Years active 1932–1987 | Name Mildred Dunnock Role Theater Actress | |
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Full Name Mildred Dorothy Dunnock Spouse Keith M. Urmy (m. 1933–1991) Awards Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Performance Movies Baby Doll, The Trouble with Harry, The Nun's Story, Death of a Salesman, BUtterfield 8 Similar People Mildred Natwick, Royal Dano, Edmund Gwenn, Betty Field, Fred Zinnemann | ||
Occupation Actress, schoolteacher |
Baby Doll 1956 Karl Carroll Baker Mildred Dunnock Eli Wallach
Mildred Dorothy Dunnock (January 25, 1901 – July 5, 1991) was an American theater, film and television actress.
Contents
- Baby Doll 1956 Karl Carroll Baker Mildred Dunnock Eli Wallach
- Hollywood Moments Character Actresses pt one
- Early life
- Career
- Personal life
- Filmography
- References

Hollywood Moments: Character Actresses pt. one
Early life

Born in Baltimore, Maryland, she graduated from Western Senior High School. Dunnock was a school teacher who did not start acting until she was in her early thirties. She attended Goucher College where she was a member of Alpha Phi sorority.
Career

After a couple of roles in Broadway productions during the 1930s, Dunnock won praise for her performance as a Welsh school teacher in The Corn is Green in 1940. The 1945 film version marked her screen debut. During the 1940s she performed mainly on stage, in such dramas as Another Part of the Forest (1946) and Death of a Salesman (1949) and in the musical Lute Song (1946). In 1947, Dunnock became a founding member of the Actors Studio.

Dunnock reprised her Salesman role in the 1951 film version. She originated the role of Big Mama in the Tennessee Williams' Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, although she lost the movie role to Judith Anderson. Her films include The Trouble with Harry (1955), Love Me Tender (1956), Baby Doll (1956), Peyton Place (1957), The Nun's Story (1959), Butterfield 8 (1960), Something Wild (1961) and Sweet Bird of Youth (1962). She was the woman in the wheelchair pushed down a flight of stairs to her death by the psychotic villain Tommy Udo (Richard Widmark) in Kiss of Death (1947). She appeared frequently in guest roles on numerous TV series such as Alfred Hitchcock Presents and Ponds Theater, and later in her career, several television movies, including a remake of Death of a Salesman in which she played Linda Loman for the third time, opposite her original Broadway co-star, Lee J. Cobb.
Dunnock was twice nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, for Death of a Salesman in 1951, and for Baby Doll in 1956. She was also nominated for the Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actress for Baby Doll, as well as Viva Zapata! in 1952 and Peyton Place in 1957.

Her final film was The Pick-up Artist (1987), which starred Robert Downey, Jr. and Molly Ringwald.

Dunnock has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her contribution to motion pictures, at 6613 Hollywood Boulevard. She is also a member of the American Theater Hall of Fame, which she was inducted into in 1983.
Personal life
Dunnock was married to Keith Urmy, an executive at Chemical Bank in Manhattan, from 1933 until her death, and had one child. She died in Oak Bluffs, Massachusetts at age 90 from natural causes. At the time of her death she was living in West Tisbury, Massachusetts.