Harriet MacGibbon

(Redirected from Harriet E. MacGibbon)

Harriet Elizabeth MacGibbon[4][5] (October 5, 1905[6][5] – February 8, 1987)[2] was an American film, stage and television actress best known for her role as the insufferably snobbish, "blue-blooded Bostonian" Mrs. Margaret Drysdale in the sitcom The Beverly Hillbillies.

Harriet MacGibbon
MacGibbon in Man with a Camera (1959)
Born
Harriet Elizabeth MacGibbon

(1905-10-05)October 5, 1905
DiedFebruary 8, 1987(1987-02-08) (aged 81)
Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills, California, U.S.
Alma materAmerican Academy of Dramatic Arts[3]
OccupationActress
Years active1925–1987
Spouse(s)William Reno Kane (1930-1942)
Charles Corwin White (1942-1967)
ChildrenWilliam MacGibbon Kane (1933–1977; died at age 43)

Career

MacGibbon joined the stock company of Edward Clarke Lilley at Akron, Ohio. She then went to San Francisco and played leading roles for Henry Duffy. In Louisville, Kentucky, she acted with Wilton Lackaye, Edmund Breese, William Faversham, Tom Wise and Nance O'Neil. Credits included Ned McCobb's Daughter, The Front Page, and a "transcontinental tour" of Max Marcin's The Big Fight (in which she starred opposite former world heavyweight champion Jack Dempsey), beginning in Boston, taking in New Haven and Hartford, Connecticut, and ending at Caine's storehouse in Los Angeles.[7][8]

She had a long and distinguished career on the Broadway stage, beginning in 1925 at the age of 19 when she acted in the play Beggar on Horseback at the Shubert Theatre. In the late 1930s, she did You Can't Take It With You, the Pulitzer Prize-winning comedy, at the Biltmore Theatre in Los Angeles. From 1934 to 1937, MacGibbon portrayed Lucy Kent on the NBC radio soap opera Home Sweet Home.[9]

MacGibbon in The Golf Specialist (1930)

Her film debut was a non-speaking bit as a snooty woman walking a dog across a golf course in W.C. Fields' The Golf Specialist (1930), shot in Fort Lee, New Jersey.[10] She made numerous guest appearances on television starting in 1950, including Bewitched, Ray Milland's sitcom Meet Mr. McNutley. Another sitcom in which MacGibbon appeared was My Three Sons, performing as Margaret Cunningham in the 1961 episode "Bub Goes to School". She was cast in five theatrical movies, including Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1962), which was directed by Vincente Minnelli and starred Glenn Ford, Ingrid Thulin, Charles Boyer, and Lee J. Cobb.[citation needed]

Personal life and death

MacGibbon married at least twice: in September 1930 to producer William Reno Kane of Philadelphia,[11] from whom she obtained a divorce in April 1942,[12][13] at which time she married writer Charles Corwin White.[14] They remained married until White's death in 1967, on Christmas Day. She had one child by her first marriage, a son, William MacGibbon Kane, who was born in 1933 and died in 1977, predeceasing his mother.[15]

Harriet MacGibbon died at age 81. She was cremated, and her ashes interred in niche 61046 in the Columbarium of Remembrance at Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Hollywood Hills), Los Angeles, California.[6]

Filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1930The Golf SpecialistSnooty woman walking dogshort, bit part, uncredited[10]
1961Cry for HappyMrs. Bennett
1961The Absent Minded ProfessorWedding guestuncredited
1961All in a Night's WorkDowageruncredited
1962A Majority of OneMrs. Putnam
1962Four Horsemen of the ApocalypseDona Luisa Desnoyers
1963Son of FlubberMrs. Edna Daggett
1965FluffyMrs. Claridge

TV filmography

  • Wacky Zoo of Morgan City (1970) as Mrs. Westerfield
  • The Judge and Jake Wyler (1972) as hostess
  • The Best Place to Be (1979)

TV series – regular

References