Greer Garson

  • Greer Garson
  • Greer Garson
  • Greer Garson
Who's Dated Who feature on Greer Garson including relationships, couples, pictures, biography, photos, pics, news, vital stats, commentary, forum, fans and facts.
 

Greer Garson Relationships

Who is Greer Garson dating?

Click on the photos to find out Who's Dated Who...
  • Greer Garson Divorce Profile
  • Greer Garson Wedding Married
  • Greer Garson Baby Relationship
  • Marriage On-Screen Romance
  • Greer Garson Boyfriend "Encounter"
 

Post Your Vote

Vote for Greer's Top Romance

Vote Results

 

Career Highlights

Update Information
 

Greer Garson Biography

Eileen Evelyn Greer Garson, CBE (September 29, 1904 - April 6, 1996) was an Academy Award-winning English actress very popular during the World War II years and was the leading lady in many pictures with Walter Pidgeon.

Known in childhood as "Eggy", Greer Garson was born in Manor Park, Essex (now Greater London), England in 1904. She was the only child of George Garson (1865-1906), a clerk born in London but with Scottish lineage, and his Irish wife, Nancy ("Nina") Sophia Greer (d. 1958). Her maternal grandfather was David Greer a RIC sergeant in Castlewellan Co Down NI in the 1880s and who later became a land steward to the Annesleys wealthy landlords who built the the town of Castlewellan. He lived in a large detached house built on the lower part of what was known as Pig Street or known locally as the Back Way near Shilliday’s builder’s yard. The house was called ‘Claremount’ and today the street is named Claremount Avenue. It was often reported that Ms. Garson was born in this house. She was, in fact born in London, but spent many of her childhood days in Castlewellan.

She was educated at the University of London, where she earned degrees in French and 18th-century literature. She intended to become a teacher, but instead began working with an advertising agency, and appeared in local theatrical productions.

Career:

She appeared on television during its earliest years, in the 1930s, most notably in a thirty-minute production of an excerpt of Twelfth Night in May 1937, alongside Peggy Ashcroft. This is the first known instance of a Shakespeare play performed on television.
Louis B. Mayer discovered Garson while he was in London looking for new talent. Garson was signed to a contract with MGM in late 1937, but did not begin work on her first film, Goodbye, Mr. Chips, until late 1938. She received her first Oscar nomination for the role, but lost to Vivien Leigh for Gone with the Wind. She received critical acclaim the next year for her role as Elizabeth Bennet in the 1940 film, Pride and Prejudice.

Garson starred opposite Joan Crawford in When Ladies Meet in 1941 and that same year, became a major box office star with the sentimental Technicolor drama Blossoms in the Dust which brought her the first of five consecutive Best Actress Oscar nominations, tying Bette Davis` 1938-1942 record, a record that still stands. Garson won the Academy Award for Best Actress in 1942 for her role as a strong British wife and mother in the middle of World War II in Mrs. Miniver. (Guinness Book of World Records credits her with the longest Oscar acceptance speech, at five minutes and 30 seconds, after which the Academy Awards instituted a time limit.[citation needed]) She was also nominated for Madame Curie (1943), Mrs. Parkington (1944), and The Valley of Decision (1945).

Garson was a popular dramatic actress for several years when she was teamed with Clark Gable in his first film since returning from war service in 1945, Adventure. The film was advertised with the catch-phrase "Gable`s back and Garson`s got him!" Garson`s popularity dropped somewhat in the late 1940s, but she remained a popular film star until the mid 1950s.

Personal Life:

Garson was married three times. Her first marriage, on September 28, 1933, was to Edward Alec Abbot Snelson (1904-1992), later Sir Edward, a British civil servant who became a noted judge and expert in Indian and Pakistani affairs. The actual marriage repor
 

Comments

Be the first person to add a comment!
 

