Ruth White (actress)

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Ruth White
Ruth White, having won an Emmy Award in 1964
Born
Ruth Patricia White

(1914-04-24)April 24, 1914
DiedDecember 3, 1969(1969-12-03) (aged 55)
Perth Amboy, New Jersey, U.S.
OccupationActress
Years active1946–1969

Ruth Patricia White (April 24, 1914 – December 3, 1969) was an American actress who worked in theatre, film, and television. She won

Tony Award
nominee.

Early years

A lifelong resident of Perth Amboy, New Jersey, White was of Irish Catholic descent. She attended St. Mary's High School and graduated with a bachelor's degree in literature from New Jersey College for Women, now Douglass Residential College, Rutgers University in 1935.[1] While pursuing her acting career in nearby New York City, she taught acting and drama at Seton Hall University. During this period, she also studied acting with Maria Ouspenskaya.[2]

Early career

White began her acting career in 1940 as an apprentice at the Cape May Playhouse.[3] Late in World War II, she spent six months in Alaska and the Aleutians touring with a USO troupe. For five years, beginning in 1948, she was the leading resident actress at Bucks County Playhouse.[2]

White's Broadway debut came in The Ivy Green (1949).[4]

Career hiatus and resurgence

White's career was delayed in the late 1950s while she nursed her ailing mother. She appeared in off-Broadway plays of

Tony Award nomination in 1968 for her role in Harold Pinter's The Birthday Party
.

Among her film appearances are her role as Mother Marcella in Fred Zinnemann's The Nun's Story (1959) and as the cantankerous, aged Mrs. Dubose, who yells at the precocious children Jem, Scout, and Dill from her front porch in Robert Mulligan's To Kill a Mockingbird (1962). By the end of the 1960s, she had become one of New York's most highly praised and in demand character actresses, and appeared in Midnight Cowboy, Hang 'Em High and No Way To Treat A Lady.

White's final film role was in The Pursuit of Happiness, released 14 months after her death.

Recognition

In 1962, White won an Obie Award for Distinguished Performance by an Actress for her work in the play Happy Days.[5]

In 1964, she won an

Little Moon of Alban.[6]

Death

White, who never married, died of cancer on December 3, 1969, aged 55. She was survived by her brothers, Richard and Charles, and her sister, Mrs. Genevieve Driscoll. She was predeceased by another sister, Mary Cecile White, who served as president of the Perth Amboy Teachers Union Local 857.[7] She is interred with her brothers Charles and Richard in the family plot at Saint Mary's Cemetery, Perth Amboy, New Jersey.[citation needed]

Filmography

Film
Year Title Role Notes
1957 Edge of the City Katherine Nordmann
1959 The Nun's Story Mother Marcella (School of Medicine)
1962 To Kill a Mockingbird Mrs. Dubose
1965 Baby the Rain Must Fall Miss Clara
1965 A Rage to Live Mrs. Bannon
1966 Cast a Giant Shadow Mrs. Chaison
1967 Up the Down Staircase Beatrice Schacter
1967 The Tiger Makes Out Mrs. Kelly
1968 No Way To Treat A Lady Mrs. Himmel
1968 A Lovely Way to Die Biddy, Cook
1968 Hang 'Em High Madame 'Peaches' Sophie
1968 Charly Mrs. Apple
1969 Midnight Cowboy Sally Buck - Texas
1969 The Reivers Miss Reba
1971 The Pursuit of Happiness Mrs. Popper (final film role)
Television
Year Title Role Notes
1949 The Magic Cottage Bessie Bookbinder early DuMont children's series
1952 Captain Video and His Video Rangers Mrs. Bullfinch 1 episode
1963 The Twilight Zone Mrs. Ford Episode: The Incredible World of Horace Ford
1963–1965 The Fugitive Edith Waverly / Grams 2 episodes
1964
Little Moon of Alban
Shelagh Mangan received Emmy award for outstanding supporting actress

References

  1. ^ "Ruth White, 55, Of Stage And TV; Actress Who Won Emmy in Little Moon of Alban Dies", The New York Times, December 4, 1969. Accessed November 14, 2017. "Ruth Catherine White, born April 14, 1924, into a family that had been in Perth Amboy for more than 150 years, was the daughter of Charles V. and Jane Gibbons White, She attended St. Mary's High School in her hometown and was graduated from Douglass College in New Brunswick, N. J."
  2. ^
    Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  3. ^ "Ruth White". Internet Broadway Database. The Broadway League. Archived from the original on December 12, 2017. Retrieved December 12, 2017.
  4. ^ "("Happy Days" search results)". OBIE Awards. Village Voice and American Theatre Wing. Archived from the original on December 13, 2017. Retrieved December 13, 2017.
  5. .

External links