Sarah Padden was a character actress in theater and vaudeville from Chicago, Illinois. She performed on stage in the early 20th century. She is noted for her expressive voice and for her psychological studies of the characters she portrayed. Her finest single-act performance was in The Clod, a stage production in which she played an uneducated woman who lived on a farm during the American Civil War. Padden was a featured player on the Orpheum Circuit, Inc.. She had a role in His Grace de Grammont, a romantic comedy by Clyde Fitch which came to the Park Theatre in Boston, Massachusetts in September 1905. The production starred Skinner and was based on the life of a chevalier in the court of Charles II. Padden appeared again with Skinner in a four-act play produced by Charles Frohman, The Honor of the Family, by Emile Fabre, which was presented in New Rochelle, New York in September 1907. Another of her theatrical parts was in Hell-Bent Fer Heaven, a Pulitzer Prize-winning play by Hatche...
Little Tough Guys in Society
1938
Apology for Murder
1945
Woman Against Woman
1938
Homicide
1949
A Life of Her Own
1950
The Man Who Lost Himself
1941
Should a Girl Marry?
1939
Hide-Out
1930
Song of Old Wyoming
1945
David Harum
1934
Kongo
1932
Joe Palooka in Fighting Mad
1948
Ann Vickers
1933
Dakota
1945
Trail Street
1947
Frontier Revenge
1948
Wild Bill Hickok Rides
1942
Range Justice
1949
Identity Unknown
1945
Women Won't Tell
1932
Anna Karenina
1935
Possessed
1947
As the Earth Turns
1934
Trifles
1930
The Power and the Glory
1933
Billy the Kid
1930
Heart of the Rio Grande
1942
Gentleman Joe Palooka
1946
The Sophomore
1929
Girl Rush
1944
Man of Two Worlds
1934
Marshal of Laredo
1945
The Pride of the Yankees
1942
Today
1930
Trail to Gunsight
1944
Again Pioneers
1950
Cross-Examination
1932
Romance of the Limberlost
1938
House by the River
1950