Lucile Watson
Lucile Watson was born on May 27, 1879 in Canada. Lucile Watson's big-screen debut came with The Royal Family of Broadway directed by George Cukor in 1930. Lucile Watson is known for Little Women directed by Mervyn LeRoy, June Allyson stars as Jo and Peter Lawford as Laurie. The upcoming new movie Lucile Watson plays is My Forbidden Past which will be released on Apr 21, 1951.
Unsmiling character player Lucile Watson was one of Hollywood's most indomitable mothers of the 1930s and 1940s...and you can take that both ways. The archetypal matriarch who enhanced scores of plush, soapy, Victorian-styled drama, her prickly pears could be insufferable indeed and heaven help anyone who gathered up the courage to take them on. A fiercely protective mother usually to everyone's detriment, her narrow-minded characters were overt and opinionated, customarily equipped with a withering look and slivered tongue as weapons. Having no trouble whatsoever situating themselves into any and all's business, Lucile played imperious mother to filmdom's top stars including James Stewart and Robert Taylor, and often stole a bit of the thunder from under them.She was born on May 27, 1879 in Quebec, Canada and trained at New York's Academy of Dramatic Arts, making her first professional stage appearance in "The Wisdom of the Wise" in 1902 at the age of 23. For the next three decades plus, she played, in stark contrast to her later stereotype, frothy ladies in witty, sparkling comedy. Her superlative performance on Broadway in "The City" in 1909 guaranteed her position as a stage star. Playwright Clyde Fitch went on to use her quite frequently in his productions. Other stage successes over the years included "Under Cover" (1913), "Heartbreak House" (1920), "Ghosts" (1926), The Importance of Being Earnest (1926), "No More Ladies" (1934), "Pride and Prejudice" (1935) and "Yes, My Darling Daughter" (1936). She blossomed in both chic lead and support roles.It took her longer, however, to bloom on film... and it was not as a leading lady. She didn't make her film bow until age 55 in the Helen Hayes vehicle What Every Woman Knows (1934). She then slowly moved up the credits list after playing minor servile roles at first. Her first noticeable support was as Norma Shearer's advice-spouting mom in the classic Clare Boothe Luce film adaptation of Femmes (1939) in which she expounds on the inescapable infidelities of husbands and the importance of saving face in high society. Better yet was her thorny, smothering mother to James Stewart in Le Lien sacré (1939) in which she squares off with Carole Lombard who poses a threat as a possible daughter-in-law. So too was her cool-as-ice matriarch in La valse dans l'ombre (1940) as she tries to separate son Robert Taylor from Vivien Leigh's fiancé with a sordid past.Lucile reached the apex of her adult career with Lillian Hellman's anti-fascist war drama "Watch on the Rhine" (1941) starring Paul Lukas on Broadway. Two years later she and Lukas preserved their brilliance on film. Co-starring Bette Davis, Quand le jour viendra (1943) won Lukas the Academy Award for "best actor" and Lucile was acknowledged for her matriarchal supporting turn, but lost to Katina Paxinou for her work in Pour qui sonne le glas (1943).Lucile continued to set a pattern of excellence in the post-war years with arch supports in such films as Le droit d'aimer (1946) as Barbara Stanwyck iron-willed mom, the class Disney film Mélodie du sud (1946) and cranky Aunt March in the MGM remake of Les quatre filles du Dr March (1949). She wound up her film career wreaking havoc in the musical Maman est à la page (1950) as Betty Hutton's maligning mother-in-law and in the overly melodramatic Mon passé défendu (1951) as newly-rich Ava Gardner's scheming great aunt. Following a return to the stage and some scattered work in television anthologies, Lucile retired in 1954 at the age of 75 to live out her last years in New York.Lucile's first marriage somewhere around 1910 to actor Rockliffe Fellowes was brief. She subsequently married playwright Louis Evan Shipman in 1928, a union that lasted until his death in 1933. The character veteran passed away on June 25, 1962, after suffering a heart attack at age 83.
Birthday
May 27, 1879Place of Birth
Québec City, Québec, Canada
Known For
Movies & TV Shows
- 19516.1
- 19506.1
- 19496.6
- 19497.2
- 19486.5
- 19486.8
- 19486.0
- 19477.1
- 19467.3
- 19467.0
- 19466.7
- 19467.3
- 19447.3
- 19447.1
- 19437.1
- 19415.9
- 19417.1
- 19416.7
- 19416.3
- 19407.3
- 19407.7
- 19397.7
- 19396.3
- 19387.3
- 19366.6
- 19366.4
- 19365.8
- 19356.6
- 19347.6
- 19306.2