English-American actress (1898–1989)
Norma Varden Shackleton (20 January 1898 – 19 January 1989), known professionally as Norma Varden , was an English-American actress with a long film career.[ 4]
Born in London, the daughter of a retired sea captain, Varden was a child prodigy. She trained as a concert pianist in Paris and performed in England before deciding to take up acting. She studied at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and made her first appearance as Mrs Darling in Peter Pan .[ 5]
In England, Varden was a protege of actress Kate Rorke.[ 6] She acted in repertory theatre and made her West End debut in The Wandering Jew in 1920. From Shakespeare to farce, she established herself as a regular member of the Aldwych Theatre company where she appeared in plays from 1929 to 1933. She began to appear in British films, usually in haughty upper-class roles.[ 5]
Move to America and film career [ edit ]
Varden's English film roles led to offers from Hollywood, and she moved there at the start of World War II, beginning a long career of playing character and supporting roles. Notable films Varden appeared in include Casablanca (1942), The Major and the Minor (1942), The White Cliffs of Dover (1944), National Velvet (1944), The Green Years (1946), Forever Amber (1947), Strangers on a Train (1951), Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), Jupiter's Darling (1955), and Witness for the Prosecution (1957). She played the housekeeper Frau Schmidt in The Sound of Music (1965). Two years later, she had a minor part as Lady Petherington in Doctor Dolittle (1967).[ 7]
She had a recurring role in the 1960s NBC sitcom Hazel as Harriet Johnson.[ 8] She appeared on CBS 's I Love Lucy as Mrs. Benson, the neighbour with whom the Ricardos switch apartments after the birth of Little Ricky in 1953.[ 9] In 1957, she guest-starred as Mrs. Weddington-Brown in Mr. Adams and Eve episode "The Social Crowd." She was cast as Mrs. Murdock in the 1961 episode "The Swedish Girl" on ABC 's The Real McCoys .[ 10] She appeared on CBS's Perry Mason as Winifred Wileen in the 1964 episode, "The Case of the Illicit Illusion".[ 11] That same year, Varden, along with veteran character actress and comedienne Kathleen Freeman were featured in a third-season episode of The Lucy Show entitled "Lucy Gets Her Maid".[ 12] In that installment, Varden played yet another snooty socialite named Mrs. Van Vlack who hires Lucy Carmichael (Lucille Ball ) as a maid. She also appeared on the seventh-season episode of The Beverly Hillbillies "Problem Bear" as the snobby socialite, Mrs. Vanransenhoff, who went home with Granny to get gossip on Mrs. Drysdale.[ 13]
Varden played Mrs. Dumont in a 1966 (Season 3, Ep.11) episode of Bewitched entitled "Oedipus Hex", sitting on a "Ways & Means" charity committee with Samantha Stephens to raise funds for a children's playground.
Varden played Mrs. Hermione Monteagle in episode 13 of the Batman series of the 1960s.[ 14]
Personal life and death [ edit ]
She became a naturalised United States citizen on 28 January 1949.[ 15]
Varden died of heart failure in Santa Barbara, California at age 90. She is interred in Santa Barbara Cemetery .[ 16] She never married.[ 17]
Complete filmography [ edit ]
The Glorious Adventure (1922) as Court Lady (uncredited)
The Chance of a Night Time (1931) as Mrs. Rashley-Butcher (uncredited)
A Night Like This (1932) as Mrs. Tuckett (uncredited)
Crime on the Hill (1933) as Editor's Secretary (uncredited)
