November 9th is Marie Dressler's 149th birthday so the Dressler Foundation put on a big celebration for her. The celebration featured a professionally made documentary of how the community came together to build the museum, free Marie Dressler Butter Tarts (and coffee) and then followed this with a screening of one of Marie Dressler's earliest movies, Tillie Wakes Up, made in 1917. (The Butter tarts were designed by Stephanie Harrington at the Dutch Oven).
Foundation chair Rick Miller also spoke of her civic involvement when in 1919 she fought for better wages for chorus girls and other women’s rights issues. She was earning $2500 a week on Broadway while they made $8 a week. She was banned from the stage for her efforts but came back as a star in the movie Anna Christie in 1930.
She knew she was not beautiful in the Hollywood sense but said that “every woman has the right to feel beautiful, no matter how scrambled her features or how indifferent her figure …. It is her birthright”.
As Rick said: “Marie is part of our cultural heritage”.
The celebration was held in the Civic Forum in Victoria Hall and it was packed with over 50 people - some had to stand. In attendance were MPP Lou Rinaldi, Mayor Gil Brocanier, Deputy Mayor John Henderson, Councillors Forrest Rowden and Suzanne Séguin and Director of Culture and Recreation, Dean Hustwick.
Rick also said that 2018 will be Marie’s 150th so there would be more celebrations next year:
- Free popcorn for the August 4th Movie on the Beach
- The Art Gallery of Northumberland will host a special Marie Dressler Exhibition in September and October (items different to the Museum)
- An exciting Society Event at the end of September – a Hollywood themed Dinner at Eight based on the successful 1933 movie starring Marie Dressler.
- On Marie’s birthday, November 9, a public celebration outside Victoria Hall.
Details of these events will be posted on this site.