Eve Arden
Eve Arden | |
---|---|
Born | Eunice M. Quedens April 30, 1908 Mill Valley, California, U.S. |
Died | November 12, 1990 Los Angeles, California, U.S. | (aged 82)
Cause of death | Colorectal cancer and heart disease |
Resting place | Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery |
Nationality | American |
Education | Tamalpais High School |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1928–1987 |
Spouse(s) |
Ned Bergen (m. 1939–1947)Brooks West (m. 1952–1984) |
Children | 4 |
Website | Eve Arden Official Website |
Eve Arden (April 30, 1908 – November 12, 1990)[1] was an American actress. Her almost 60-year career crossed most media frontiers with both supporting and leading roles, but to younger audiences she may be best-remembered for playing the sardonic but engaging title character, a high school teacher, on Our Miss Brooks, and as the Rydell High School principal in both Grease and Grease 2.
Early life
Arden was born Eunice M. Quedens (pronounced qwi-DENZ) on April 30, 1908, in Mill Valley, California, to Lucille and Charles Quedens. Her parents divorced when she was a child. Some sources indicated that she was Catholic based solely on the fact that she had, at one point, attended a Roman Catholic convent school, which is not dispositive. However, at age 16, she left Tamalpais High School, a public high school, and joined a stock theater company.[2] She made her film debut, under her real name, in the backstage musical Song of Love (1929). She played a wisecracking showgirl who becomes a rival to the film's star, singer Belle Baker. The film was one of Columbia Pictures' earliest successes.
Arden's Broadway debut came in 1934, when she was cast in that year's Ziegfeld Follies revue. This role was the first in which she was credited as Eve Arden. She chose that name after being told by producer Lee Shubert to drop her real name and claimed she was inspired by two cosmetics bottles in her dressing room, one labeled Evening in Paris and the other by Elizabeth Arden.[citation needed]
Career
Film
Arden's film career began in earnest in 1937 when she appeared in the films Oh Doctor and Stage Door. Her Stage Door portrayal of a fast-talking, witty supporting character, gained Arden considerable notice and was to be a template for many of Arden's future roles.[3][4]
Her many memorable screen roles include a supporting role as Joan Crawford's wise-cracking friend in Mildred Pierce (1945) for which she received an Academy Award nomination as Best Supporting Actress, and James Stewart's wistful secretary in Otto Preminger's murder mystery, Anatomy of a Murder (1959). (One of her co-stars in that film was husband Brooks West.) She also performed some acrobatics in the Marx Brothers film At the Circus (1939). In 1946 exhibitors voted her the sixth-most promising "star of tomorrow".[5]
Radio and television
Arden's ability with witty scripts made her a natural talent for radio; she became a regular on Danny Kaye's short-lived but memorably zany comedy-variety show in 1946, which also featured swing bandleader Harry James and gravel-voiced character actor-comedian Lionel Stander.[6]
Kaye's show lasted one season, but Arden's display of comic talent and timing set the stage for her to be cast in her best-known role, Madison High School English teacher Connie Brooks in Our Miss Brooks. Arden portrayed the character on radio from 1948 to 1957, in a television version of the program from 1952 to 1956, and in a 1956 feature film. Arden's character clashed with the school's principal, Osgood Conklin (played by Gale Gordon), and nursed an unrequited crush on fellow teacher Philip Boynton (played originally by future film star Jeff Chandler and, later on radio, then on television, by Robert Rockwell). Except for Chandler, the entire radio cast of Arden, Gordon, Richard Crenna (Walter Denton), Robert Rockwell (Mr. Philip Boynton), Gloria McMillan (Harriet Conklin), and Jane Morgan (landlady Margaret Davis) played the same roles on television.
