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Geraldine Fitzgerald | |
---|---|
Born | Geraldine Mary Fitzgerald November 24, 1913 Greystones, County Wicklow, Ireland |
Died | July 17, 2005 | (aged 91)
Resting place | Woodlawn Cemetery in The Bronx, New York, U.S. |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1932–1991 |
Spouses | |
Children | 2, including Michael Lindsay-Hogg |
Geraldine Mary Fitzgerald (November 24, 1913 – July 17, 2005)[1] was an Irish actress. She received the Daytime Emmy Award as well as nominations for an Academy Award, a Primetime Emmy Award, and a Tony Award. She was a member of the American Theater Hall of Fame and was inducted into the Hollywood Walk of Fame.[2] In 2020, she was listed at number 30 on The Irish Times list of Ireland's greatest film actors.[3]
She made her film debut in the British thriller Blind Justice (1934). She went on to receive a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her portrayal of Isabella Linton in the William Wyler directed romantic drama Wuthering Heights (1939). She acted in classic Hollywood films such as Dark Victory (1939), Watch on the Rhine (1943), and Wilson (1944), She later took roles in films such as The Pawnbroker (1964), Rachel, Rachel (1968), Harry and Tonto (1974), Arthur (1981), Easy Money (1983), and Poltergeist II: The Other Side (1986).
Fitzgerald was born in Greystones, County Wicklow,[4] south of Dublin, the daughter of Edith Catherine (née Richards) and Edward Martin FitzGerald, who was a lawyer.[5][6] Her father was Roman Catholic and her mother was Protestant, but converted to Catholicism.[citation needed]
She studied painting at the Dublin Metropolitan School of Art (which later became, in 1936, the National College of Art and, later again, in 1971, the National College of Art and Design). Inspired by her aunt, actress Shelah Richards, Fitzgerald began her acting career in 1932 at Dublin's Gate Theatre. After two seasons in Dublin, she moved to London,[7]: 12 where she found success in British films including The Mill on the Floss, Turn of the Tide, and Cafe Mascot.[5]
Fitzgerald's success led her to New York and the Broadway stage in 1938. She made her American debut opposite Orson Welles in the Mercury Theatre production of Heartbreak House. Hollywood producer Hal B. Wallis saw her in this production and subsequently signed her to a contract with Warner Bros.[8] She had two significant successes in 1939: a role in the Bette Davis film Dark Victory,[9] and an Academy Award nomination for her supporting performance as Isabella Linton in William Wyler's Wuthering Heights.[5]
She then appeared in Shining Victory (1941), The Gay Sisters (1942), and Watch on the Rhine (1943) for Warner Bros., and Wilson (1944) for 20th Century Fox, but her career was hampered by her frequent clashes with studio management. She lost the role of Brigid O'Shaughnessy, villainess in The Maltese Falcon (1941), after clashes with executive Jack L. Warner. Although she continued to work throughout the 1940s, co-starring with John Garfield in the Warner Bros. crime drama Nobody Lives Forever (1946), the quality of her roles began to diminish and her career lost momentum.[citation needed]
In 1946, shortly after completing work on Three Strangers, she left Hollywood to return to New York City, where she married her second husband, Stuart Scheftel, a grandson of Isidor Straus. She returned to Britain to film So Evil My Love (1948), receiving strong reviews for her performance as an alcoholic adultress, and The Late Edwina Black (1951), before returning to the United States. She became a naturalized United States citizen on April 18, 1955.[10]
The 1950s provided her with few opportunities in film, but during the 1960s she asserted herself as a character actor and her career enjoyed a revival. Among her successful films of this period were Ten North Frederick (1958), The Pawnbroker (1964), and Rachel, Rachel (1968). Her later films included The Mango Tree (1977), for which she received an Australian Film Institute Best Actress nomination, and Harry and Tonto (1974), in a scene opposite Art Carney. In the comedy Arthur (1981), she portrayed Dudley Moore's wealthy and eccentric grandmother, even though she was only 22 years older than Moore. In 1983, she portrayed Rose Kennedy in the miniseries Kennedy with Martin Sheen, and co-starred as Joanne Woodward's mother in the 1985 drama Do You Remember Love. Fitzgerald appeared in the 1983 Rodney Dangerfield comedy Easy Money, the horror film Poltergeist II: The Other Side (1986), and the comedy Arthur 2: On the Rocks (1988). In 1986, she starred alongside Tuesday Weld and River Phoenix in Circle of Violence, a television film about elder abuse.
