Rosalind Russell

Rosalind Russell Headshot

Actress

Birth Date: June 4, 1907

Death Date: November 28, 1976

Birth Place: Waterbury, Connecticut

She was born into wealth and privilege but for Golden Age moviegoers, Rosalind Russell represented the epitome of the working woman. Warehoused as a Universal acquisition and underutilized at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, the lanky, dark-eyed actress tested her comic chops in George Cukor's "The Women" (1939) before coming into her own as Cary Grant's co-star in Howard Hawks' "His Girl Friday" (1940) - a role refused by almost every A-list actress in Hollywood. Tailoring the script to the talents of his stars, whom he encouraged to ad lib for the camera, Hawks delivered the rare Hollywood hit to please critics and audiences alike, while Russell made of her brassy distaff journalist Hildy Johnson a role model for American women braving the male-dominated workforce. Russell also found satisfaction on stage, winning a Tony for "Wonderful Town" in 1953 and reprising her 1956 Broadway success as "Auntie Mame" in Warner Brothers' lavish Technicolor film adaptation. The four-time Academy Award nominee transitioned deftly to middle-age, playing a small town spinster in "Picnic" (1955) and mentoring Natalie Wood's budding burlesque star in "Gypsy" (1962). Diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis, Russell threw herself into charity work, for which she received the 1973 Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award only a few years before breast cancer robbed Hollywood of one of its most unique talents, a glamorous leading lady with the soul of a vaudevillian.

Catherine Rosalind Russell was born on June 4, 1907, in Waterbury, CT. The fourth of seven children born to James Edward Russell, a trial attorney, and the former Clara McKnight, a school teacher, Russell was raised in affluence on Waterbury's Cracker Hill, a conclave of stately Victorian homes shaded by fruit trees and backed by rose gardens. Called Rosalind by her parents, in memory of a happy sea cruise to Nova Scotia aboard the S.S. Rosalind, Russell developed into a tomboy, climbing trees, riding horses from her father's stable, and cutting classes to attend movies at her local bijou. Upon her high school graduation from the Notre Dame Academy, she enrolled in Tarrytown, New York's Marymount College, with the stated aim of becoming a teacher. Drawn to campus theatricals, Russell played the Jesuit saint Francis Xavier in a religious play and was given the lead role in a student production of the operetta "The Bohemian Girl." Leaving Marymount in 1927 after only two years, she enrolled in classes at the American Academy of Dramatic Art in Manhattan, assuring her now widowed mother that a diploma from AADA would enable her to teach voice and diction.

In 1929, Russell was cast in the lead role in Frederick Lonsdale's comedy of manners "The Last of Mrs. Cheney," which also featured another young AADA enrollee - Agnes Moorehead. Upon her graduation from the Academy, Russell transitioned to summer stock, joining a repertory company based at New York's Saranac Lake, and later traveling for acting work in Boston. As a member of the Adirondack Players, she starred in a regional staging of Edwin Burke's "This Thing Called Love," a recent Broadway hit. In 1930, Russell made her Broadway debut with an ensemble role in the Theatre Guild revue "Garrick Gaieties," alongside future television comedienne Imogene Coca. Equally short-lived was her return to the Great White Way in the Alma Wilson farce "Company's Coming!," which closed after a week at the Lyceum Theater. Tapped by Universal Pictures in Hollywood for potential film work, Russell traveled west but her brief time at Universal was an unhappy one. Breaking her studio contract, Russell found a more welcoming home at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, for whom she made her feature film debut in "Evelyn Prentice" (1934), as Myrna Loy's snooty rival for the love of William Powell.

Despite possessing a flair for comedy, Russell's initial film roles often cast her as the other woman in such dramas as "West Point of the Air" (1935) with Robert Young and "China Seas" (1935) with Clark Gable. Though romance favored her in the class comedy "It Had to Happen" (1936) with George Raft and in the psychological thriller "Night Must Fall" (1937) with Robert Montgomery, Russell's unique abilities were largely wasted. A happy exception was her turn as the journalist heroine of Michael Curtiz's "Four's a Crowd" (1938), co-starring Errol Flynn, and her breakthrough role as the catty Sylvia Fowler in George Cukor's madcap "The Women" (1939). The latter classic allowed Russell to bring all of her talents to bear, contrasting her haughty, patrician mien (which so often limited her to playing socialites) with an affinity for slapstick. If "The Women" showed Russell's great promise as a top-tier comedienne, that promise was fulfilled when she was loaned out to Columbia Pictures to co-star opposite Cary Grant in Howard Hawks' "His Girl Friday" (1940), a reworking of the Ben Hecht-Charles MacArthur stage play with one of the principle roles gender-reversed for a woman.