Submit a Comment

 

Snapshot

    Name Greer Garson
    (Eileen Evelyn Greer Garson)
    Height 5' 6"  (168 cm)
    Build Slim
    Eye Color Green
    Hair Color Red
    Date of Birth September 291904
    Birthplace London, England
    Star Sign Libra
    Died April 6, 1996 (Aged 92)
    Location of Death Dallas, Tx
    Cause of Death Heart Failure
    Nationality England
    Ethnicity White
    Religion Presbyterian
    University University of London
    Occupation Actress
    Celebrity Index Gr
    Claim to Fame Mrs. Minivers

    Rate this Date

 

Photo Gallery

 

Fans

 

Trivia

Miscellaneous

Quotes
  • "All I know about getting something that you want is that there are three essential things: wanting, trying and getting the opportunity, the breaks. None works alone without the others. Wanting is basic. Trying is up to you. And the breaks - I do know this, they always happen."

  • "I remember her as gracious and beautiful. She had stature, but it didn`t make her inaccessible. She wasn`t somebody you`d poke and tell a dirty joke to, but she gave off a real feeling of warmth."--actress Eve Plumb, who costarred with Garson in the 1978 TV adaptation of Little Women.

  • "If you`re going to be typed, there are worse moulds in which you can be cast."

  • [In a 1990 interview, Garson deplored the violence of many modern films] "I think the mirror should be tilted slightly upward when it`s reflecting life -- toward the cheerful, the tender, the compassionate, the brave, the funny, the encouraging, all those things -- and not tilted down to the gutter part of the time, into the troubled vistas of conflict."

  • [speaking in the 1970s] "I`ve been offered nymphomaniacs, kleptomaniacs, pyromaniacs, homicidal maniacs and just plain maniacs. I think producers felt that after playing a long series of noble and admirable characters there would be quite a lot of shock value in seeing me play something altogether different. But I prefer upbeat stories that send people out of the theater feeling better than they did coming in. It`s my cup of tea."
  • Trivia
  • In 1938 she suffered malnutrition from embarking on a crash diet to achieve the standard Hollywood slimline figure.

  • In 1952, she accepted the Oscar for best actress in a leading role on behalf of Vivien Leigh, who wasn`t present at the awards ceremony.

  • In 1962, she accepted the Oscar for best actress in a leading role on behalf of Sophia Loren, who wasn`t present at the awards ceremony.

  • In the 1982, she turned down Aaron Spelling`s offer of a part in the hit soap "Dynasty" (1981), playing mother to Joan Collins`s Alexis.

  • She was a fan of the film Top Gun (1986).

  • A fire at her home destroyed the original Oscar she had won for best actress in Mrs. Miniver (1942). The Academy of Motion Pictures later sent her a replacement.

  • Had homes in Dallas, Los Angeles and ranch near Pecos, New Mexico.

  • Her given name, Greer, was a contraction of MacGregor, her mother`s maiden name.

  • Lana Turner remembered that in the MGM wardrobe department, Garson`s fitting mannequin had the largest hips, "but she is a tall woman."

  • Nominated for an Academy Award five years in a row: 1941, 1942, 1943, 1944 and 1945. She holds the record for most consecutive nominations with Bette Davis.

  • Replaced Rosalind Russell in the Broadway version of Auntie Mame in 1958.

  • Signed up by MGM boss Louis B. Mayer when he saw her acting on a London stage. [1937]

  • Well-known for activities on behalf of educational and cultural institutions.

  • While at MGM in the 1940s she said that she would liked to have been cast in more comedies rather than dramas, and was jealous that those roles were given to another redhead who recently signed with the studio, Lucille Ball. Ironically, Ball was dissatisfied at being overlooked for dramatic roles.

  • Although it is sometimes bandied about as an anecdotal piece of Oscar trivia, she did not "ramble on for over an hour" after receiving her 1943 Academy Award for Mrs. Miniver (1942). Her acceptance speech was actually only 5-1/2 minutes in length. This still makes it the longest acceptance speech ever.
  • Measurements
  • Bust: 36"   Waist: /C"  Hips: 38"
  •  

    Contributors

    This page was last updated by:
    Who's Dated Who content is contributed and edited by our readers. Please report errors or omissions on this page.
     

    Related Links

     

    Related Profiles