Ann Harding
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Ann Harding | |
---|---|
Born | Dorothy Walton Gatley August 7, 1902 San Antonio, Texas, U.S. |
Died | September 1, 1981 | (aged 79)
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1921–1965 |
Spouse(s) | Harry Bannister (1926–1932) 1 child Werner Janssen (1937–1962) 1 child |
Children | Jane Bannister (1928-2005) Grace Kaye Janssen |
Ann Harding (August 7, 1902 – September 1, 1981) was an American theatre, motion picture, radio, and television actress.
Early years
Born Dorothy Walton Gatley at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio, Texas, to George G. Gatley and Elizabeth "Bessie" Crabb. The daughter of a career army officer, she traveled often during her early life. Her father was born in Maine and served in the American Expeditionary Force in World War I. He died in San Francisco, California in 1931. She grew up in East Orange, New Jersey and graduated from East Orange High School.[1] Harding attended Bryn Mawr College in Bryn Mawr, PA, on the Pennsylvania Main Line outside Philadelphia.
Career
Following school, she found employment as a script reader. She began acting and made her Broadway debut in 1921. She soon became a leading lady, who kept in shape by using the services of Sylvia of Hollywood.[2] She was a prominent actress in Pittsburgh theatre for a time, performing with the Sharp Company and later starting the Nixon Players with Harry Bannister.[3] In 1929, she made her film debut in Paris Bound, opposite Fredric March. In 1931, she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress for Holiday.
First under contract to Pathé, which was subsequently absorbed by RKO studio, Harding (who was promoted as the studio's 'answer' to MGM's superstar Norma Shearer), co-starred with Ronald Colman, Myrna Loy, Herbert Marshall, Leslie Howard, Richard Dix, and Gary Cooper, often on loan out to other studios, such as MGM and Paramount. At RKO, Harding, along with Helen Twelvetrees and Constance Bennett, comprised a trio who specialized in the "women's pictures" genre.
Her performances were often heralded by the critics, who cited her diction and stage experience as assets to the then-new medium of "talking pictures". Harding's second film was Her Private Affair, in which she portrayed a wife of questionable morality. The film was an enormous commercial success. During this period, she was generally considered to be one of cinema's most beautiful women, with her long waist-length blonde hair as one of her most noted physical attributes. Her films during her peak include The Animal Kingdom, Peter Ibbetson, When Ladies Meet, The Flame Within, and Biography of a Bachelor Girl. Harding, however, eventually became stereotyped as the innocent, self-sacrificing young woman. Following lukewarm responses by both her critics and the public to several of her later 1930s films, she eventually quit making movies when she married the conductor Werner Janssen in 1937. However, she returned in 1942 to make Eyes in the Night and to take secondary roles in other movies. In 1956, she again starred with Fredric March, this time in The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit.
The 1960s marked her return to Broadway after an absence of decades — she had last appeared there in 1927. In 1962, she starred in General Seeger, directed by and co-starring George C. Scott, and in 1964 she appeared in Abraham Cochrane. Both productions had brief runs, with the former play lasting a mere three performances (including previews). Harding made her last acting appearance in 1965 in an episode of Ben Casey before retiring from acting.
Personal life
Harding married actor Harry Bannister in 1926. They had one child together before divorcing in 1932. Their daughter Jane was born in 1928 and died in December 2005. In 1937, Harding married Werner Janssen, the famous conductor. Janssen and Harding enjoyed life in a number of cities, before settling down in California to work more closely with Hollywood. The couple divorced in 1962. Her death certificate states that she had an adoptive daughter Grace Kaye Harding.
Death
On September 1, 1981, Harding died at the age of 79 in Sherman Oaks, California. After cremation, her urn was placed in the Court of Remembrance wall at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Hollywood Hills, California.
For her contributions to the motion picture and television industries, Harding has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame located at 6201 (motion picture) and 6840 Hollywood Boulevard (television).
