Pages

Sunday, November 10, 2013

What a Character: Gladys Cooper


The What a Character! blogathon is in progress now, hosted by Once Upon a Screen, Outspoken and Freckled and Paula's Cinema Club. Click here for more information and links to participating blogs. My entry for the event follows...
~
Young Gladys
She was a beautiful child, wide-eyed and wistful, who began modeling at age six; during World War I she was the favorite 'picture postcard' pin-up of British troops; she went on tour in a musical at age 17 and by the time she neared 40 she was a star of the London stage. In 1940, at age 51, she began working as a character actress in Hollywood and would, over the course of the next three decades, earn three Oscar nominations for Best Supporting Actress. Her name was Gladys Cooper and she is best remembered for her performance as Bette Davis's cruel, steel-willed mother, Mrs. Vale, in Now, Voyager...


Gladys Cooper and Alfred Hitchcock launched their careers in Hollywood at the same time on the same film - Rebecca (1940). Cooper's was the small role of a tweedy aristocrat, the sister of Maxim de Winter (Laurence Olivier), who offered warmth and kindness to the beleaguered second Mrs. de Winter (Joan Fontaine). Rebecca, Selznick Pictures' follow up to Gone with the Wind, took the year's Best Picture Oscar and put Cooper (not to mention Hitchcock, Fontaine and Olivier) on the Hollywood map. Her obvious talent and commanding presence brought two less sympathetic roles next: Dennis Morgan's disapproving socialite mother in Kitty Foyle (1940) and the spurned wife of Laurence Olivier in That Hamilton
Gladys Cooper and Frank Morgan in Green Dolphin Street
Woman
(1941). Her facility in these roles paved the way for Cooper to be cast as the villain in Now, Voyager. She earned her first Oscar nomination in 1942 for her portrayal of this archetypal devouring mother. The following year she earned her second nomination as Sister Marie Therese, a severe and punishing nun in The Song of Bernadette (1943).


Typecast? Yes and no. Cooper was fortunate (and versatile) enough to be cast in sympathetic roles - in Mr. Lucky (1943), The White Cliffs of Dover (1944), The Valley of Decision (1945), Green Dolphin Street (1947) and other popular films - but she was as often cast as uppercrust autocrats. In 1947, she brought one of her most memorable wealthy dowagers to the screen as Mrs. Hamilton in the holiday fantasy The Bishop's Wife. This time, though, there was a twist; the imperious widow's hardened heart was melted by no less an angel than Cary Grant - giving Cooper the rare chance to render both harsh and tender facets of her character.

Gladys Cooper and Cary Grant, The Bishop's Wife
The 1950s brought the actress far more work on television than in films, but she would add one more notable ill-tempered and overbearing mother to her gallery of silver screen harridans. Maude Railton-Bell, her role in Delbert Mann's Separate Tables (1958), doesn't command the wealth or position of Mrs. Vale of the "Boston Vales," but she does maintain the same kind of suffocating stranglehold on her dowdy spinster daughter (Deborah Kerr).

Gladys Cooper's credits during TV's early, golden days are impressive. She appeared on two legendary drama anthologies, The Alcoa Hour and Playhouse 90; she was featured on both Alfred Hitchcock Presents and The Alfred Hitchcock Hour; she guested on The Ann Sothern Show, Naked City, The Outer Limits, Burkes Law, Ben Casey, The Girl From U.N.C.L.E. (!) and was nominated for a
The Rogues
1964 primetime Emmy for The Rogues, a crime caper series in which she
co-starred with Charles Boyer, David Niven, Gig Young and Robert Coote. Most often talked about among her many TV performances, though, are her appearances on the venerable series, The Twilight Zone. Cooper first appeared in a haunting 1962 episode entitled "Nothing in the Dark," in which she portrayed an elderly woman utterly terrified of death (personified by fledgling actor Robert Redford). Her second guest spot came the following year when she played one of several elderly travelers who have booked "Passage on the Lady Anne." Finally, later in 1963, came "Night Call," directed by Jacques Tourneur, in which she starred solo as an elderly woman who lives alone and begins to receive unnerving, anonymous phone calls.

Now in her mid-70s, Gladys Cooper still had a last good film or two ahead of her. She was a member of John Huston's illustrious cast in The List of Adrian Messenger (1963) and earned her third and final Academy Award nomination for her performance as Mrs. Higgins, mother of Henry (Rex Harrison), in the Oscar-winning musical, My Fair Lady (1964).

And that's not all. Before she embarked on her Hollywood career, Cooper had starred on Broadway several times. She returned to the New York stage in her late career and earned Tony nominations in her final two roles. She was nominated for Best Actress in a Play in 1956 for her performance in The Chalk Garden and again in 1962 for her performance in A Passage to India (in a role that would bring an Oscar to Peggy Ashcroft 20+ years later).

