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Nanette Fabray

 
American Theater Guide: Nanette Fabray

Fabray, Nanette [née Ruby Bernadette Nanette Theresa Fabares] (b. 1922), actress and singer. The bubbly, snub‐nosed redhead made her debut at the age of three in vaudeville in Los Angeles, not far from her native San Diego, and afterwards toured as Baby Nanette. Later she won scholarships to the Max Reinhardt School of the Theatre and appeared in its productions of The Miracle, Six Characters in Search of an Author, and Servant with Two Masters. Broadway first saw her in Meet the People (1940), then in Let's Face It! (1941), By Jupiter (1943), My Dear Public (1943), and Jackpot (1944). After replacing Celeste Holm as the lead in Bloomer Girl (1945), she was awarded the role of Sara Longstreet in High Button Shoes (1947), introducing “Papa, Won't You Dance with Me?” and “I Still Get Jealous.” Fabray's subsequent credits include the perennial wife Sara Cooper in Love Life (1948), the American girl Jo Kirkland who loves a Hessian soldier in Arms and the Girl (1950), the orphan Jeanette in Make a Wish (1951), and First Lady Nell Henderson in Mr. President (1962). Her later New York performances were sporadic but memorable, as in No Hard Feelings (1973) and Bermuda Avenue Triangle (1997).

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Actor: Nanette Fabray
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  • Born: Oct 27, 1920 in San Diego, California
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '30s, '50s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Drama
  • Career Highlights: The Band Wagon, Harper Valley P.T.A., Alice Through the Looking Glass
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Band Wagon (1953)

Biography

In vaudeville from the age of six, Nanette Fabray made her first film appearance (under her family name Fabares) as one of Bette Davis' ladies-in-waiting in The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939). She established herself as a Broadway star in the 1940s, starring in musicals ranging from 1947's High Button Shoes to 1962's Mister President, winning a brace of Donaldson awards along the way. In 1953, she played her most famous screen role as a Betty Comden-ish playwright in MGM's The Band Wagon (1953). On television, Fabray won three Emmies for her work on Sid Caesar's programs of 1954 and 1955; she also starred in her own 1961 sitcom, The Nanette Fabray Show, and was co-starred as Bonnie Franklin's mother in the 1970s series One Day at a Time. Legally deaf since the 1950s, Fabray has worked tirelessly on behalf of America's hearing impaired, and has been honored for her efforts by several presidents. Nanette Fabray is the widow of screenwriter/director Ranald McDougall, and the aunt of actress Shelley Fabares. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Nanette Fabray
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Nanette Fabray
Born Nanette Ruby Bernadette Fabares
October 27, 1920 (1920-10-27) (age 89)
San Diego, California, U.S.
Occupation Actress
Years active 1924–1994
Spouse(s) Dave Tebet (1947-1951)
Ranald MacDougall (1957-1973)

Nanette Fabray (born October 27, 1920) is an American film, television and musical theatre actress. She is the aunt of actress/singer Shelley Fabares.

Contents

Biography

Born as Nanette Ruby Bernadette Fabares in San Diego, California, she overcame a significant hearing impairment to pursue her career and has been a long-time advocate for the rights of the deaf and hard of hearing. Her honors representing the handicapped include the President's Distinguished Service Award and the Eleanor Roosevelt Humanitarian Award.

Career

In vaudeville from the age of six, Fabray made her first film appearance as an extra in the Our Gang short Cradle Robbers in 1924.[1] Her feature debut came as one of Bette Davis' ladies-in-waiting in The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (1939). In 1953, she played her most famous screen role as a Betty Comden-like playwright in MGM's The Band Wagon with Fred Astaire and Jack Buchanan. Their performance included a classic musical number, "Triplets", that was eventually included in That's Entertainment Part II. Additional film credits include The Subterraneans and The Happy Ending.

Fabray made her Broadway debut in Let's Face It! in 1941. Additional theatre credits included By Jupiter, Bloomer Girl, High Button Shoes, Make a Wish, Love Life for which she won the Tony Award, and Mr. President, which garnered her a second nomination.

In her early Broadway and film appearances, Fabray was credited as Fabares. The pronunciation is the same, but she changed the spelling following an embarrassing moment on The Ed Sullivan Show, when the famed host, reading a cue card, mispronounced her name on live television as "Nanette Fa-bare-ass."

Television

Fabray became a household name with her appearances on Caesar's Hour, for which she won three Emmys. She and Sid Caesar as a team became a national sensation. Fabray left the show after a misunderstanding when her business manager, unbeknownst to her, made unreasonable demands for her third season contract, and Fabray and Caesar did not reconcile until a few years later when both became aware of the facts. [1] Fabray appeared on several series as the mother of a main character: on One Day at a Time she was Ann Romano's mom; on The Mary Tyler Moore Show she was mother to Mary Richards, and on Coach, she played mother to real-life niece Shelley Fabares.

She also made appearances on The Carol Burnett Show, Burke's Law, Love, American Style, Maude, The Love Boat, What's My Line?, and Murder, She Wrote. Her brief, eponymous 1961 comedy series was cancelled after 13 episodes. On the PBS program, Pioneers of Television: Sitcoms, Mary Tyler Moore credited her well-known "crying" takes to mimicking Fabray's style of comic crying.

Fabray's most recent work was in 2007, when she appeared in The Damsel Dialogues, an original revue by composer Dick de Benedictus, with direction/choreography by Miriam Nelson. The show focused on women's' issues with life, love, loss and the work place. The play was performed at the Whitefire Theatre in Sherman Oaks, California.

Personal life

Fabray's first husband, Dave Tebet was a Vice-President of NBC. Her second husband, screenwriter and sometime-director Ranald MacDougall (1957-73), with whom she had one child, numbered Mildred Pierce and Cleopatra among his credits. He was President of the Writers Guild of America in the early 1970s.

A resident of Pacific Palisades, California, Fabray wrote to Dear Abby in 2001 to decry the loud background music used on television programs today. [2]

Hollywood Walk of Fame

Nanette Fabray has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Partial filmography

Film

Television

References

  1. ^ a b Fabray interview, Archive of American Television, National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences
  2. ^ Letter to Dear Abby

External links


 
 

 

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American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Nanette Fabray" Read more