Harriet E. Macgibbon

Harriet E. MacGibbon (October 5, 1905February 8, 1987) was an American actress. She was born in Chicago, Illinois, the daughter of Walter Peter McGibbon (born April 1872) and Gertrude L. Crary (born December 1864). Harriet's father was a physician. It is not clear why she added an "a" to her surname, but she was credited a few times as McGibbon. She was "finished" at Knox School, Cooperstown, New York, where she prepared for Vassar. Without staying to receive a diploma, she left to fulfill her desire for the footlights and studied with Franklin H. Sargent at his American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York City. 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. There were regular productions, including Ned McCobb's Daughter, The Front Page, The Big Fight, and a "transcontinental tour" starring MacGibbon in The Big Fight, which began in Boston, took in New Haven and Hartford, and ended at Caine's storehouse. Jack Dempsey was also in the cast. During that time, MacGibbon stopped off in Boston long enough to study the harp with Alfred Holy, harpist of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. She later said that when she gave up the instrument, Mr. Holy, "with unconscious humor," remarked, "What a pity, Miss MacGibbon, you look so lovely with a harp." She also had a long and distinguished career on the Broadway stage, beginning in 1925 at the age of nineteen 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 Downtown Los Angeles. MacGibbon had two husbands, William R. Kane (divorced) and Charles Corwin White, II. The second marriage ended with his death on December 25, 1967. She and Kane had one son, William MacGibbon Kane (February 2, 1933-April 2, 1977). She made numerous guest appearances on television starting in 1950, but appeared in only five theatrical motion pictures, including The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1962), which was directed by Vincente Minnelli and starred Glenn Ford, Ingrid Thulin, Charles Boyer and Lee J. Cobb. Unlike her stage roles, MacGibbon's movie and TV roles usually consisted of snooty society ladies, which includes her well known role of Mrs. Margaret Drysdale in the long-running hit TV sitcom The Beverly Hillbillies. Harriet E. MacGibbon died at the age of eighty-one of pulmonary and cardiac failure. She was cremated and her ashes are in niche 61046, Columbarium of Remembrance, Forest Lawn - Hollywood Hills Cemetery, Los Angeles, California.

Filmography

Made-for-TV Filmography

TV series - regular

External links

Macgibbon, Harriet E. Macgibbon, Harriet E. Macgibbon, Harriet E. Macgibbon, Harriet E. Macgibbon, Harriet E. Macgibbon, Harriet E.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
tianjin academy of fine arts
tianjin conservatory of music
university of macau
beijing people's police college
china people's public security university
peking union medical college
beijing university of physical education
toei oedo line
prelude to dune
bowsprit
beijing electronic science and technology institute
china foreign affairs university
china youth university for political sciences
china institute of industrial relations
china women's university
beijing technology and business university
legends of dune
beijing union university
beijing university of technology
north china university of technology
capital university of medical sciences
capital normal university
capital university of economics and business
beijing institute of clothing technology
beijing institute of civil engineering and architecture
beijing institute of machinery
daphne blake
race traitor
tongdosa
setl2
mountain states
electric cello
bangalore linux user group
ivan caldern
alexander de jesus
bangalore it.com
isetl programming language
orsa
isetlw programming language
indiction cycle
nonacquiescence
norville "shaggy" rogers
his majesty's declaration of abdication act 1936
linux bangalore