Skip to content

Poché Pictures

  • Movies
  • YouTube
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Home
  • Scream Queens & Their Directors
  • Billie Burke – the Angel in Pink Smoke

Billie Burke – the Angel in Pink Smoke

Posted on November 25, 2025 By admin No Comments on Billie Burke – the Angel in Pink Smoke
Scream Queens & Their Directors

Billie Burke didn’t start out as Glinda the Good Witch. She started out as Mary William Ethelbert Appleton Burke, a name so long you’d swear her parents were trying to give her a head start in society just by the syllables alone. She was born in Washington, D.C., but may as well have been dropped from a circus tent—her father was a singer and clown for Barnum & Bailey, a man whose office was a caravan and whose business card could’ve just said “Noise.” From that life she learned two things:
the world is a traveling show,
and applause sounds better when you’ve earned it in sawdust.

The family fled to London long before she knew what permanence meant. In the West End she watched real actors, felt the floorboards shake beneath them, and understood: she wanted the kind of life that required no permission. By 1903 she was onstage herself, red-haired and restless, with a smile that could sell hats, gowns, dreams—whatever the audience needed.

Then Broadway came calling, and she answered like a woman who already knew her own legend. Mrs. Dot. Suzanne. The “Mind the Paint” Girl. Burke didn’t just perform society ladies—she became the blueprint. Department stores copied her dresses. Women copied her manners. There were little Billie Burkes all over Manhattan, fluttering around in lace collars while the real one walked into restaurants like she owned sunrise.

And along the way came Florenz Ziegfeld, Broadway’s golden myth with champagne in his bloodstream. He married her in 1914, and Hollywood followed, waving contracts. Her first film, Peggy (1915), turned her into the kind of star that got paid more money than God and twice the praise. Silent-era fans worshipped her—Mary Pickford sugar, Lillian Gish tragedy, Billie Burke chic.

The 1910s and ’20s belonged to her. Lucile designed her gowns. Pond’s paid her to smile. Society women clipped her photos for fashion notes. And she was the kind of famous only early Hollywood could manufacture—untouchable, dazzling, and just human enough to be adored.

Then the crash came—the Wall Street one, the emotional one, the kind that wipes out the Ziegfeld empire like a sandcastle in a riptide. With her husband drowning in debt and health, she went back to acting not because she wanted to, but because reality didn’t care how many feathers were on her boa. Ziegfeld died during the filming of A Bill of Divorcement (1932), and she kept working, pearl-straight posture and a broken heart tucked somewhere under the corsetry.

This is where Billie Burke became the Billie Burke we remember.
Silly. Vapid. Spinning in a cloud of chiffon.
All of it an act, of course.
She played airheads the way a safecracker cracks safes—with precision.

Dinner at Eight.
Topper.
Merrily We Live—which earned her an Oscar nomination.
And then the pink bubble that would follow her into eternity: Glinda the Good Witch of the North.

In The Wizard of Oz (1939) she drifted in on a bubble like a champagne hangover with wings. She was 54, but the camera loved her like she’d just arrived at the party. Tender voice, twinkling eyes, a goddess of sweetness with a mind sharp enough to slice the Wicked Witch in half if she’d wanted to. Judy Garland adored her. Kids trusted her. And adults? Adults felt safe for the first time since the Depression.

George Cukor wanted her for Gone with the Wind as Aunt Pittypat. She declined. Some roles were written with her perfume in mind, but she knew better than to become a caricature of herself. She’d already become an institution.

Radio claimed her for The Billie Burke Show. Early television claimed her for At Home with Billie Burke. She tried Broadway again, but age stole her lines, and she chose dignity over desperation. “Acting just wasn’t any fun anymore,” she said—one of the few honest confessions Hollywood ever heard.

She died in Los Angeles in 1970, the same pink town she’d helped paint with glamour decades earlier. She lies beside Ziegfeld in Kensico Cemetery—a partnership that outlasted fame, failure, and every twinkling light on Broadway.

They named a crater on Mercury after her in 2015.
Seems fitting.
Even in death, Billie Burke glows somewhere just out of reach—
a little silly, a little divine,
and forever drifting toward the light.


Post Views: 205

Post navigation

❮ Previous Post: Dora Madison Burge – the Texas wildfire who never once asked permission
Next Post: Kathleen Burke – the Panther Woman Who Wanted Out ❯

You may also like

Scream Queens & Their Directors
Cindy Crawford The mole, the myth, the business plan.
December 20, 2025
Scream Queens & Their Directors
Diane Ellis She barely arrived before the lights went out.
January 20, 2026
Scream Queens & Their Directors
Constance Adams DeMille
December 26, 2025
Scream Queens & Their Directors
EVELYN ANKERS: THE QUEEN OF THE Bs WHO STOOD HER GROUND AGAINST MONSTERS AND MEN
November 19, 2025

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Dark. Raw. Unfiltered. Independent horror for the real ones. $12.99/month.

CLICK HERE TO BROWSE THE FILMS

Recent Posts

  • Traci Lords – The Girl Who Wouldn’t Stay Buried
  • Rhonda Fleming — The Queen of Technicolor
  • Ethel Fleming — The Surf Girl Who Wouldn’t Drown
  • Alice Fleming — Grandeur in the Margins of the Frame
  • Maureen Flannigan — The Girl Who Could Freeze Time and Then Kept Moving

Categories

  • Behind The Scenes
  • Character Actors
  • Death Wishes
  • Follow The White Rabbit
  • Here Lies Bud
  • Hollywood "News"
  • Movies
  • Old Time Wrestlers
  • Philosophy & Poetry
  • Present Day Wrestlers (Male)
  • Pro Wrestling History & News
  • Reviews
  • Scream Queens & Their Directors
  • Uncategorized
  • Women's Wrestling
  • Wrestling News
  • Zap aka The Wicked
  • Zoe Dies In The End
  • Zombie Chicks

Copyright © 2025 Poché Pictures. Image Disclaimer: Some images on this website may be AI-generated artistic interpretations used for editorial purposes. Real photographs taken by Poche Pictures or collaborating photographers are clearly identifiable and used with permission.

Theme: Oceanly News Dark by ScriptsTown