Fitzgerald returned to stage acting, and won acclaim for her performance in the 1971 revival of Long Day's Journey Into Night. In 1976, she performed as a cabaret singer with the show Streetsongs, which played three successful runs on Broadway and was the subject of a PBS television special. She recorded an album of the show for Harbinger Records, produced by Bill Rudman and Ken Bloom and distributed by Ben Bagley's Painted Smiles label.[11] She also achieved success as a theatre director; in 1982, she became one of the first women to receive a Tony Award nomination for Best Direction of a Play for a production of Mass Appeal.[12] While in New York, Fitzgerald collaborated with playwright and Franciscan brother Jonathan Ringkamp to found the Everyman Theater of Brooklyn, a street theater company. The company performed throughout the city, including at Ethical Culture and La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club, both in Manhattan. The company first performed at La MaMa in September 1972, with a production called Everyman at La MaMa.[13] They then performed The Francis-Day, a musical about Francis of Assisi, at La MaMa in July 1973.[14]
She appeared on television, in such series as Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Robert Montgomery Presents, Naked City, St. Elsewhere, The Golden Girls, and Cagney and Lacey. She had a regular role in the short-lived 1965 CBS serial Our Private World. In 1987, she played a title role in the television pilot Mabel and Max, produced by Barbra Streisand. She received an Emmy Award nomination for a guest role playing Anna in The Golden Girls Mother's Day episode in 1988, and played a different character in the episode "Not Another Monday". She won a Daytime Emmy Award as best actress for her appearance in the NBC Special Treat episode "Rodeo Red and the Runaways". On February 8, 1960, Fitzgerald was recognized with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, at 6353 Hollywood Boulevard, for her contributions to motion pictures.[15]
Fitzgerald married Sir Edward Lindsay-Hogg, 4th Bt., in London on November 18, 1936. She was granted a divorce in Reno on August 30, 1946, after three years of separation.[16] She had one son, director Sir Michael Lindsay-Hogg, by her first marriage, and a daughter, Susan Scheftel, by her second marriage[5] to American businessman Stuart Straus Scheftel,[5] grandson of Ida and Isidor Straus.[17]
Her son's resemblance to Orson Welles, with whom she worked and was linked romantically in the late 1930s, led to rumors that Welles was his biological father. Fitzgerald never confirmed this to her son, but in his 2011 autobiography Lindsay-Hogg wrote that this question was resolved by his mother's close friend Gloria Vanderbilt, who had written that Fitzgerald told her that Welles was his father.[18][19]
A 2015 biography of Welles by Patrick McGilligan argues that Welles's paternity is unlikely; Fitzgerald left the United States for Ireland in late May 1939, and her son, born in early May 1940, was conceived before her return to the U.S. in late October. Welles did not travel overseas during that period.[20]
English actress Tara Fitzgerald is Fitzgerald's great-niece.[8][21]
Fitzgerald died at age 91 in New York City, following a long battle with Alzheimer's disease.[9] She is buried in Woodlawn Cemetery, in The Bronx, next to her husband, Stuart Straus Scheftel.[22][23]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1934 | Blind Justice | Peggy Summers | |
Open All Night | Jill | ||
1935 | The Lad | Joan Fandon | |
