. A 934. Photo: Poletto, Rome / DCF. Silvana Pampanini in Bufere / Fille dangereuse / Storms (Guido Brignone, 1953).

Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016)
German postcard by Kunst und Bild, Berlin, no. T 603. Photo: Döring Film GmbH. Publicity still for Königsmark (Solange Térac, 1953).

Declining diva


Even when she was in America, Silvana Pampanini refused to act in Hollywood, presumably because her English was not good enough. She did play in France, where she was known as Niní Pampan. Examples are La tour de Nesle / Tower of Lust (Abel Gance, 1955), in which she played Marguerite de Bourgogne opposite Pierre Brasseur as Jehan Buridan, and La loi des rues / Law of the Streets (Ralph Habib, 1956), with Raymond Pellegrin.

She also played in films in Spain, where she starred in La principessa delle Canarie/The Island Princess (Paolo Moffa, Carlos Serrano de Osma, 1954), Germany, Greece, Yugoslavia, Egypt, Argentine, and in particular in Mexico, where she played in some films that never were released in Italy, such as Sed de amor / Thirst for Love (Alfonso Corona Blake, 1959) with Pedro Armendariz, and the comedy Napoleoncito (Gilberto Martinez Solares, 1964).

In the meantime, the yellow press published about Pampanini's flirts with Prince Ahmad Shah Khan, Tyrone Power, William Holden, George DeWitt, Omar Sharif, Orson Welles, King Faruq of Egypt and others. Pampanini herself said that her one true love, a ten-year-older man, not involved in cinema and never identified, died of a disease one month before their wedding. After a brief experience as director and screenwriter in 1958, Pampanini slowed down her film career and focused on radio and TV, where she worked as announcer and host.

In 1964, Dino Risi directed her in Il gaucho / The Gaucho (Dino Risi, 1964), a partly autobiographical film in which Silvana played a declining diva who pathetically searches for her lost glory and for a millionaire to marry. In 1966, after a career of twenty years, Pampanini retired in order to assist her ageing parents, whom she took care of till their deaths. She returned for one last role as a prostitute in an episode of Mazzabubù... Quante corna stanno quaggiù? (Mariano Laurenti, 1971), with Giancarlo Giannini and Sylva Koscina. After that, she was only visible once more, as herself in Tassinaro (Alberto Sordi, 1983).

In the TV mini-series Tre stelle (Pier Francesco Pingitore, 1999), she had a bit part as the old mother of Alba Parietti, and in the fall of 2002, she hosted the TV show Domenica In for two months. Pampanini was devoted to Padre Pio and San Antonio. She never married nor had any children. However, she was proud that once Totò proposed to her, on the set of 47 morto che parla (Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia, 1950), even if he asked in vain.

In her roaring years, Pampanini was not very beloved by the critics, and she did not receive important awards, which caused her, in her autobiography 'Scandalosamente perbene' (Shockingly Respectable, 1996), to compare herself with Greta Garbo. Pampanini never was afraid to keep silent, so in December 2006, she publicly mocked Gina Lollobrigida for marrying a much younger man, and when, in 2008, Mayor Walter Veltroni did not invite her for the Festa del Cinema in Rome, she started a serious polemic.

In 2007, she participated in the festivities of 70 years Cinecittà and in 2009 she hosted the Mostra del Cinema dello Stretto, which brought a warm welcome and recognition of her career. Though living in Monaco, Pampanini was nominated Grande ufficiale dell'ordine al merito della Repubblica Italiana in 2003 by President Ciampi. In September 2009, she returned to the Venice film festival for the projection of the restored version of Noi cannibali / We Cannibals (Antonio Leonviola, 1953), a film inserted in the section 'Questi fantasmi 2' (These Ghosts 2), dedicated to Italian films to be reconsidered. Silvana Pampanini died in 2016 in Rome, Italy.

Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016)
German collector card by Greiling Sammelbilder in the series Filmstars der Welt, 2. Band, Serie E, no. 102. Photo: Allianz Film. Publicity still for O.K. Nerone / O.K. Nero (Mario Soldati, 1951).

Silvana Pampanini in Le Avventure di Mandrin (1952)
Spanish postcard, no. 2432. Silvana Pampanini in Le Avventure di Mandrin / The Affair of Madame Pompadour (Mario Soldati, 1952).

Silvana Pampanini
Vintage card.

Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016)
French postcard. Silvana Pampanini greets the representative of the Mexican production.

Silvana Pampanini
East-German card by VEB Progress Film Vertrieb, Berlin, no. 511. Photo: Unitalia Film.

Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016)
Russian postcard, no. 17860, 1959.

Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016)
Russian postcard, no. M 49010, 1960.

Silvana Pampanini (1925-2016)
Russian postcard, no. M 49010.18, 1960.

Sources: Sandra Brennan (AllMovie - Page now defunct), Wikipedia (Italian and English), and IMDb. Special thanks to Marlene Pilaete for additional information.

