Marjorie Gateson
Marjorie Gateson | |
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File:Marjorie Gateson.jpg | |
Born | Marjorie Augusta Gateson January 17, 1891 Brooklyn, New York, U.S. |
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. New York City, New York, U.S. |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1931-1958 |
Marjorie Augusta Gateson (January 17, 1891 – April 17, 1977[1]), was a stage and film actress.
She was born in Brooklyn, New York, to Augusta and Daniel Gateson. Her maternal grandfather and brother were clergymen;[2] Some sources state her father was one too,[2] but Axel Nissen in his book Mothers, Mammies and Old Maids: Twenty-Five Character Actresses of Golden Age Hollywood writes that he was a contractor.[1] She attended the Packer Collegiate Institute and the Brooklyn Conservatory of Music, the latter being where her mother taught elocution.[2] She believed her mother had "an inner longing for the stage",[2] which she passed on to Marjorie, along with diction and poise.[1]
Gateson's musical schooling came in handy, helping her land a job in the chorus in a play called The Pink Lady.[3] She made her Broadway debut at the age of 21 in a short-lived musical called The Dove of Peace on November 4, 1912; the show closed after 12 performances.[1] During the much longer run of her next Broadway play, The Little Cafe (November 12, 1913 – March 14, 1914), she played several of the characters.[3] In 1917's Broadway musical Have a Heart, she got to sing a couple of songs.[1] She performed in a steady diet of musical comedies for another decade, ending with Oh, Ernest! (1927), but also appeared in non-musical comedies and dramas. After the Broadway comedy As Good as New in 1930, she set out for Hollywood.[1]
Gateson made her film debut in 1931, after more than two decades on the stage, playing secondary character roles as women of wealth and breeding, who were often haughty and aloof.[1] She is perhaps best known as the society matron who attempts to thwart Mae West's character's plans for social climbing in the 1935 film Goin' to Town, and as a rather kinder socialite whom Harold Lloyd teaches to box in 1934's The Milky Way.
Other films in which she appeared include The King's Vacation (1933) (her largest role, the female lead opposite George Arliss), Bureau of Missing Persons (1933), Private Number (1936), You'll Never Get Rich (1941), International Lady (1941), and Meet The Stewarts (1942). Her film work petered out in the late 1940s and she jumped into television roles.
She mad her small screen debut in 1949. She was featured in the 1949 television soap opera One Man's Family and found success in 1954 at age 63 playing matriarch Grace Harris Tyrell on the daytime soap The Secret Storm, a role she would play until 1968. Gateson also made numerous other television appearances in the 1950s, including episodes of Hallmark Hall of Fame, Robert Montgomery Presents, and United States Steel Hour.
Gateson suffered a stroke, which ended her acting career, and died several years later in 1977 of pneumonia, at the age of 86 in Manhattan.[1]
Partial filmography
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- Street of Women (1932)
- The King's Vacation (1933)
- Employees' Entrance (1933)
- Walls of Gold (1933)
- Cocktail Hour (1933)
- Melody Cruise (1933)
- Blind Adventure (1933)
- Bureau of Missing Persons (1933)
- The World Changes (1933)
- Lady Killer (1933)
- Let's Fall in Love (1933)
- Hi, Nellie! (1934)
- Operator 13 (1934)
- Down to Their Last Yacht (1934)
- Chained (1934)
- Big Hearted Herbert (1934)
- Happiness Ahead (1934)
- Gentlemen Are Born (1934)
- Goin' to Town (1935)
- The Milky Way (1936)
- Wife vs. Secretary (1936)
- Big Brown Eyes (1936)
- Private Number (1936)
- Vogues of 1938 (1937)
- First Lady (1937)
- Stablemates (1938)
- Spring Madness (1938)
- 'Til We Meet Again (1940)
- Pop Always Pays (1940)
- In Old Missouri (1940)
- Back Street (1941)
- Honolulu Lu (1941)[4]
- You'll Never Get Rich (1941)
- International Lady (1941)
- Passage from Hong Kong (1941)
- Obliging Young Lady (1942)
- Rings on Her Fingers (1942)
- Meet the Stewarts (1942)
- Juke Box Jenny(1942)
- No Time for Love (1943)
- The Youngest Profession (1943)
- The Sky's the Limit (1943)
- I Dood It (1943)
- Seven Days Ashore (1944)
- One More Tomorrow (1946)
- The Caddy (1953)
References
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to [[commons:Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).|Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).]]. |
- Marjorie Gateson at AllMovie
- Marjorie Gateson at the Internet Broadway DatabaseLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
- Marjorie Gateson at Find a Grave
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles with hCards
- Pages using div col with unknown parameters
- Commons category link from Wikidata
- 1891 births
- 1977 deaths
- 20th-century American actresses
- American film actresses
- American soap opera actresses
- American stage actresses
- American television actresses
- Deaths from pneumonia
- Infectious disease deaths in New York
- People from Brooklyn