Shirley Booth
Shirley Booth was born in Brooklyn, New York, United States on August 30th, 1898 and is the Movie Actress. At the age of 94, Shirley Booth biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 94 years old, Shirley Booth physical status not available right now. We will update Shirley Booth's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.
Shirley Booth (born Marjory Ford, 1898-92) was an American stage, film, radio, and television actress. Booth, who was primarily a theater actress, began her Broadway debut in 1925.
Lola Delaney's most notable role in the drama Come Back, Little Sheba, won her first Tony Award in 1950 (she'll go on to win two more).
She made her film debut in the 1952 film version, reenacting her role in the 1952 film version for which she received the Academy Award for Best Actress and the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress for her role.
Despite her success in films, she preferred acting on the stage and made only four more films. She appeared in the sitcom Hazel in 1961-66, winning two Primetime Emmy Awards.
She was later praised for her role in The Glass Menagerie's 1966 television production.
Mrs. Claus appeared in the 1974 animated Christmas television special The Year Without a Santa Claus Claus.
Early life
Booth was born in New York City to Albert James and Virginia M. Ford (née Wright). She was identified as Thelma Booth Ford in the 1905 New York state census. Jean (1914-2010), Jean's older sister, had one sibling, Jean (1914-2010). She spent her youth in Flatbush, Brooklyn, where she attended Public School 152 years ago.
After attending a stage performance, Booth's family moved to Philadelphia, where she first became interested in acting after seeing a Broadway performance. When Booth was a teen, her family moved to Hartford, Connecticut, where she became interested in summer stock. She appeared in Mother Carey's Chickens' production for the first time. She dropped out of school and moved to New York City to further pursue a career as a result of her father's demonstrations. When her father refused to use the family name properly, she started using the word "Thelma Booth" first. Shirley Booth later changed her name to Shirley Booth.
Personal life
On November 23, 1929, Booth married Ed Gardner, who later became well-known as the creator and host of the radio show Duffy's Tavern. In 1942, the two families separated. William H. Baker Jr., a US Army corporal, married her the following year. Booth and Baker were married before his death from heart disease in 1951. She never remarried and had no children from either marriage.
Booth has a motion pictures actress on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6850 Hollywood Boulevard for her contributions to the film industry.
Booth moved to North Chatham, Massachusetts, where she and her poodle and two cats lived. She kept in touch with her family by phone and spent her time painting and needlework. She was inducted into the American Theatre Hall of Fame in November 1979. Booth did not attend the ceremony, but Celeste Holm presented her with the award on her behalf.
Career
Booth began her career as an adolescent, appearing in stock company productions. She appeared in Pittsburgh theatre for a time, and she was a popular actress in the Sharp Company. She appeared on Broadway for the first time on Broadway, Hell's Bells, opposite Humphrey Bogart on January 26, 1925. Booth's first appearance in the comedy Three Men on a Horse, which lasted almost two years from 1935 to 1937, attracted major attention. She gained notoriety in dramas, comedies, and, eventually, musicals during the 1930s and 1940s. Ruth Sherwood played Ruth Sherwood in the 1940 Broadway revival of My Sister Eileen (1939), appeared in Tomorrow the World (1943). On CBS radio from 1941 to 1943, Booth appeared on Duffy's Tavern, portraying the nerdy, cracking, man-crazy daughter of the unseen tavern owner. Ed Gardner, Ed Gardner, the couple's second husband, designed and wrote the show, as well as starring Archie, the show's lead actor; Booth left the show just after the couple divorced; She auditioned unsuccessfully for Our Miss Brooks' title role in 1948; Harry Ackerman, the show's producer, had recommended that Booth be concerned with a high school teacher's inability to have full fun with the character's comedic possibilities, but Ackerman told radio historian Gerald Nachman that she was too afraid of the character's comedic possibilities to have full fun with the character's comedic possibilities. When Eve Arden took over as the title role, Our Miss Brooks became a radio and television hit.
Grace Woods in Goodbye, My Fancy (1948), won her first Tony Award for Best Supporting or Featured Actress (Dramatic). Lola Delaney's second Tony Award was for Best Actress in a Play, which she received for her role as the tortured wife in the mellow drama Come Back, Little Sheba (1950). Sidney Blackmer, her leading man, received the Tony Award for her work as her husband, Doc, in a Play.
Following her success in Come Back, Little Sheba, she was immediately followed by the film A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1951), based on the famous book in which she played the feisty, but Aunt Sissy was another big hit. Her fame was so high that the tale was skewed from the original that Aunt Sissy played the leading role (rather than Francie). Booth returned to Hollywood to reprise her stage appearance in the 1952 film version of Come Back, Little Sheba, with Burt Lancaster playing Doc. After the film was complete, she returned to New York and played Leona Samish in The Time of the Cuckoo (1952) on Broadway, her first of only five films in her career.