Happy (1933) as Miss Stone, Secretary with Glasses (uncredited)
Turkey Time (1933) as Ernestine Stoatt
Evergreen (1934) as Barmaid (uncredited)
The Iron Duke (1934) as Duchess of Richmond
Dirty Work (1934) as Tiara Customer (uncredited)
The Student's Romance (1935) as Dora Streudelmeier, Karl's Aunt
Boys Will Be Boys (1935) as Lady Dorking
Stormy Weather (1935) as Mrs. Dulcie Bullock
Foreign Affaires (1935) as Mrs. Hardy Hornett
Get Off My Foot (1935) as Mrs. Rawlingcourt
Music Hath Charms (1935) as Bit (uncredited)
The Amazing Quest of Ernest Bliss (1936) (uncredited)
Where There's a Will (1936) as Lady Margaret Wimpleton
East Meets West (1936) as Lady Mallory
Windbag the Sailor (1936) as Olivia Potter-Porter
Fire Over England (1937) as Elena's Governess (uncredited)
Wanted! (1937) as Mrs. Smithers
The Lilac Domino (1937) (uncredited)
Strange Adventures of Mr. Smith (1937) as Mrs. Broadbent
Make-Up (1937) as Hostess
Rhythm Racketeer (1937) as Della Nash
Fools for Scandal (1938) as Cicely Trevel (uncredited)
You're the Doctor (1938) as Lady Beatrice
Everything Happens to Me (1938) as Mrs. Prodder
Little Ladyship (1939, TV Movie) as Mrs. Cynthia Bigley
Home from Home (1939) as Mrs. Fairweather
Shipyard Sally (1939) as Lady Patricia Randall
The Earl of Chicago (1940) as Maureen Kilmount
Waterloo Bridge (1940) as Hostess at Restaurant (uncredited)
Hit Parade of 1941 (1940) (uncredited)
The Mad Doctor (1940) as Woman at Charity Bazaar (uncredited)
Scotland Yard (1941) as Lady Heathcote
Road to Zanzibar (1941) as Clara Kimble (uncredited)
Glamour Boy (1941) as Mrs. Lee
We Were Dancing (1942) as Mrs. Bryce-Carew
Flying with Music (1942) as Miss Mullens
The Glass Key (1942) as Henrys' Dinner Guest (uncredited)
The Major and the Minor (1942) as Mrs. Osborne
Casablanca (1942) as Wife of Pickpocketed Englishman (uncredited)
Random Harvest (1942) as Julia
Johnny Doughboy (1942) as Miss Penticott (uncredited)
Slightly Dangerous (1943) as Opera Singer (uncredited)
Dixie (1943) as Mrs. LaPlant (uncredited)
The Good Fellows (1943) as Mrs. Drayton
Sherlock Holmes Faces Death (1943) as Gracie, Barmaid (uncredited)
My Kingdom for a Cook (1943) as Margaret, Morley's Cook (uncredited)
The Beautiful Cheat (1943) as Miss Timmons
The White Cliffs of Dover (1944) as Mrs. Bland
Mademoiselle Fifi (1944) as The Wholesaler's Wife
Double Indemnity (1944) as Secretary (uncredited)
National Velvet (1944) as Miss Sims
Bring on the Girls (1945) as Aunt Martha
Those Endearing Young Charms (1945) as Mrs. Woods, Hall's Floor Lady
The Cheaters (1945) as Mattie (uncredited)
Girls of the Big House (1945) as Mrs. Thelma Holt
Hold That Blonde (1945) as Flora Carteret
The Green Years (1946) as Mrs. Bosomley
The Searching Wind (1946) as Mrs. Hayworth
Millie's Daughter (1947) as Mrs. Sarah Harris
The Trouble with Women (1947) as Mrs. Wilmer Dawson
Ivy (1947) as Joan Rodney (uncredited)
Thunder in the Valley (1947) as Lady Eleanor (uncredited)
Forever Amber (1947) as Mrs. Abbott (uncredited)
Where There's Life (1947) as Mabel Jones
Mr. Ashton Was Indiscreet (1947) as Woman at Banquet (uncredited)
My Own True Love (1948) as Red Cross Nurse (uncredited)
The Amazing Mr. X (1948) as Wealthy-Looking Woman (uncredited)
The Scar (1948) as Mrs. Gerry (uncredited)
Let's Live a Little (1948) as Nurse Brady
Adventure in Baltimore (1949) as H. H. Hamilton
The Secret Garden (1949) as Nurse
Fancy Pants (1950) as Lady Maude
Strangers on a Train (1951) as Mrs. Cunningham
Thunder on the Hill (1951) as Pierce