Broadway stage credits
Date | Production | Role |
---|---|---|
October 3, 1921 – Oct 1921 | Like a King | Phyllis Weston |
October 1, 1923 – May 1924 | Tarnish | Letitia Tevis |
September 8, 1924 – September 1924 | Thoroughbreds | Sue |
October 7, 1925 – December 1925 | Stolen Fruit | Marie Millais |
March 23, 1926 – April 1926 | Schweiger | Anna Schweiger |
September 28, 1926 – March 1927 | The Woman Disputed | Marie-Ange |
September 19, 1927 – October 1927 | The Trial of Mary Dugan | Mary Dugan |
February 28, 1962 – March 1, 1962 | General Seeger | Rena Seeger |
February 17, 1964 – February 17, 1964 | Abraham Cochrane | Myra Holliday |
Partial filmography
Film | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Film | Role | Notes | |
1929 | Paris Bound | Mary Hutton | ||
Her Private Affair | Vera Kessler | Co-starred Harry Bannister | ||
Condemned | Madame Vidal | USA reissue title: Condemned to Devil's Island | Co-starred Ronald Colman | |
1930 | Holiday | Linda Seton | Nominated – Academy Award for Best Actress | |
The Girl of the Golden West | Minnie | |||
1931 | East Lynne | Lady Isabella | The film was nominated for a Best Picture Oscar | |
Devotion | Shirley Mortimer | |||
1932 | Prestige | Therese Du Flos Verlaine | ||
Westward Passage | Olivia Van Tyne Allen Ottendorf | |||
The Conquerors | Caroline Ogden Standish | USA reissue title: Pioneer Builders | ||
The Animal Kingdom | Daisy Sage | UK Title: The Woman in His House | Co-starred Leslie Howard | |
1933 | When Ladies Meet | Claire Woodruff | Co-starred Myrna Loy | |
Double Harness | Joan Colby | Co-starred William Powell | ||
The Right to Romance | Dr. Margaret "Peggy" Simmons | Co-starred Robert Young | ||
1934 | The Life of Vergie Winters | Vergie Winters aka Virginia Wood | ||
The Fountain | Julie von Marwitz | |||
The Hollywood Gad About | Herself | Short subject | ||
1935 | Biography of a Bachelor Girl | Marion Forsythe | ||
Enchanted April | Mrs. Lotty Wilkins | |||
The Flame Within | Doctor Mary White | |||
Peter Ibbetson | Mary, Duchess of Towers | Co-starred Gary Cooper | ||
1936 | The Lady Consents | Anne Talbot | ||
The Witness Chair | Paula Young | |||
1937 | Love from a Stranger | Carol Howard | USA title: A Night of Terror | Co-starred Basil Rathbone |
1942 | Eyes in the Night | Norma Lawry | Starred Edward Arnold | |
1943 | Mission to Moscow | Mrs. Marjorie Davies | ||
The North Star | Sophia Pavlova | USA recut version: Armored Attack | ||
1944 | Nine Girls | Gracie Thornton | ||
Janie | Lucille Conway | |||
1945 | Those Endearing Young Charms | Mrs. Brandt (Captain) | ||
1946 | Janie Gets Married | Lucille Conway | ||
1947 | It Happened on 5th Avenue | Mary O'Connor | ||
Christmas Eve | Aunt Matilda Reed | USA reissue title: Sinner's Holiday | ||
1950 | The Magnificent Yankee | Fanny Bowditch Holmes | Co-starred Louis Calhern | |
Two Weeks with Love | Katherine Robinson | |||
1951 | The Unknown Man | Stella Mason | USA title: The Bradley Mason Story | |
1956 | The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit | Helen Hopkins | Starred Gregory Peck and Jennifer Jones | |
I've Lived Before | Mrs. Jane Stone | |||
Strange Intruder | Mary Carmichael | |||
Television | ||||
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
1955 | Crossroads | Hulda Lund | 1 episode | |
Studio 57 | Martha Halstead | 1 episode | ||
1956 | Front Row Center | Grammie | 1 episode | |
1959 | The DuPont Show with June Allyson | Naomi | 1 episode, "Ruth and Naomi" | |
1963 | The Defenders | Helen Bernard | 1 episode | |
Burke's Law | Annabelle Rogers | 1 episode | ||
1964 | Dr. Kildare | Mae Priest | 1 episode | |
1965 | Ben Casey | Edith Sommers | 1 episode |
References
- Ann Harding – Cinema's Gallant Lady (Biography By Scott O'Brien)
- ^ Percy, Eileen. "Durante Will Be Made an M. G. M. Star; 'Schnozzle; Has Ste Record for Saving Pictures.", The Milwaukee Sentinel, October 26, 1932. "Ann Harding began hers 15 years ago in a dramatic class at East Orange High school."
- ^ Hollywood Undressed: Observations of Sylvia As Noted by Her Secretary (1931) Brentano’s.
- ^ Conner, Lynne (2007). Pittsburgh In Stages: Two Hundred Years of Theater. University of Pittsburgh Press. pp. 105–106. ISBN 978-0-8229-4330-3. Retrieved 2011-06-06.
External links
- 1902 births
- 1981 deaths
- Actresses from San Antonio, Texas
- American film actresses
- American radio actresses
- American stage actresses
- American television actresses
- Bryn Mawr College alumni
- Burials at Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Hollywood Hills)
- People from East Orange, New Jersey
- People from San Antonio, Texas
- 20th-century American actresses