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Lucile Gleason
View on WikipediaThis article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (February 2007) |
Lucile Gleason (née Webster; February 6, 1888 – May 18, 1947) was an American stage and screen actress. Gleason was also a civic worker who was active in film colony projects.
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Lucile Webster was born on February 6, 1888, in Pasadena, California.
Career
[edit]Stage
[edit]
Lucile Webster went on stage as a teen working with her father's stock company. After she married actor James Gleason, she realized stage success in New York City in a production of The Shannons of Broadway (1927), written by her husband. The play was adapted for a 1929 film of the same name, and was later made into the film Goodbye Broadway (1938).
Film
[edit]Gleason's motion picture career started with several movies in 1929 and continued until 1945. The Gleasons continued to perform together in Hollywood. In 1929 they co-starred in The Shannons of Broadway.[1] In 1945, they made The Clock, with Lucile playing the role of Mrs. Al Henry, the wife of her husband's character.
Higgins Family films
[edit]Their son, Russell, was paired with his parents in the farcical family comedy, The Higgins Family, in 1938. The story centers around Lucile's performance in two radio programs which threaten to derail her husband's advertising business. [citation needed] The trio was also featured in Grandpa Goes to Town, another Higgins saga, in 1940.[2]
Activism
[edit]She was a vice-president of the Screen Actors Guild[3] and was a member of the Hollywood U.S.O. and the Veterans' Service Council. In 1947 she was named Mother of 1947 in a Mother's Day observance conducted by the U.S.O. In the 1930s Gleason served on the advisory board of the Federal Theater Project. On several occasions she was an unsuccessful candidate for political office. In 1944 Gleason ran for the Assembly from the 59th District in California. In 1946 she was defeated by then incumbent Secretary of State Frank Jordan.
Personal life
[edit]Gleason became the wife of actor James Gleason in 1905, when the couple married in Oakland, California. She took his surname as her professional and legal surname.
Her only child was actor Russell Gleason (1908-1945), whose most prominent role came in the Academy Award-winning version of All Quiet on the Western Front (1930), in which he played the role of Private Müller.
On December 26, 1945, Russell Gleason was in New York City when he fell to his death out of a fourth story window in the Hotel Sutton. He had been awaiting deployment to Europe with his regiment in the hotel, which the army had commandeered to house the troops. Reports varied, some saying the fall was accidental, while others stating it was a suicide.[citation needed]
Death
[edit]Gleason died in her sleep, apparently of heart disease in 1947,[4] aged 59, at her home in Brentwood, California.
Filmography
[edit]| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1929 | The Shannons of Broadway | Emma Shannon | |
| 1931 | The Pagan Lady | Nellie | |
| Girls About Town | Mrs. Benjamin Thomas | ||
| Nice Women | Mrs. Girard | ||
| 1932 | Girl of the Rio | Matron | |
| 1933 | Don't Bet on Love | Mrs. Gilbert | |
| The Solitaire Man | Mrs. Arthur Peabody | ||
| Love, Honor, and Oh Baby! | Flo Bowen | ||
| 1934 | Beloved | The Duchess | |
| Woman Unafraid | Augusta Winthrop | ||
| I Like It That Way | Mrs. Anderson | ||
| A Successful Failure | Mrs. Cushing | ||
| 1936 | Klondike Annie | Big Tess | |
| The Ex-Mrs. Bradford | Mrs. Hutchins | ||
| Rhythm on the Range | Penelope 'Penny' Ryland | ||
| Red Lights Ahead | Molly 'Ma' Wallace | ||
| 1937 | Navy Blues | Aunt Beulah | |
| First Lady | Mrs. Ives | ||
| 1938 | The Higgins Family | Lillian Higgins | |
| The Nurse from Brooklyn | 'Ma' Hutchins | ||
| The Beloved Brat | Miss Brewster | ||
| 1939 | My Wife's Relatives | Lil Higgins | |
| Should Husbands Work? | |||
| The Covered Trailer | |||
| Money to Burn | |||
| 1940 | Grandpa Goes to Town | ||
| Lucky Partners | Ethel's Mother | ||
| Earl of Puddlestone | Lil Higgins | ||
| 1941 | The Gay Falcon | Vera Gardner | |
| 1942 | She's in the Army | Sgt. Hannah Walters | |
| 1943 | Stage Door Canteen | Herself | |
| 1944 | Take It Big | Sophie | |
| 1945 | The Clock | Mrs. Al Henry | |
| Don't Fence Me In | Mrs. Prentiss | (final film role) |
References
[edit]- ^ "(movie theater advertisements)". The Indianapolis News. Indiana, Indianapolis. The Indianapolis News. February 3, 1930. p. 3. Retrieved January 17, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Walker, Paul (April 26, 1940). "'Grandpa' at the Rio: 'Black Friday,' Senate". Harrisburg Telegraph. Pennsylvania, Harrisburg. Harrisburg Telegraph. p. 17. Retrieved January 17, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Film Actors' Guild Headed by Arnold". Oakland Tribune. California, Oakland. Oakland Tribune. September 16, 1940. p. 9. Retrieved January 17, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Lucile Gleason Dies". The Waco News-Tribune. Texas, Waco. The Waco News-Tribune. May 19, 1947. p. 1. Retrieved January 18, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
Sources
[edit]- Fresno Bee, "Actress Lucile Gleason Dies In Hollywood", May 19, 1947, p. 3
- Los Angeles Times, "Lucile Gleason, Film Actress, Dies in Sleep", May 19, 1947, p. A1
- Oakland Tribune, "Gleasons Score At Grand Lake", October 28, 1938, p. 37
External links
[edit]Lucile Gleason