22 January 2026

Malcolm McGregor

Smooth, dark-haired Malcolm McGregor (1892-1945) had a rich Hollywood career as a leading man of 1920s silent action films and melodramas. He was the handsome and clean-cut partner to such glamorous stars as Pauline Frederick, Norma Shearer and Corinne Griffith. Like so many of his contemporaries, McGregor's career quickly waned after the changeover to sound.

Malcolm McGregor
French postcard by Cinémagazine-Edition, Paris, no. 337.

Malcolm McGregor
French postcard in the Series Les Vedettes de Cinéma by A.N., Paris, no. 228. Photo: Metro-Goldwyn.

The highlight of a busy career


Malcolm McGregor was born in Newark, New Jersey, in 1892. His parents were Austin Hall McGregor and Emily Ward Ripley McGregor.

Initially, he was under contract with Metro. McGregor debuted in The Prisoner of Zenda (Rex Ingram, 1922) as Captain Fritz von Tarlenheim, who helps to defend his king.  "Perhaps after mature deliberation I may want to retract the statement, but in this moment of enthusiasm I want to say that I think The Prisoner of Zenda is the best picture I have ever seen", raved the Chicago Tribune critic.[

McGregor had his breakthrough as the male lead in Broken Chains (Allen Holubar, 1922) opposite Colleen Moore and Ernest Torrence. It was based on the winning story from a scenario contest held by the Goldwyn Pictures Corporation and the Chicago Daily News. Among 27,000 entries, Winifred Kimball's 'Broken Chains' was selected. Experienced scenarist Carey Wilson made it ready for filming.

McGregor starred as the young whaling captain in the film version of Ben Ames Williams' All the Brothers Were Valiant (Irving Willat, 1923) with Billie Dove and Lon Chaney. Photoplay: "This is a whaling good story, though overlong. Most of the action is on board a ship, and there is some good saltwater atmosphere. Both of the brothers are valiant. Malcolm McGregor is a likeable hero. And the other, Lon Chaney, is most villainous!"

The film was destroyed in the 1965 MGM vault fire and was considered completely lost until some reels (500 metres, app. 25 minutes) were discovered at Eye Filmmuseum in the Netherlands in 2014. All the Brothers Were Valiant was perhaps the highlight of a busy career that mostly found the handsome actor supporting such glamorous female stars.

Alice Terry and Lewis Stone in The Prisoner of Zenda
German postcard by Ross Verlag, no. 679/4. Lewis Stone as Rudolph Rassendyll and Alice Terry as Princess Flavia in The Prisoner of Zenda (Rex Ingram, 1922). The Bismarck-like guy behind Terry is the actor Robert Edeson, who plays Colonel Sapt. Behind him is Malcolm McGregor, who plays Captain Fritz von Tarlenheim. Both are the loyal aids of the King, defending him against his evil half-brother Michael (Stuart Holmes, who might be the man in black on the right) and his plotting cronies: his mistress Antoinette (Barbara La Marr) and Rupert von Hentzau (Ramon Novarro). Trying to stop a coup by Michael, who has abducted and imprisoned the real king, Sapt and Tarlenheim arrange a lookalike cousin of the king to be crowned (which we see on this card). The substitute king falls in love with Princess Flavia, but he cannot tell the truth... Stone played both the King and his lookalike.

Malcolm McGregor
Belgian postcard by Ed. Weekblad Cinéma, Antwerp.

Second fiddle to Bela Lugosi


Malcolm McGregor was the partner of Pauline Frederick in Smouldering Fires (Clarence Brown, 1923), Norma Shearer in Lady of the Night (Monta Bell, 1925) and Corinne Griffith in Infatuation (Irvin Cummings, 1925).

He also co-starred with such glamorous stars as Colleen Moore, May McAvoy, Florence Vidor, Patsy Ruth Miller, and Evelyn Brent. He appeared in Frank Borzage's The Circle (1925), starring Eleanor Boardman, and Michael Curtiz's The Man from the Sea (1927), starring Dolores Costello and Warner Oland.

Until the late 1920s, McGregor had a prosperous career, but when sound set in, his career waned. He was reduced to playing second fiddle to Bela Lugosi in the Mascot serial The Whispering Shadow (Colbert Clark, Albert Herman, 1932). He had a small, uncredited role in China Seas (Tay Garnett, 1935), with Clark Gable and Jean Harlow.

McGregor retired after playing a gangster in a low-budget screen version of radio's Special Agent K-7 (Raymond K. Johnson, 1937). Malcolm McGregor was married twice. In 1916, he married Genevieve Murphy, and in 1918, they had a daughter, Joan. In 1938, Aimee Christine Rochester became his second wife.

In 1945, McGregor died in General Hospital, Los Angeles, from facial and body burns received in his Hollywood home. Police reported he was found collapsed on the floor near a bed where he had apparently fallen asleep while smoking. Malcolm McGregor was 52. He was interred at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, Los Angeles County.

Malcolm McGregor
British postcard in the Picturegoer Series, London, no. 158.

Malcolm McGregor
British postcard in the Picturegoer Series, London, no. 158a.

Sources: Find A Grave, Wikipedia (English and French) and IMDb. Our thanks to Elif Rongen (Eye Filmmuseum) for additional information.