Logo
facts about constance worth.html

16 Facts About Constance Worth

facts about constance worth.html1.

Constance Worth was born in Sydney, Australia in 1911, the youngest of three daughters of businessman Moffatt Howarth and his wife Mary Ellen.

2.

Constance Worth appeared on stage at Sydney's Independent theatre in a production of Cynara.

3.

Constance Worth had a supporting role in Hall's next film, The Silence of Dean Maitland, which was a box-office success.

4.

Constance Worth's name was linked romantically to Ivan Goff around this time.

5.

Constance Worth had a supporting part in Angels Over Broadway with Rita Hayworth; Worth wanted to resume her name "Joy Howarth" but it was felt this was too close to Hayworth so she kept her new stage name.

6.

Constance Worth lost a part in They Dare Not Love because Brent was cast.

7.

Constance Worth was fourth billed in the gangster B film Borrowed Hero at Monogram and The Dawn Express at RKO.

8.

Constance Worth went to work as a waitress at a drive-in restaurant, which led to an item in a gossip column and drew the attention of Harry Cohn.

9.

Constance Worth had a minor role in Columbia's City Without Men, but she was billed third in Republic's serial G-Men vs The Black Dragon.

10.

Constance Worth had billing in The Crime Doctor's Strangest Case and had a decent role in Klondike Kate, directed by William Castle.

11.

Constance Worth had uncredited roles in Cover Girl and Jam Session.

12.

Constance Worth had a supporting part in PRC's Why Girls Leave Home and Monogram's Sensation Hunters, and a minor role in RKO's Deadline at Dawn.

13.

Constance Worth had an uncredited role in The Set-Up.

14.

Constance Worth's last film was a minor role in the Johnny Mack Brown Monogram Western Western Renegades.

15.

Constance Worth died, aged 52, in Hollywood on 18 October 1963, an "ordinary housewife," reportedly from anemia.

16.

Constance Worth occasionally is mistaken for a British silent-era stage and film actress of the same name, active from 1919 to 1922.