Gladys Cooper (center) in a 1971 revival of The Chalk Garden

At last, in 1967, as she approached 80, Gladys Cooper was named a Dame of the British Empire. Her life in the public eye had begun because of the great beauty with which she was naturally endowed; she was long considered the most beautiful woman in England. But Cooper was blessed with more than looks, she had striking talent and presence and profound devotion to her craft. The blush of youthful beauty would, as it always does, fade, but her power as an actress only matured and deepened through the years. Dame Gladys Cooper had been about to embark on a Canadian tour with a revival of The Chalk Garden in 1971 when she was stricken with pneumonia and died.

Bette Davis was set to tape a guest appearance on The Dick Cavett Show when she learned of Gladys Cooper's death; she shared her thoughts during the interview:
 

20 comments:

  1. Lovely post on a truly, profoundly great actress. Also love Bette Davis remarks in her interview on their like shall never come again. Sadly true.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It seems English film actors and actresses still go through fairly rigorous stage training (and it shows). In the US it seems there's no longer as much a professional stage tradition as there once was. The Soap opera seems to be one of the main routes to film work these days.

      Delete
  2. Your article is very enlightening. Gladys Cooper lived a fascinating life in fascinating times. We're lucky to have those filmed performances to enjoy.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks! I'd love to have seen Gladys Cooper's performance in "The Letter" on film. She originated the role of Leslie Crosbie on the London stage.

      Delete
  3. Thanks for featuring Gladys Cooper in the blogathon. I knew almost nothing about her career, except that I'm a fan of her work.

    Thanks also for including the clip of the Bette Davis/Dick Cavett interview. The whole interview is fascinating, but I especially love the warm words Davis had for Cooper.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I enjoy the Dick Cavett interviews of old - he's very bright and yet has that bit of awkwardness in the presence of the great ones that is endearing.

      Delete
  4. Lady Eve -as always, an excellent article about one of the greats. A while back I kept coming across some guy on FB who apparently had a thing for the young Gladys and kept posting pictures of her in her youth and I must say she was quite the beauty.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. She was very lovely - beautiful eyes - dreamy, with a slightly "bedroom" quality. It was the fashion in her days as a model to look serious, a bit melancholy - in other words, not to smile (as much stillness as possible was preferred in the poses - due the slow speed of cameras then).

      Delete
  5. Cooper is truly one-of-a-kind. Her performance in The Bishop's Wife is truly special, but the one that I probably love the most is The Valley of Decision.

    Thank you for this wonderful tribute. And for posting that picture of her as a young woman. So beautiful!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Gladys Cooper's best known film roles are in two high-profile classics - Now, Voyager and The Bishop's Wife - in which she plays (brilliantly) matriarchal bullies. So - I was surprised when I first saw her in more kindly roles and realized how truly engaging and sympathetic she could be. A very, very fine actress.

      Delete
  6. I saw Gladys in several performances, like Now, Voyager, and The Song of Bernadette. Since some of her movies, like Separate Tables and Kitty Foyle, are on my to-watch list, I promise to pay more attention to her. Oh, and she was a real beauty in her youth!
    Don't forget to read my contribution to the blogathon! :)
    Kisses!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Lê, I'll read every blogathon entry eventually, and I'm looking forward to yours.

      Delete
  7. I get chills just thinking of her in NOW, VOYAGER and adore her in THE BISHOP'S WIFE! She had extraordinary range and this is a wonderful tribute!! As is always the case when I visit, I loved reading this post. Lovely!!

    Thanks so much for participating in the blogathon! :)

    Aurora

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. And thanks for hosting a great blogathon, Aurora!

      Delete
  8. Lady Eve, a great selection and fine tribute to this thespian, who seemed to be in everything. As far as mothers go I can't imagine more differant roles than those in Kitty Foyle or Now Voyager with that of My Fair Lady. But that's what makes a great actor.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes - she was so credible as cold, cruel characters and yet equally fine in roles that required warmth and and humor and sweetness.

      Delete
  9. Though I have seen Cooper in many of the films you discuss, I always have associated her with the TV series THE ROUGES, a show I use to watch way back when. Wish it would come out on DVD. A Wonderfully done article!

    ReplyDelete
  10. I only vaguely remember The Rogues and don't know if I ever watched even an episode - but it looks like the entire season is available on YouTube. Will have to check it out - what a cast!

    ReplyDelete
  11. I remember her in many roles, but never realized her career ran all the way back to her youth or that she had been a celebrated beauty. I am ashamed to say I was not even aware of her name...I just knew she was a great character actress. Thanks for a excellent read.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for stopping by, Cyd, I'm glad you enjoyed this brief "tour" of Gladys Cooper's career.

      Delete