In 1953, Booth was nominated for Best Actress in a Leading Role for her role in Come Back, Little Sheba, becoming the first actress to win both a Tony and an Academy Award for the same role. The film has also received accolades from the Cannes Film Festival, the Golden Globe Awards, The New York Film Critics Circle Awards, and the National Board of Review. She also received her third Tony Award in a Play category for her role in Arthur Laurent's play The Time of the Cuckoo.
Booth was 54 years old when she made her first film, but she had successfully shaved almost a decade off her true age, with her advertisements citing 1907 as the year of her birth. Her correct year of birth was not known by her closest relatives until her correct year of birth, 1898, was announced at the time of her death. She released her second film, a romantic romance About Mrs. Leslie opposite Robert Ryan, in 1954, to rave reviews, but audiences were not well received. Booth had appeared in the all-star comedy/drama film Main Street to Broadway in 1953. She lived between New York and California for the next few years. She performed well in the musical By the Beautiful Sea (1954) and the comedy Desk Set (1955). Despite the fact that Booth was well-known to moviegoers during this period, the film's summertime (renamed as Summertime for the film in 1955) and Desk Set (1957) both went to Katharine Hepburn.
Booth was named Best of Chicago in 1957 for her appearance on the stage. In Marc Blitzstein's musical Juno, an adaptation of Seán O'Casey's 1924 classic play, Juno and the Paycock, she returned to Broadway in 1959, portraying as the long-suffering title character. In 1961, director Frank Capra approached Booth about appearing in Pocketful of Miracles, a modernized Capra's 1933 comedy-drama Lady starring May Robson. Booth told Robson that she was unable to replicate Robson's Oscar-nominated role in the original film and then dropped her role. Bette Davis, who was unfavorably compared to Robson by most reviewers when the film first came out, was cast by Capra.
Booth returned to motion pictures to star in two more films for Paramount Pictures, including Dolly Gallagher Levi in the 1958 film version of Thornton Wilder's romance/comedy The Matchmaker (the source text for the musical Hello, Dolly! ), and to portray Alma Duval in the drama Hot Spell (1958). Booth was nominated as the year's Best Actress by the New York Film Critics Circle for her role as executed murderer Barbara Graham in I Want to Live. (Certified &s; The Unborn is a book that was on sale at the United Nations headquarters in London.
Booth appeared in the title role on the NBC situation comedy Hazel, based on Ted Key's popular single-panel cartoon about the domineering yet endearing housemaid Hazel Burke, who works for the Baxter family. Don DeForte, Whitney Blake as Dorothy "Missy" Baxter, and Bobby Buntrock as the Baxters' young son Harold (whom Hazel called "Sport") appeared in the series (and "sport" in the film). Hazel was a big hit on audiences and attracted high ratings on its premiere.
Booth told the Associated Press in 1963, just one of Hazel's fame at the time.
Booth received two Primetime Emmy Awards for her work in the series over the course of five years, and she was nominated for a third. Booth is one of the few entertainers to win all three major entertainment awards (Oscar, Tony, Emmy).
In 1965, NBC canceled the series. CBS picked up and retooled the series; Don DeFore (George Baxter) and Whitney Blake (Dorothy Baxter) were written out of the book, while Bobby Buntrock (Harold "Sport") Baxter) remained a cast member. Ray Fulmer appeared as Steve Baxter, the brother of DeFore's character George. Barbara Booth, who owed the rights to the series, married Lynn Borden, a former Miss Arizona woman, as Steve's wife Barbara. Susie Benjamin, Barbara and Steve's daughter, was portrayed as Julia Benjamin. George and Dorothy Baxter, along with Harold, have migrated to Baghdad, leaving Harold to live with Steve and Barbara in the redesigned version. Hazel, the current Baxters' housekeeper, continues to serve. Although the fifth season's polls were still solid (Hazel ranked 26 for the season), Booth had to cancel due to health issues.
Booth appeared in The Glass Menagerie, which aired on the anthology film CBS Playhouse, shortly after the conclusion of Hazel's appearance. She received critical acclaim for her work and was nominated for another Primetime Emmy Award.
Booth's last Broadway appearances were in a revival of Nol Coward's play Hay Fever and the musical Look to the Lilies, both in 1970. In 1971, she returned to Chicago to star opposite Gig Young in a revival of Harvey at the Blackstone Theater. In 1973, Booth returned to episodic television in ABC's A Touch of Grace. The series was based on the British sitcom For the Love of Ada. After one season, A Touch of Grace was cancelled.
In 1974, Booth introduced Mrs. Claus in the animated television series The Year Without a Santa Clause. It was Booth's last acting role after she moved to Cape Cod.