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Jane Darwell

Show Count: 8
Series Count: 0
Role: Old Time Radio Star
Old Time Radio
Born: October 15, 1879, Palmyra, Missouri, USA
Died: August 13, 1967, Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA

Jane Darwell (October 15, 1879–August 13, 1967) was an American actress of stage, film, and television. With appearances in more than one hundred major motion pictures, Darwell is perhaps best-remembered for her portrayal of the matriarch and leader of the Joad family in the film adaptation of John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath, for which she received the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, and her role as the Bird Woman in Disney's musical family film, Mary Poppins.

Early life

Born Patti Woodard to William Robert Woodard, a railroad president, and Ellen Booth in Palmyra in Marion County in northeasternMissouri, she originally intended to become a circus rider, then later an opera singer. Her father objected, however, and she compromised by becoming an actress but changed her name to Darwell to avoid sullying the family name.

Career

Darwell in the play A Doll's House, 1945.

She took up voice culture and the piano followed by a course in dramatics. At one point, she decided to enter a convent but instead changed her mind and became an actress. Darwell began her acting career in theater productions in Chicago and made her first film appearance in 1913. She appeared in almost twenty films over the next two years before returning to the stage. After a 15 year absence from films, she resumed her film career in 1930 with a role in Tom Sawyer, and her career as a Hollywood character actress began. Short, stout and plain-faced she was quickly cast in a succession of films usually as the mother of one of the major characters. She was especially prevalent in Shirley Temple films; she appeared in five films with Temple, usually as the housekeeper or grandmother.

She won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress as "Ma Joad" in The Grapes of Wrath (1940), a role she was given at the insistence of the film's star, Henry Fonda. A contract player with 20th Century Fox, Darwell was memorably cast in The Ox-Bow Incident, and occasionally starred in"B" movies and played featured parts in scores of major films.

Darwell had noted appearances on the stage as well; in 1944, she was popular in the stage comedy Suds in Your Eye, in which she played an Irishwoman who had inherited a junkyard.

By the end of her career she had appeared in more than 170 films, including Huckleberry Finn (1931), Jesse James (1939), Gone with the Wind (1939), The Devil and Daniel Webster (1941), The Ox-Bow Incident (1943), and My Darling Clementine (1946).

In 1954, Darwell appeared with Andy Clyde in the episode "Santa's Old Suit" of the television series The Pepsi-Cola Playhouse. This same episode was re-run the following Christmas 1955 on Studio 57. In 1959, she appeared with child actor Roger Mobley in the episode "Mr. Rush's Secretary" on the NBC western series, Buckskin, starring Tom Nolan and Sally Brophy. She guest starred on John Bromfield's crime drama in a modern western setting, Sheriff of Cochise.

On July 27, 1961, Darwell appeared as "Grandmother McCoy" in an episode of the ABC sitcom The Real McCoys. In the story line, the series characters played by Walter Brennan, Richard Crenna, and Kathleen Nolan return to fictitious Smokey Corners, West Virginia for Grandmother McCoy's 100th birthday gathering. Darwell was fifteen years older than "son", Walter Brennan. Pat Buttram and Henry Jones appeared in this episode as Cousin Carl and Jed McCoy, respectively.

Darwell's final role as the old woman feeding the birds in Mary Poppins (1964) was personally assigned to her by Walt Disney.

Darwell has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, at 6735 Hollywood Boulevard.

Death

In her last years, Darwell's health was poor. It took some persuasion for her to appear in Disney's Mary Poppins as she was, by then, tired, frail and in her middle eighties.

Darwell died from a heart attack at the age of eighty-seven.

Source: Wikipedia

Broadcast: 9th January 1949
Added: Jan 09 2007
Broadcast: 1st October 1939
Added: May 09 2011
Broadcast: 8th September 1947
Added: Oct 16 2010