Russell's enthusiasm to take the lead in an A-list comedy tailored to her particular talents was tempered initially when she learned that the role of ace reporter Hildy Johnson had been rejected by nearly every major Hollywood comedienne - among them Irene Dunne, Ginger Rogers, Claudette Colbert, Carole Lombard and Jean Arthur. Glumly submitting to costume tests for Hawks, the actress boldly voiced her apprehension but was reassured by the veteran director and co-star Grant, with whom she enjoyed a professional relationship of complete equanimity that had little precedent in Hollywood at the time. Though Hawks had a reputation for demanding from his actors absolute fidelity to the shooting script, he allowed and encouraged Russell and Grant to ad lib for the camera, even to the extreme of breaking the presumed forth wall separating players and audience. The film's manic pacing; overlapping, fast-flying dialogue; and the winning union of Russell and Grant made it a hit with both the critics and moviegoers. The production also had the benefit of bringing Russell together with Frederick Brisson, a Danish expatriate and agency executive whom she would marry in 1941, with Cary Grant as their best man.

Russell earned Academy Award nominations for her roles in the comedy "My Cousin Eileen" (1942), for the historical biopic "Sister Kenny" (1946), and for "Mourning Becomes Electra" (1947), an adaptation of the grim Eugene O'Neill play that proved a disastrous venture for RKO-Radio Pictures. If the majority of her subsequent film roles proved unmemorable, Russell found greater job satisfaction by returning to the stage. She toured with a 1951 production of "Bell, Book and Candle" and won a Tony for starring in the 1953 Broadway production of "Wonderful Town" and George Abbott's musical adaptation of "My Cousin Eileen." She stayed with the hit show through 556 performances and reprised the role of Ruth Sherwood for a 1958 television adaptation broadcast by CBS. In the interim, the 47-year-old actress accepted a supporting role as a small town spinster in Joshua Logan's "Picnic" (1955) but refused a Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination when Columbia denied her top billing. In 1956, Russell returned to Broadway for the last time to star as the free-spirited "Auntie Mame," another box office juggernaut that ran for over 600 performances at the Broadhurst Theater.

When Russell reprised her role as Mame Dennis in Morton DaCosta's film adaptation of "Auntie Mame" (1958), she had found a signature role to bookend her indelible turn as Hildy Johnson in "His Girl Friday" (1940). The film garnered six Oscar nominations, among them one for Russell as Best Actress, but she had to content herself with a Golden Globe and some of the best reviews of her career. After the diagnosis of breast cancer in 1959 required Russell to undergo a double mastectomy, she worked less often. She played Mama Rose to Natalie Wood's budding burlesque performer Gypsy Rose Lee in "Gypsy" (1962) and appeared as a martinet Mother Superior in the convent comedy "The Trouble with Angels" (1966) and its sequel, "Where Angels Go, Trouble Follow" (1968). "Rosie!" (1967) gave the actress another whack at Mame-style irreverence in the role of a widow whose avaricious daughters have her committed to a sanitarium for fear she will spend their inheritance before she dies. Billing herself as C.A. McKnight (in honor of her mother), Russell co-wrote her final film appearance, playing a New Jersey housewife who volunteers for espionage work in the comedy "Mrs. Pollifax - Spy" (1971), based on a series of novels by Dorothy Gilman.

Russell's final credit was in the ABC telefilm "The Crooked Hearts" (1972), a geriatric romantic comedy which finds her posing as a socialite in order to meet wealthy widowers, only to snag Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., a debonair confidence man targeting wealthy widows. Diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis in 1969, Russell refused to acknowledge her disability publicly but devoted herself to charity work, for which she received the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award at the 1973 Academy Awards. The metastasis of her cancer brought about Russell's death in her Beverly Hills home on Nov. 28, 1976. Her autobiography, Life is a Banquet (a title cadged from "Auntie Mame") was published a year after her death. In 1978, the Rosalind Russell Medical Research Center for Arthritis was founded at UCLA-San Francisco. In 2000, "His Girl Friday" and "Auntie Mame" were included in the American Film Institute's Top 100 comedies. In 2009, Jonathan Gruber's documentary "Life Is a Banquet: The Rosalind Russell Story" was exhibited at film festivals nationwide. By Richard Harland Smith

Credits

The Crooked Hearts

Actor
Laurita Dorsey
Movie
1972

Mrs. Pollifax: Spy

Actor
Mrs. Pollifax
Movie
1971

Mrs. Pollifax: Spy

Screenwriter
Movie
1971

Where Angels Go, Trouble FollowsStream

Actor
Mother Simplicia
Movie
1968

Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mamma's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' So Sad

Actor
Madame Rosepettle
Movie
1967

Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Mama's Hung You in the Closet and I'm Feelin' So Sad

Actor
Madame Rosepettle
Movie
1967

Rosie!

