Jean Adair


Jean Adair was a Canadian actress. She was also known as Jennet Adair.

Career

Born Violet McNaughton in Hamilton, Ontario, her work as Jennet Adair in vaudeville included performing as a "singing comedienne".
Adair received a scholarship for a dramatic school course, after which she acted for two years with stock theater companies. She moved from stock performances to replacing Irene Dunne in a production of Mother, and her New York debut came in September 1922 when she acted in It's a Boy at the Sam H. Harris Theatre.
In 1931, Adair appeared in the Summer stock cast at the Elitch Theatre.
She worked primarily on stage but also made several film appearances late in her career, most notably as Aunt Martha, one of Cary Grant's dotty old aunts in Arsenic and Old Lace, a role she originated on Broadway. Her final performance was as the beloved matriarch Rebecca Nurse in the original production of The Crucible. Like many stage actresses of her era, she also appeared in vaudeville.

Death

She died at Beth Israel Hospital in New York City on May 11, 1953, aged 79. She was cremated at Ferncliff Crematory in Hartsdale, New York. Her ashes were collected by playwright Howard Lindsay.

Broadway productions

It's a Boy! The Jay Walker Devils The Good Fellow Machinal That Ferguson Family Scarlet Pages Everything's Jake Rock Me, Julie Blessed Event Best Years Black Sheep The Show Off For Services Rendered Murder at the Vanities Broomsticks, Amen! Picnic Mid-West Sun Kissed On Borrowed Time Morning's at Seven Goodbye in the Night Arsenic and Old Lace Star-Spangled Family The Next Half Hour Detective Story Bell, Book and Candle
  • ''The Crucible''