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Barbara ONeil

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Occupation
  
Actress

TV shows
  
Young Doctor Malone

Role
  
Film actress

Name
  
Barbara O'Neil

Years active
  
1937-59; 1970


Barbara O'Neil 92832991jpgv8CC82CDC0C8F7E0

Born
  
July 17, 1910 (
1910-07-17
)
St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.

Died
  
September 3, 1980, Cos Cob, Greenwich, Connecticut, United States

Spouse
  
Joshua Logan (m. 1940–1942)

Books
  
Biorhythms: How to Live with Your Life Cycles

Movies
  
Gone with the Wind, All This - and Heaven T, Secret Beyond the Door, The Nun's Story, Angel Face

Similar People
  
Thomas Mitchell, Butterfly McQueen, Evelyn Keyes, Ann Rutherford, Hattie McDaniel

hormone imbalance by barbara o neill


Barbara O'Neil (July 17, 1910 – September 3, 1980) was an American film and stage actress. She appeared in the popular film Gone with the Wind (1939) and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress in 1940 for her performance in All This, and Heaven Too.

Contents

Barbara O'Neil Barbara O3939Neil Gone with the Wind Autographed Photo

"The Liver" by Barbara ONeill


Life and career

Barbara O'Neil StinkyLulu Barbara O39Neil in All This and Heaven Too

Barbara O'Neil was born in St. Louis, Missouri, the daughter of Barbara (née Blackman 1880-1963) and David O'Neil, a businessman and poet. Her mother was a socialite and suffragette. She spent her childhood mostly in Europe and graduated from Sarah Lawrence College. Her maternal grandmother was Carrie Horton Blackman, a successful portrait painter.

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She began her acting career in summer stock. In July 1931 Bretaigne Windust, Charles Leatherbee (the grandson of Charles Richard Crane), and Joshua Logan, the three directors of the University Players, a three-year-old summer stock company at West Falmouth on Cape Cod, were looking for a leading lady for their repertory season that winter in Baltimore. At the suggestion of George Pierce Baker, they auditioned and hired O'Neil, one of his talented students at the Yale School of Drama. Romances born of the University Players led to three significant marriages: actress Margaret Sullavan to Henry Fonda for a few months in 1932, director/actor Joshua Logan's younger sister Mary Lee Logan to Charles Leatherbee, and Joshua Logan himself to Barbara O'Neil, which lasted only a brief period in the early 1940s. O'Neil never remarried. She made her Broadway debut in a 1932 play about Carrie Nation. Her other stage credits include originating the role of Madam Serena Merle in a Broadway adaptation of The Portrait of a Lady in 1954.

In 1937 O'Neil debuted in the film Stella Dallas, and in 1939 she was cast in the role of Ellen O'Hara, Scarlett O'Hara's mother, in Gone with the Wind (though she was only three years older than her onscreen "daughter," Vivien Leigh), after the role was turned down by Lillian Gish. The following year, she appeared in All This and Heaven Too; she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for the role of the domineering and jealous Duchesse de Praslin.

Her later films include Shining Victory (1941), I Remember Mama (1948), The Secret Beyond the Door (1948) and two of director Otto Preminger's films, Whirlpool (1949) and Angel Face (1952). She also appeared in The Nun's Story (1959), starring Audrey Hepburn.

O'Neil died from a heart attack at the age of 70 on September 3, 1980.


Barbara O'Neil Barbara ONeil was born on July 17 1910 in St Louis Missouri USA


References

Barbara O'Neil Wikipedia