Actor
Rosie Lord
Movie
1967

Les Riches familles

Actor
Movie
1967

The Trouble with AngelsStream

Actor
Mother Superior
Movie
1966
75%

Dortoir des anges

Actor
Movie
1965

Five Finger Exercise

Actor
Louise Harington
Movie
1962

GypsyStream

Actor
Rose Hovick
Movie
1962
64%

A Majority of One

Actor
Mrs. Bertha Jacoby
Movie
1961

Ford Startime

Actor
Show
1959

Vivir Es Mi Deseo

Actor
Movie
1958

Auntie MameStream

Actor
Mame Dennis
Movie
1958
88%

PicnicStream

Actor
Rosemary
Movie
1955
50%

The Girl Rush

Actor
Kim Halliday
Movie
1955

Never Wave at a WAC

Actor
Jo McBain
Movie
1952

What's My Line?Stream

Guest
Game Show
1950

Dama sin Corazón

Actor
Movie
1950

A Woman of Distinction

Actor
Susan Manning Middlecott
Movie
1950

Tell It to the Judge

Actor
Marsha Meredith
Movie
1949

The Velvet Touch

Actor
Valerie Stanton
Movie
1948

The Guilt of Janet Ames

Actor
Janet Ames
Movie
1947

Mourning Becomes Electra

Actor
Lavinia Mannon
Movie
1947

Sister Kenny

Actor
Elizabeth Kenny
Movie
1946

Roughly Speaking

Actor
Louise Randall Pierson
Movie
1945

She Wouldn't Say Yes

Actor
Dr. Susan A. Lane
Movie
1945

What a Woman!

Actor
Carol Ainsley
Movie
1943

Flight for Freedom

Actor
Tonie Carter
Movie
1943

My Sister Eileen

Actor
Ruth Sherwood
Movie
1942

Take a Letter, Darling

Actor
A.M. MacGregor
Movie
1942

The Feminine Touch

Actor
Julie Hathaway
Movie
1941

They Met in Bombay

Actor
Anya Von Duren
Movie
1941

Design for Scandal

Actor
Judge Cornelia C. Porter
Movie
1941

No Time for Comedy

Actor
Linda Paige Esterbrook
Movie
1940

Hired Wife

Actor
Kendal Browning
Movie
1940

This Thing Called Love

Actor
Ann Winters
Movie
1940

His Girl FridayStream

Actor
Hildegard "Hildy" Johnson
Movie
1940
99%

The WomenStream

Actor
Sylvia
Movie
1939
94%

Fast and Loose

Actor
Garda Sloane
Movie
1939

Four's a Crowd

Actor
Jean Christy
Movie
1938

The Citadel

Actor
Christine Barlow Manson
Movie
1938

Man-Proof

Actor
Elizabeth Kent Wythe
Movie
1937

Live, Love and Learn

Actor
Julie Stoddard
Movie
1937

Night Must FallStream

Actor
Olivia
Movie
1937

La Mujer de Craig

Actor
Movie
1936

Trouble for Two

Actor
Miss Vandeleur
Movie
1936

Craig's Wife

Actor
Harriet Craig
Movie
1936

Under Two Flags

Actor
Lady Venetia Cunningham
Movie
1936

It Had to Happen

Actor
Beatrice Newnes
Movie
1936

China Seas

Actor
Sybil
Movie
1935

Casino Murder Case

Actor
Doris Reed
Movie
1935

Rendezvous

Actor
Joel Carter
Movie
1935

The Night Is Young

Actor
Countess Zarika Rafay
Movie
1935

Reckless

Actor
Josephine "Jo" Mercer
Movie
1935

West Point of the Air

Actor
Mrs. Dare Marshall
Movie
1935

Evelyn Prentice

Actor
Mrs. Nancy Harrison
Movie
1934

Forsaking All Others

Actor
Eleanor
Movie
1934

The President Vanishes

Actor
Sally Voorman
Movie
1934