Dorothy McGuire |
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Actor Credits
Other InformationAwardsOutstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Special Emmy Awards [1986] (Won/Nominated: Nominated) Outstanding Continuing Performance by a Supporting Actress in a Drama Series Emmy Awards [1976] (Won/Nominated: Nominated) Top Female Dramatic Performance Laurel Awards [1960] (Won/Nominated: Nominated) Top Female Star Laurel Awards [1959] (Won/Nominated: Nominated) Best Actress in a Single Performance Emmy Awards [1955] (Won/Nominated: Nominated) Best Supporting Actress Academy Awards [1948] (Won/Nominated: Nominated) Star on the Walk of Fame Walk of Fame |
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Dorothy McGuire Biography |
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A genuine model of sincerity, practicality and dignity in most of the roles she inhabited, actress Dorothy McGuire offered Tinseltown more talent than it probably knew what to do with. A quiet, passive beauty, she had a soothing quality to her open-faced looks and voice. She was a natural when he came to tearjerkers and she certainly had a knack for opening up her filmgoer`s tear ducts with her arresting performances in sentimental drama. She preferred to rest on her acting laurels than engage in publicity-monging to win roles. As a result, Dorothy was surprisingly ill-served in the awards department during her over five-decade film career, yet left a major imprint on celluloid. Touching, complex, immaculate in poise and style, she is now and forever etched in Hollywood`s "Golden Age" annals and in the minds of film lovers everywhere.
Dorothy began inconspicuously enough in Omaha, Nebraska on June 14, 1916. Her parents encouraged her early interest in acting and she made her debut as a teenager in "A Kiss for Cinderella" at the Omaha Community Playhouse which starred visiting alumni member Henry Fonda. She received her education at Omaha Junior College, Ladywood Convent in Indianapolis, and Pine Manor Junior College in Wellesley, Massachusetts before setting her sites on an acting career. Following summer stock she appeared in such 1938 stage productions as "Bachelor Born" and "Stopover" before understudying the role of Emily Gibb in Thornton Wilder`s "Our Town" on Broadway, which at the time showcased young Martha Scott. Dorothy eventually replaced Scott in the role. Other experiences came her way on stage with "My Dear Children" starring John Barrymore, "Swingin` the Dream", "Medicine Show", "The Time of Your Life" and "Kind Lady" before she was handed the titular role of "Claudia" in 1941. This gentle comedy became a certifiable Broadway hit and Dorothy simply incandescent as the child-like bride forced to wake up to reality after her sudden marriage. David O. Selznick subsequently signed her to a film contract. Fortunately, 20th Century-Fox, untrue to form, took a chance on the film unknown and allowed her to recreate her stage triumph opposite Robert Young. Claudia (1943) was so beautifully done and warmly received that McGuire and Young went on to recreate their roles three years later with Claudia and David (1946). Unbelievably, Dorothy topped herself in only her second film role. After a pregnant Gene Tierney became unavailable for the role of Katie Nolan in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945), the part fell to Dorothy. It`s now hard to believe anyone else in the role. As the impoverished wife of a charming Irish ne`er-do-well and inebriate, Dorothy showed amazing complexity as the detached wife and mother whose painful but necessary decision-making alienates many around her, especially her daughter who is the apple of her daddy`s eye. Directed by Elia Kazan, Dorothy was shamefully overlooked at awards time. Young Peggy Ann Garner was given a "special juvenile Oscar" and errant husband James Dunn picked up the Supporting Actor trophy for his work. Dorothy was not of the mind of tooting her own horn and it may have cost her an Oscar nomination -- better yet, the Oscar -- for she was hands down the better performer than eventual winner Joan Crawford, a popular choice for Mildred Pierce (1945). Dorothy made it four film hits in a row with the success of both the sentimental fantasy The Enchanted Cottage (194 Biography Credit: www.imdb.com/name/nm0570192/bio |
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