Marriage
Beavers married a man named Robert Clark in 1936. He later became her manager and helped her to manage her very busy schedule. She not only worked on roles for the films she was in, but also "her twenty-week tours of theaters that she conducted annually”. They later divorced and remarried. Many years later, in 1952, Beavers married Leroy Moore, who was either an interior designer or a chef (varying sources); they stayed together until her death in 1962. She had no children.
Read more about this topic: Louise Beavers
Famous quotes containing the word marriage:
“If a marriage is going to work well, it must be on a solid footing, namely money, and of that commodity it is the girl with the smallest dowry who, to my knowledge, consumes the most, to infuriate her husband. All the same, it is only fair that the marriage should pay for past pleasures, since it will scarcely procure any in the future.”
—Philip Dormer Stanhope, 4th Earl Chesterfield (16941773)
“Adultery is the vice of equivocation.
It is not marriage but a mockery of it, a merging that mixes love and dread together like jackstraws. There is no understanding of contentment in adultery.... You belong to each other in what together youve made of a third identity that almost immediately cancels your own. There is a law in art that proves it. Two colors are proven complimentary only when forming that most desolate of all colorsneutral gray.”
—Alexander Theroux (b. 1940)
“From infancy, almost, the average girl is told that marriage is her ultimate goal; therefore her training and education must be directed toward that end. Like the mute beast fattened for slaughter, she is prepared for that.”
—Emma Goldman (18691940)