- Source: Jeff Donnell
Jean Marie "Jeff" Donnell (July 10, 1921 – April 11, 1988) was an American actress.
Early years
Donnell was born in South Windham, Maine, to Harold and Mildred Donnell, when her father was superintendent at a boys' reformatory in that town. As a child, she adopted the nickname "Jeff" after the character in her favorite comic strip, Mutt and Jeff. To avoid gender confusion, she was sometimes billed as "(Miss) Jeff Donnell."
Donnell graduated from Towson High School, Towson, Maryland, in 1938 and attended the Leland Powers School of Drama in Boston, Massachusetts. Later, she studied at the Yale School of Drama.
Career
Donnell was signed to a contract by Columbia Pictures while she was active with the Farragut Playhouse in New Hampshire, and she made her film debut in My Sister Eileen (1942).
She became a fixture at Columbia, working steadily in comedies, mysteries, westerns, and musicals for five years, and then off and on at the studio from 1950 to 1972. During the 1940s she was typically the house tomboy, a plain-speaking sidekick for the glamorous ingenue, and developed a flair for comedy. Columbia did give Donnell the glamour treatment later (in the 1946 Boston Blackie mystery The Phantom Thief, in which she played a troubled heiress), but she never shook the sidekick image. When her Columbia contract ran out, she freelanced at other studios, mostly in low-budget action pictures. She returned to Columbia in 1950. She had met Lucille Ball on the set of the 1948 RKO Radio Pictures production Easy Living; Ball remembered Donnell and recruited her to play her sidekick in The Fuller Brush Girl (1950).
Donnell continued to play character roles in motion pictures and television; for three seasons, she portrayed George Gobel's wife, Alice, in The George Gobel Show (1954–1957) on NBC-TV. Many of her assignments were for Columbia (notably as Gidget's mother Dorothy Lawrence in Gidget Goes Hawaiian and Gidget Goes to Rome) and Columbia's TV subsidiary Screen Gems (she played Hannah Marshall in the Gidget television series, : 391 and portrayed Mrs. Bennett in the TV series Julia).: 548 In 1966 she made five appearances on Dr. Kildare as Evelyn Driscoll, and she played Ethel on the Matt Helm TV series.: 667
Her last Columbia feature was the women's lib-themed comedy Stand Up and Be Counted (1972). Her final recurring role was as Stella Fields, the Quartermaines' housekeeper, in the popular soap opera General Hospital, from 1979 to 1988.
Personal life
Donnell's four marriages all ended in divorce. The first, in 1940 (and ultimately longest), was to William R. Anderson, her teacher at the Leland Powers Dramatic School. Donnell had her only children with him, namely Michael Phineas—affectionately dubbed Mickey Finn—in 1942 and Sarah Jane (aka Sally), whom the couple adopted in the fall of 1947. Anderson and Donnell divorced in 1952.
Next came actor Aldo Ray, whom Donnell married in 1954 and divorced in 1957. Her third marriage, to advertising executive John Bricker, began on December 1, 1958 and concluded in an uncontested divorce decree issued on March 19, 1963, with Donnell reporting that Bricker had, among other things, publicly belittled both herself and her adopted daughter.
Donnell's fourth and final marriage, to Radcliffe (aka Rod) Bealey, lasted all of three months, comprising roughly the spring of 1970. Commencing in March of that year with a guest list confined to family and close friends, the marriage was officially dissolved in June.
Death
On April 11, 1988, at age 66, Donnell died of a heart attack at her home in Hollywood. As for her then still recurring role on General Hospital, a contemporaneous report by syndicated soaps pundit Lynda Hirsch states that Donnell was being replaced by another actress in that season's remaining few episodes, and would then be written out of the show altogether, the onscreen rationale consisting of a note left with her character's employers, explaining that she had to leave to care for an ailing relative.
Credits
Notes
References
External links
Jeff Donnell at IMDb
Photos of Jeff Donnell 1940s various films Archived 2020-05-16 at the Wayback Machine by Ned Scott
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Doughboys in Ireland
- Outcasts of the Trail
- Spider-Man (film 1977)
- Dancing in Manhattan
- The Boogie Man Will Get You
- Because You're Mine
- Sweet Smell of Success
- The 100 (seri televisi)
- Daftar film Marvel Cinematic Universe
- Vlog
- Jeff Donnell
- The Iron Maiden
- Spider-Man (1977 film)
- The First Time (1952 film)
- Aldo Ray
- Donnell
- Night Editor
- George Gobel
- Massacre Canyon (film)
- The Phantom Thief