Muriel Kirkland
Muriel Kirkland was an American actress.
Early years
Kirkland was born on August 19, 1903, in Yonkers, New York, the daughter of advertising executive Charles B. Kirkland and Margaret Kirkland. As a teenager, Kirkland had "an inferiority complex of horrible proportions," accompanied by "a state of shyness and self-consciousness".When she was 16 and had just finished convent school, her parents decided that she could best overcome her self-concerns by attending the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. Kirkland resisted, saying that she did not want to become an actress, but her parents were firm, and she enrolled. When Kirkland had been at the academy six months, she was dropped from the school and told, "You will never be an actress. We are sorry". She took the assessment as a challenge and left the school determined to become an actress. She was turned down by theatrical agencies until she gained a part with a stock company in Yonkers.
Career
Stage
Soon after Kirkland's stage debut in Yonkers, an apprenticeship with Stuart Walker in Cincinnati increased her self-reliance as an actress, and he made her the leading lady of his Huntington, West Virginia, company. Walker taught her how to use her voice and her eyes and, in the process, increased her self-confidence.Kirkland's first New York stage appearance occurred when she was 19, portraying Maria in The School for Scandal. Before that season ended, she was on Broadway, playing Nettie in Out of Step. She acted in the Broadway production of Strictly Dishonorable after being the "forty-ninth ingenue to read the part". Her other Broadway credits included Brass Buttons, Cock Robin, The Greeks Had a Word for It, I Love an Actress, Fast Service, Lady of Letters, Stop-over, Abe Lincoln in Illinois, Inherit the Wind and The Legend of Lizzie.
Kirkland acted with the Orpheum Players in Kansas City and the All-Star Jefferson Players in Birmingham, Alabama, and performed in summer theater in Westchester County, New York; Magnolia, Massachusetts; and New Rochelle, New York. She also was the "unknown ingenue" in a company that Blanche Bates headed.