Three Witnesses | Diana Morton | ||
Department Store | Jane Grey | ||
The Ace of Spades | Evelyn Daventry | ||
Turn of the Tide | Ruth Fosdyck | ||
Lieutenant Daring R.N. | Joan Fayre | ||
1936 | Debt of Honour | Peggy Mayhew | |
Cafe Mascot | Moira O'Flynn | ||
The Mill on the Floss | Maggie Tulliver | ||
1939 | Wuthering Heights | Isabella | |
Dark Victory | Ann King | ||
A Child Is Born | Grace Sutton | ||
1940 | 'Til We Meet Again | Bonny Coburn | |
1941 | Flight from Destiny | Betty Farroway | |
Shining Victory | Dr. Mary Murray | ||
1942 | The Gay Sisters | Evelyn Gaylord | |
1943 | Watch on the Rhine | Marthe de Brancovis | |
1944 | Ladies Courageous | Virgie Alford | |
Wilson | Edith Bolling Galt | ||
1945 | The Strange Affair of Uncle Harry | Lettie Quincey | |
1946 | Three Strangers | Crystal Shackleford | |
O.S.S. | Ellen Rogers / Elaine Duprez | ||
Nobody Lives Forever | Gladys Halvorsen | ||
1948 | So Evil My Love | Susan Courtney | |
1951 | The Late Edwina Black | Elizabeth | |
1958 | Ten North Frederick | Edith Chapin | |
1961 | The Fiercest Heart | Tante Maria | |
1964 | The Pawnbroker | Marilyn Birchfield | |
1968 | Rachel, Rachel | Reverend Wood | |
1973 | The Last American Hero | Mrs. Jackson | |
1974 | Harry and Tonto | Jessie | |
1976 | Echoes of a Summer | Sara | |
Diary of the Dead | Maud Kennaway | ||
1977 | The Mango Tree | Grandma Carr | |
1978 | Bye Bye Monkey | Mrs. Toland | |
1981 | Arthur | Martha Bach | |
Lovespell | Bronwyn | ||
1982 | Blood Link | Mrs. Thomason | |
1983 | Easy Money | Mrs. Monahan | |
1986 | Poltergeist II: The Other Side | Gramma-Jess | |
1988 | Arthur 2: On the Rocks | Martha Bach |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1951–1955 | Robert Montgomery Presents | Elizabeth | 6 episodes |
1960 | Shirley Temple's Storybook | Aunt Rosa | Season 2 Episode 13: "The Black Sheep" |
1961 | Alfred Hitchcock Presents | Elizabeth Burton | Season 6 Episode 24: "A Woman's Help" |
1964 | The Nurses | Nurse Carrie Bruno | Season 2 Episode 23: "For the Mice and the Rabbits" |
1965 | The Alfred Hitchcock Hour | Agatha Tomlin | Season 3 Episode 24: "Power of Attorney" |
1970 | The Best of Everything | Violet Jordan | 114 episodes |
1973 | Me | Ma | TV movie (aka Untold Damage) |
1975 | NBC Special Treat | Ella McCune | |
1977 | The Quinns | Peggy Quinn | TV movie |
Yesterday's Child | Emma Talbot | TV movie | |
1983 | Kennedy | Rose Kennedy | TV Miniseries |
1985 | Do You Remember Love | Lorraine Wyatt | TV movie |
1986 | Circle of Violence: A Family Drama | Charlotte Kessling | TV movie |
1988–1989 | The Golden Girls | Anna / Martha | 2 episodes: "Mothers' Day" (1988) / "Not Another Monday" (1989) |
1991 | Bump in the Night | Mrs. Beauchamps | TV movie, (final film role) |
Year | Program | Episode | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
1941 | Philip Morris Playhouse | Stage Door | [24] |
Year | Award | Category | Work | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1939 | Academy Award | Best Supporting Actress | Wuthering Heights | Nominated | [25] |
1939 | National Board of Review | Best Acting | Dark Victory / Wuthering Heights | Won | [26] |
1960 | Hollywood Walk of Fame | Motion Picture Star | — | Honored | [27] |
1975 | Daytime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Individual Achievement in Children's Programming | NBC Special Treat | Won | |
1982 | Tony Award | Best Direction of a Play | Mass Appeal (1982) | Nominated | [28] |
1988 | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series | The Golden Girls (episode "Mother's Day") | Nominated | [29] |