Classic Films
In reply to the discussion: Recent Obituaries, Classic Films Only [View all]CBHagman
(17,139 posts)The New York Times took the high road in their obituary and headline, mentioning her Oscar nominations, but several other news outlets mention the nasty baroness from The Sound of Music in the headlines. Sigh.
I remember being startled to realize that she played Paul Henreid's selfless wife in Between Two Worlds.
[url]http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/10/movies/eleanor-parker-91-oscar-nominated-actress-dies.html?hpw&rref=television[/url]
She was nominated for an Oscar for dramatic roles as a wrongly convicted young prisoner in Caged (1950), a police officers neglected wife in Detective Story (1951) and an opera star with polio in Interrupted Melody (1955), a biography of the Australian soprano Marjorie Lawrence. She also received an Emmy Award nomination in 1963 for an episode of The Eleventh Hour, an NBC series about psychiatric cases.
If she never became a star, admirers contended, it was because of her versatility. Sometimes a blonde, sometimes a brunette, often a redhead, Ms. Parker made indelible impressions but submerged herself in a wide range of characters, from a war heros noble fiancée in Pride of the Marines (1945) to W. Somerset Maughams vicious waitress-prostitute in a remake of Of Human Bondage (1946).
(SNIP)
In 1953, with two recent Oscar nominations to her credit, Ms. Parker talked to The New York Times about her good career luck so far. Things have a way of working out right for me, she said, adding a bit later, I maintain that if you work, believe in yourself and do what is right for you without stepping all over others, the way somehow opens up.
I even got my three wishes granted, she said in the same interview. To be in pictures, to give Mother a mink coat and buy the folks a house.
IMDB credits:
[url]http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0662223/[/url]
With John Garfield in Pride of the Marines