Arden's portrayal of the character was so popular that she was made an honorary member of the National Education Association, received a 1952 award from the Teachers College of Connecticut's Alumni Association "for humanizing the American teacher", and even received teaching job offers.[1] She won a listeners' poll by Radio Mirror magazine as the top ranking comedienne of 1948–1949, receiving her award at the end of an Our Miss Brooks broadcast that March. "I'm certainly going to try in the coming months to merit the honor you've bestowed upon me, because I understand that if I win this (award) two years in a row, I get to keep Mr. Boynton," she joked. But she was also a hit with the critics; a winter 1949 poll of newspaper and magazine radio editors taken by Motion Picture Daily named her the year's best radio comedienne.[7]
Arden had a very brief guest appearance in a 1955 I Love Lucy episode entitled "Hollywood at Last" in which she played herself. While awaiting their food at The Brown Derby, a Hollywood restaurant, Lucy Ricardo (Lucille Ball) and Ethel Mertz (Vivian Vance) argue over whether a certain portrait on a nearby wall is Shelley Winters or Judy Holliday. Lucy urges Ethel to ask a lady occupying the next booth, who turns and replies, "Neither. That's Eve Arden." Ethel suddenly realizes she was just talking to Arden herself, who soon passes Lucy and Ethel's table to leave the restaurant while the pair gawk. Desilu Productions, jointly owned by Desi Arnaz and Ball during their marriage, was the production company for the Our Miss Brooks television show, which filmed during the same years as I Love Lucy. Ball and Arden became acquainted when they co-starred together in the film Stage Door in 1937. It was Ball, according to numerous radio historians, who suggested Arden for Our Miss Brooks after Shirley Booth auditioned for but failed to land the role and Ball – committed at the time to My Favorite Husband – could not.[8]
Arden tried another series in the fall of 1957, The Eve Arden Show, but it was canceled in spring of 1958 after 26 episodes. In 1966, Arden played Nurse Kelton in the episode of Bewitched. She later co-starred with Kaye Ballard as her neighbor and in-law, Eve Hubbard, in the 1967–69 situation comedy The Mothers-in-Law, which was produced by Desi Arnaz after the dissolution of Desilu Productions.[9]
Other credits
Arden was one of many actresses to take on the title roles in Hello, Dolly! and Auntie Mame in the 1960s; in 1967, she won the Sarah Siddons Award for her work in Chicago theatre.[10] Arden was cast in 1983 as the leading lady in what was to be her Broadway comeback in Moose Murders. But she wisely withdrew (and was replaced with the much younger Holland Taylor) after one preview performance, citing "artistic differences". The show went on to open and close on the same night, becoming known as one of the most legendary flops in Broadway history.[11]
She became familiar to a new generation of film-goers when she played Principal McGee in both 1978's Grease and 1982's Grease 2, as well as making appearances on such television shows as Bewitched, Alice, Maude and Falcon Crest. In 1985, she appeared as the wicked stepmother in the Faerie Tale Theatre production of Cinderella.
Arden published an autobiography, The Three Phases of Eve, in 1985. In addition to her Academy Award nomination, Arden has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame: Radio and Television (see List of stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for addresses). She was inducted into the National Radio Hall of Fame in 1995.[12]
Personal life
Arden was married to Ned Bergen from 1939 to 1947, and to actor Brooks West from 1952 until his death in 1984 from a heart ailment. She and West had four children, all of whom survived their parents.[3]
Death
On November 12, 1990, Arden died from colorectal cancer and heart disease at her home, 9066 St. Ives Drive, Los Angeles, California, 90069, aged 82. She is interred in the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery, Westwood, Los Angeles, California.[13] Some sources had given 1907 or 1909 as her year of birth, however her gravestone and her death certificate #39019050699, County of Los Angeles Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk in the name of Eve Arden West clearly gives her date of birth as April 30, 1908 and age at death as 82.