The Highwayman (1951) as Dowager at Ball (uncredited)
Washington Story (1952) (uncredited)
Les Miserables (1952) as Madame Courbet (uncredited)
Something for the Birds (1952) as Congresswoman Bates (uncredited)
Young Bess (1953) as Lady Tyrwhitt
Loose in London (1953) as Aunt Agatha
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) as Lady Beekman
Elephant Walk (1954) as Shop Customer (uncredited)
Three Coins in the Fountain (1954) as Woman at Cocktail Party (uncredited)
Dynamite, the Story of Alfred Nobel (1954, TV Movie)
The Silver Chalice (1954) as Roman Matron (uncredited)
Jupiter's Darling (1955) as Fabia
The Birds and the Bees (1956) as Passenger (uncredited)
Sneak Preview (1956) (Season 1 Episode 1: "Just Plain Folks")
Witness for the Prosecution (1957) as Mrs. Emily Jane French
In the Money (1958) as Mrs. Smythe-Chumley (uncredited)
The Buccaneer (1958) as Madame Hilaire
The Miracle (1959) as Mrs. MacGregor (uncredited)
Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1960) (Season 5 Episode 35: "The Schartz-Metterklume Method") as Jenny (uncredited)
Five Minutes to Live (1961) as Priscilla Auerbach
Rome Adventure (1962) as Dean of Briarcroft College for Women (uncredited)
13 Frightened Girls (1963) as Miss Pittford
Island of Love (1963) as Wife in Nightclub (uncredited)
Kisses for My President (1964) as Miss Dinsendorff (uncredited)
The Sound of Music (1965) as Frau Schmidt, housekeeper
A Very Special Favor (1965) as Mother Plum
Two's Company (1965, TV Movie) as Lady Ordering Drink at Party (uncredited)
Doctor Dolittle (1967) as Lady Petherington
The Impossible Years (1968) as Dr. Jenkins (uncredited)
Istanbul Express [de ] (1968, TV Movie) as Englishwoman
Doc (1969, TV Movie) as Mrs. Dobson (final film role)
^ "Ancestry Library Edition" . Ancestrylibrary.com. Retrieved 19 April 2017 .
^ "Ancestry Library Edition" . Ancestrylibrary.com. Retrieved 19 April 2017 .
^ "Ancestry Library Edition" . Search.ancestrylibrary.com . Retrieved 19 April 2017 .
^ "Norma Varden" . BFI . Archived from the original on 23 April 2016.
^ a b Hal Erickson. "Norma Varden – Biography, Movie Highlights and Photos – AllMovie" . AllMovie .
^ "Mask and Wig on Broadway" . The Brooklyn Daily Eagle . New York, Brooklyn: Newspapers.com. 26 April 1929. p. 42. Retrieved 14 June 2016 .
^ "Profile: Norma Vardene" . afi.com.
^ "Hazel : Such a Nice Little Man (1964) - William D. Russell | Cast and Crew | AllMovie" – via www.allmovie.com.
^ "I Love Lucy : The Ricardos Change Apartments (1953) - William Asher, James V. Kern | Cast and Crew | AllMovie" – via www.allmovie.com.
^ "The Real McCoys : The Swedish Girl (1961) - | Cast and Crew | AllMovie" – via www.allmovie.com.
^ "Perry Mason : The Case of the Illicit Illusion (1964) - Irving J. Moore, Irving Moore | Cast and Crew | AllMovie" – via www.allmovie.com.
^ "The Lucy Show : Lucy Gets Her Maid (1964) - Jack Donohue | Cast and Crew | AllMovie" – via www.allmovie.com.
^ "The Beverly Hillbillies: Problem Bear (1969) – – Cast and Crew" . AllMovie .
^ "Batman : The Thirteenth Hat (1966) - Norman Foster | Cast and Crew | AllMovie" – via www.allmovie.com.
^ Naturalization paperwork for Norma Varden , ancestry.com. Retrieved 13 October 2015.
^ Wilson, Scott. Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons , 3d ed.: 2 (Kindle Locations 25047-25048). McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. Kindle Edition.
^ "Noted actress Norma Varden dead at 90" . Reading Eagle . 22 January 1989.
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