Eileen Herlie

Eileen Herlie Headshot

Actress

Birth Date: March 8, 1918

Death Date: October 8, 2008 — 90 years old

Birth Place: Glasgow, Scotland, UK

A celebrated actress, particularly noted for her interpretations of Queen Gertrude in "Hamlet," Eileen Herlie has primarily been delighting daytime viewers for more than 20 years as the irrepressible, no-nonsense and down-to-earth carny woman turned boutique owner and boarding house proprietress Myrtle Lum Fargate on ABC's "All My Children." Herlie first joined the daytime drama in 1976, playing the former variety performer who arrives in the fictional Pine Valley looking to start a new life.

Shunned by some, she recognizes a man who had been wining and dining the town's doyenne, Phoebe Tyler, as a former petty thief. The storyline which ensued endeared her to all, yet after an initial few years on the show, her character was married off and written out of the show. But, Herlie had become so popular that the producers brought her back as a widow, and she has since dispensed good cheer and common sense, even befriending Erica Kane (Susan Lucci).

Few who watch her on "All My Children" are aware of her illustrious stage and film career. The petite Glaswegian honed her craft on stage with the Scottish National Theatre and first garnered attention in Jean Cocteau's play "The Eagle Has Two Heads." She graced several Broadway musicals, most notably "Take Me Along" (1959), alongside Jackie Gleason and Walter Pidgeon, and "All American" (1962), opposite Ray Bolger.

After a couple of films, Laurence Olivier cast Herlie as Queen Gertrude in his 1948 film version of "Hamlet"; that she was a dozen years younger than him only highlighted his Freudian interpretation of the role. Two years later, the actress had her first leading role as a Jewish woman in pre-war Germany forced by her family to marry a man they deem appropriate rather than her true love in "The Angel With the Trumpet."

She garnered praise for her turn as the mother of a newlywed bride in the comedy "For Better For Worse" (1954) and as the mother the first psychoanalytic patient in "Freud" (1962). She again played Gertrude, this time to Richard Burton in John Gielgud's 1964 modern dress version of the classic. (The Broadway production was filmed for theatrical release.)

Her last film (to date) was Sidney Lumet's 1968 adaptation of Chekhov's "The Sea Gull."

Credits

SOAPnet Selects: The Best of '06

Actor
Show
2006

All My Children Christmas

Actor
Show
2003

Justice, Only Justice

Actor
Show
2002

One Life to Live Christmas

Actor
Show
2000

One Life to Live Tuesday

Actor
Show
2000

One Life to Live Yesterday

Actor
Show
2000

Lemonade

Actor
Edith
Movie
1971

All My ChildrenStream

Actor
Myrtle Lum Fargate
Soap
1970

All My Children Friday

Actor
Show
1970

All My Children Monday

Actor
Show
1970

All My Children Thursday

Actor
Show
1970

All My Children Today

Actor
Show
1970

All My Children Tuesday

Actor
Show
1970

All My Children Wednesday

Actor
Show
1970

All My Children Yesterday

Actor
Show
1970

The Sea GullStream

Actor
Polina
Movie
1968

Hamlet

Actor
Gertrude
Movie
1964

General Hospital Today

Actor
Show
1963

General Hospital Yesterday

Actor
Show
1963

Freud

Actor
Frau Ida Koertner
Movie
1962
78%

She Didn't Say No!

Actor
Bridget Monahan
Movie
1958

For Better, For Worse

Actor
Anne's Mother
Movie
1954

The Great Gilbert and Sullivan

Actor
Helen D'Oyly Carte
Movie
1953

Isn't Life Wonderful?

Actor
Mother
Movie
1952

The Angel with the Trumpet

Actor
Henrietta Stein
Movie
1950

Angel With the Trumpet

Actor
Henrietta Stein
Movie
1950

HamletStream

Actor
Gertrude, The Queen
Movie
1948
96%

Hungry Hill

Actor
Katherine
Movie
1947