Filmography
Features
Short subjects
- Screen Snapshots: Off the Air (1947)
- Screen Snaphots: Hollywood Life (1954)
Stage work
- Low and Behold (1933)
- Private Lives (1933)
- On Approval (1933)
- Ziegfeld Follies of 1934 (1934)
- Parade (1935)
- Ziegfeld Follies of 1936 (1936)
- Very Warm for May (1939)
- Two for the Show (1940)
- Let's Face It! (1941)
- Over 21 (1950)
- Here Today (1951)
- Auntie Mame (1958)
- Goodbye Charlie (1960)
- The Marriage-Go-Round (1961)
- Beekman Place (1965)
- Hello, Dolly! (1966)
- Barefoot in the Park (1967)
- Cactus Flower (1968)
- Butterflies Are Free (1970)
- Natural Ingredients (1971)
- Silverplate (1971)
- Under Papa's Picture (1973)
- The Most Marvelous News (1977)
- Absurd Person Singular (1978)
- Little Me (1980)
- Moose Murders (1983; left after one preview; replaced by Holland Taylor)
See also
References
- ^ a b Burt A. Folkart (13 November 1990). "Eve Arden, 82; Portrayed TV's Beloved 'Our Miss Brooks'". Los Angeles Times. LAtimes.com. Retrieved 2011-12-05.
- ^ Tamalpais High School Alumni Directory. 2002. Harris Publishing Co., p. 237. Lists "Quedens, Eunice M." in the Class of 1926
- ^ a b Albin Krebs (November 13, 1990). "Eve Arden, Actress, Is Dead... TV's 'Our Miss Brooks'". New York Times. NYTimes.com. Retrieved 2011-06-13.
- ^ "Eve Arden". tcm.com. Retrieved 2011-06-13.
- ^ "The Stars of To-morrow". Sydney Morning Morning Herald (NSW: 1842-1954). NSW: National Library of Australia. September 10, 1946. p. 11 Supplement: The Sydney Morning Herald Magazine. Retrieved April 24, 2012.
- ^ "The Danny Kaye Show". The Digital Deli Too. Retrieved 2011-12-05.
- ^ "Eve Arden, 82, dies; best known as 'Our Miss Brooks'". The Oregonian. Worthpoint. 13 November 1990. Retrieved 2011-12-05.
- ^ "Eve Arden as Connie Brooks". Ourmissbrooks.com. Retrieved 2011-12-05.
- ^ "Eve Arden profile (1908-1990)". Brian's Drive-in Theatre. February 15, 2011. Retrieved 2011-06-13.
- ^ "The Sarah Siddons Society Awardees". Sarah Siddons Society. 2010. Retrieved 2011-06-13.
- ^ Campbell Robertson (April 21, 2008). "A Broadway Flop Again Raises Its Antlers". New York Times. NYTimes.com. Retrieved 2011-06-13.
- ^ "Comedy: Eve Arden". Radio Hall of Fame. Retrieved 2011-06-13.
- ^ Eve Arden at Find a Grave
Further reading
- Tucker, David C. (2007). The Women Who Made Television Funny: Ten Stars of 1950s Sitcoms. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co. ISBN 0-7864-2900-3.
- Karol, Michael (2005). Sitcom Queens: Divas of the Small Screen. iUniverse. ISBN 0-595-40251-8.
- Ian Herbert, ed. (1981). "ARDEN, Eve". Who's Who in the Theatre. Vol. 1. Gale Research Company. p. 21. ISSN 0083-9833.
External links
- 1908 births
- 1990 deaths
- 20th-century American actresses
- Actresses from California
- American film actresses
- American radio actresses
- American stage actresses
- American television actresses
- American women comedians
- Burials at Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery
- Cancer deaths in California
- Cardiovascular disease deaths in California
- Deaths from colorectal cancer
- National Radio Hall of Fame inductees
- Outstanding Performance by a Lead Actress in a Comedy Series Primetime Emmy Award winners
- People from Marin County, California
- Tamalpais High School alumni
- Vaudeville performers
- Warner Bros. contract players
- Ziegfeld girls