Patricia Peardon
Patricia Peardon was an American actress who originated the title role in the Broadway play Junior Miss. She later became a sculptor.
Early years
Born in Paterson, New Jersey, Peardon was the daughter of U. S. Navy Commander R. C. Peardon and his wife. Her father was a baritone soloist in his church, and he performed in locally produced operas and operettas. Her mother was a business executive who wanted Peardon to become a teacher. She grew up in Allendale, New Jersey, and became an actress when she was 8 years old. She attended Oakley Hall private girls' school in Allendale.Radio programs on which Peardon appeared in her youth included The March of Time and Cavalcade of America. Raised in Midland Park, New Jersey, and then nearby Ridgewood, Peardon was 12 years old when she toured with Katharine Hepburn in Jane Eyre, a production of the Theatre Guild. Peardon later cited Hepburn's encouragement as a significant factor in her becoming an actress.
Career
Acting
Peardon's Broadway debut came when she was 17 years old as she created the role of Judy Graves in Junior Miss. She was 16 when, at the prompting of a friend, she "put on high heels and all the jewelry she could muster, piled her hair on top of her head and shadowed her eyelids" and went to Moss Hart seeking the part. A review in Time magazine said that Peardon "tears into the role of Judy with engaging gusto." Jay Carmody wrote in a review in the Evening Star, "The respect in which the play is most singularly blessed is in having Miss Peardon to play the role of Judy." Theater critic Richard Watts described Peardon as "just gawky enough, just blooming enough, and just pretty enough" for her part. Peardon played Graves for the show's full Broadway run and a subsequent long tour. She also did so overseas when Junior Miss was the first USO-sponsored play to tour Europe. The role led to her being featured on the cover of the December 15, 1941, issue of Life magazine and in an accompanying story with photographs of a re-enactment of her meeting Hart at the theater.Also on Broadway, Peardon portrayed Cindy Hillard in The Desperate Hours. That role resulted from her attending an audition for Robert Montgomery's television program. Montgomery, who also was directing The Desperate Hours, asked her to skip the TV audition and try out for the play instead. In other stage activity, Peardon toured with Arnold Moss's Shakespeare Festival Players, performing in King Lear, Love's Labour's Lost, Measure for Measure, The Tempest, and Twelfth Night. She also performed at the American Shakespeare Theatre at Stratford, Connecticut in 1964 and toured in a summer production of Heaven Can Wait. Plays in which she performed in regional theater included Uncle Vanya, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Dark of the Moon, The Music Master, and The Seven Year Itch.
Peardon was heard on radio on The Aldrich Family, Let's Pretend, and Orphans of Divorce. She acted on television on Johnny Jupiter and on The Philco Television Playhouse.