Edna May Oliver


Edna May Oliver was an American stage and film actress. During the 1930s, she was one of the better-known character actresses in American films, often playing tart-tongued spinsters.

Career

Born in Malden, Massachusetts, the daughter of Ida May and Charles Edward Nutter, Oliver quit school at age 14 to pursue a stage career.
She achieved her first success in 1917 on Broadway in Jerome Kern's musical comedy Oh, Boy!, playing the hero's comically dour Aunt Penelope. In 1923 she appeared as Hannah in the Broadway version of Owen Davis's Icebound. She would later reprise the Hannah role in William C. De Mille's silent film of Icebound the following year. In 1925, Oliver appeared on Broadway in The Cradle Snatchers, costarring Mary Boland, Gene Raymond, and Humphrey Bogart. Oliver's most notable stage appearance was as Parthy, wife of Cap'n Andy Hawks, in the original 1927 stage production of the musical Show Boat. She reprised her role in the 1932 Broadway revival, but turned down the chance to play Parthy in the 1936 film version to play the Nurse in that year's film version of Romeo and Juliet.
Her film debut was in 1923 in Wife in Name Only. She continued to appear in films until Lydia in 1941. She first gained major notice in films for her appearances in several comedies starring the team of Wheeler & Woolsey, including Half Shot at Sunrise, her first film under her RKO Radio Pictures contract in 1930. Usually in featured parts, she starred in ten films, including Fanny Foley Herself and Ladies of the Jury. She played wealthy, domineering Aunt March in the 1933 version of Little Women.
File:Scene from Romeo and Juliet 2.jpg|thumb|right| John Barrymore, Oliver and Leslie Howard in Romeo and Juliet
Oliver's most popular star vehicles were mystery-comedies, starring as spinster sleuth Hildegarde Withers from the popular Stuart Palmer novels. The series ended prematurely when she left RKO to sign with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1935; the studio attempted to continue the series with Helen Broderick and then ZaSu Pitts as Withers.
While at MGM, David O. Selznick cast Oliver in two film versions of novels by Charles Dickens, as the prim, acidic Miss Pross, in A Tale of Two Cities, starring Ronald Colman, and as the title character's eccentric aunt, Betsy Trotwood, in David Copperfield.
She appeared in the Shirley Temple film Little Miss Broadway as the landlord of a hotel for vaudevillians who wants to shut it down. She also performed in two 1939 movie musicals: with Tyrone Power in the Sonja Henie skating film Second Fiddle, and in a supporting role as the agent of the title characters in the Fred Astaire/Ginger Rogers musical The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle. A 1940 comic performance as Laurence Olivier's Mr. Darcy's domineering aunt Lady Catherine de Bourgh in Pride and Prejudice and a 1941 role as Merle Oberon's grandmother in Lydia concluded her film career.
She was also cast in noncomedic films such as Cimarron, Ann Vickers, and Romeo and Juliet.

Death

Oliver died at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital on her 59th birthday in 1942 shortly after being diagnosed with abdominal cancer, and was interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.

Awards and honors

Oliver received an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in Drums Along the Mohawk.

Stage

DateTitleRole
December 5, 1916 - January 1917The Master
February 20, 1917 – March 30, 1918Oh BoyMiss Penelope Budd
November 25, 1919 – January 7, 1920The Rose of ChinaMrs. Hobson
February 2, 1920 – May 1, 1920My Golden GirlMrs. Judson Mitchell
November 1, 1920 – December 11, 1920The Half MoonMrs. Francis Adams Jarvis
September 26, 1921 – unknownWait 'Til We're MarriedAunt Meridian
November 28, 1921 – December 1921Her Salary ManMrs. Sophie Perkins
September 6, 1922 – September 1922Wild Oats LaneJune
February 10, 1923 – June 1923IceboundHannah
October 13, 1924 – November 15, 1924In His ArmsMrs. John Clarendon
January 13, 1925 – February 1925IsabelMrs. John Clarendon
September 7, 1925 – October 1926Cradle SnatchersEthel Drake
December 27, 1927 – May 4, 1929Show Boat Parthy Ann Hawks
May 19, 1932 – October 22, 1932Show Boat Parthy Ann Hawks

Filmography

YearTitleRoleStudio/Distributor
1929The Saturday Night KidMiss StreeterParamount Productions
1930Half Shot at SunriseMrs. MarshallRKO Pictures
1931CimarronMrs. Tracy WyattRKO Pictures
1931Forbidden AdventureBessie TateParamount Productions
1931Fanny Foley HerselfFanny FoleyRKO Pictures
1931Laugh and Get RichSarah AustinRKO Pictures
1931Cracked NutsAunt Minnie Van VardenRKO Pictures
1932The Penguin Pool MurderMiss Hildegarde Martha WithersRKO Pictures
1932Ladies of the JuryMrs. Livingston Baldwin CraneRKO Pictures
1932The ConquerorsMatilda BlakeRKO Pictures
1932Hold 'Em JailVioletRKO Pictures
1933Ann VickersMalvina WormserRKO Pictures
1933Meet the BaronDean PrimroseMGM
1933The Great JasperMadame TalmaRKO Pictures
1933It's Great to Be AliveDr. ProdwellFox Film Corp.
1933Only YesterdayLeonaUniversal Pictures
1933Little WomenAunt MarchRKO Pictures
1933Alice in WonderlandThe Red QueenParamount Productions
1934The Last GentlemanAugusta Pritchard20th Century Fox
1934The Poor RichHarriet SpottiswoodUniversal Pictures
1934Murder on the BlackboardHildegarde WithersRKO Pictures
1934We're Rich AgainMaudeRKO Pictures
1935David CopperfieldAunt Betsey TrotwoodMGM
1935No More LadiesMrs. Fanny "Grandma" TownsendMGM
1935Murder on a HoneymoonHildegarde WithersRKO Pictures
1935A Tale of Two CitiesMiss ProssMGM
1937My Dear Miss AldrichMrs. Lou AthertonMGM
1937ParnellAunt Ben WoodMGM
1937RosalieQueen of RomanzaMGM
1937Romeo and JulietThe NurseMGM
Note: Premiered August 20, 1936, but not released until April 16, 1937
1938Little Miss BroadwaySarah Wendling20th Century Fox
1938Paradise for ThreeMrs. Julia KunkelMGM
1939Nurse Edith CavellCountess de MavonImperadio Pictures Ltd
1939Drums Along the MohawkMrs. McKlennar20th Century Fox
1939The Story of Vernon and Irene CastleMaggie SuttonRKO Pictures
1939Second FiddleAunt Phoebe20th Century Fox
1940Pride and PrejudiceLady Catherine de BourghMGM
1941LydiaSarah MacMillanAlexander Korda Films
1976America at the MoviesFootageAmerican Film Institute

Radio

Oliver was a regular cast member from 1941 to 1942 on the Bob Burns series The Arkansas Traveler. She often played the character of an off-beat nurse, the type of role she had already performed earlier during her movie career.
On July 7, 1942 Oliver started a new summer radio series titled The Remarkable Miss Tuttle. She played the lead role of Josephine Tuttle, and the program had a planned 13-week run. However, Oliver quickly became ill and her role was taken over by her friend Mary Boland. When it became apparent that Oliver could not return, the title of the program was changed to The Remarkable Miss Crandall, with Boland playing the new lead character. This new format only lasted two weeks, and for the remaining four weeks the program was replaced by a new series, Mayor of the Town, starring Lionel Barrymore.