View on GrokipediaLucile Gleason (née Webster; February 6, 1888 – May 18, 1947) was an American actress recognized for her stage and film performances, frequently appearing alongside her husband James Gleason and their son Russell Gleason in family-oriented productions.[1][2] Born in Pasadena, California, she began her career in theater before transitioning to motion pictures in the late 1920s.[2] Gleason served as the inaugural treasurer of the Screen Actors Guild, contributing to early labor organization efforts in Hollywood.[3] Married to actor and playwright James Gleason from August 22, 1906, until her death, the couple collaborated professionally for over four decades, including in the 1929 film The Shannons of Broadway, which showcased the Gleason family dynamic.[4][5] Her film roles often featured maternal or character parts, with appearances in notable pictures such as The Ex-Mrs. Bradford (1936), Klondike Annie (1936), and The Clock (1945).[2] Despite a career spanning supporting roles rather than stardom, Gleason's longevity and union involvement underscored her influence in the entertainment industry during the early sound era.[1]
Early Life
Birth and Childhood
Lucile Webster was born on February 6, 1888, in Pasadena, California.[2][6] In the late 19th century, Pasadena emerged as an affluent residential suburb northeast of Los Angeles, drawing health-seekers and tourists from the eastern United States due to its mild climate and garden-like setting, which was promoted as beneficial for those with tuberculosis and other respiratory conditions.[7][8] The area's growth accelerated after the 1870s, with the establishment of resorts, sanitariums, and the arrival of wealthy migrants via the Southern Pacific Railroad, transforming it from ranchland into a haven for seasonal residents by the 1880s.[9] Specific details on Webster's family socioeconomic status or early education remain sparse in available records.Professional Career
Stage Work
Lucile Webster began her professional stage career in the early 1900s as a teenager performing in stock theater companies, repertory ensembles that toured and presented varied plays in regional venues.[10] She met actor James Gleason while working in a stock company managed by his father, William Gleason, and the pair married in 1905, subsequently collaborating frequently in touring productions that featured their comedic interplay as a husband-and-wife team.[11] These early efforts emphasized character-driven sketches and domestic humor, establishing their reputation as dependable performers in light entertainment before transitioning to major New York stages.[12] Gleason's Broadway appearances commenced in 1919 with a supporting role as Ada in The Five Million, a comedy that ran for approximately two months at the Playhouse Theatre. She followed with smaller parts in subsequent productions, including the Casting Director in Merton of the Movies (1922–1923, 381 performances), Lucy in the short-lived farce The Lady Killer (1924), and Fanny Lehman in The Butter and Egg Man (1925–1926, 243 performances), where she contributed to ensemble dynamics in satirical takes on show business and finance.[10] These roles positioned her as a versatile supporting actress adept at portraying pragmatic, no-nonsense women in comedic contexts.[13] Her most prominent stage success came in The Shannons of Broadway (1927–1928), a comedy written by and co-starring her husband James Gleason, in which she played Emma Shannon, the matriarch of a vaudeville family navigating fame and family tensions.[14] The production opened on September 26, 1927, at the Martin Beck Theatre and ran for 250 performances until June 2, 1928, drawing on the Gleasons' real-life partnership to authentically depict backstage vaudeville life and earning praise for its lively ensemble work.[14] This run solidified her standing as a reliable character performer whose timing and rapport with Gleason enhanced the play's humorous realism.[15]Transition to Film
Lucile Gleason transitioned from stage acting to film in 1929, debuting in the screen adaptation of The Shannons of Broadway, a comedy written by her husband James Gleason that had premiered on Broadway in 1927.[16][17] In the film, directed by Emmett J. Flynn and produced by Pathé Exchange, she reprised her stage role as Emma Shannon alongside James Gleason, marking an extension of their theatrical partnership to the nascent sound medium.[18] This entry into Hollywood aligned with the industry's rapid shift from silent films to "talkies," as synchronized sound technology—pioneered by Warner Bros.' The Jazz Singer in 1927—prompted widespread studio conversions by 1929, demanding actors with clear vocal delivery honed from live performance.[17] Gleason's stage-honed skills in comedic timing and character portrayal facilitated her adaptation to cinema's more intimate scale, where exaggerated projections gave way to subtle facial expressions captured in close-ups.[16] Early contracts, including with Pathé, positioned her in supporting roles that often echoed maternal or domestic archetypes from her Broadway work, setting a pattern amid the era's demand for versatile performers amid technological upheaval.[19] By 1930, she appeared in additional productions like Don't Believe It, navigating the consolidation of sound techniques that rendered many silent-era stars obsolete while favoring theater veterans.[19] This pivot capitalized on the Gleasons' collaborative dynamic, with James contributing writing and acting, enabling Lucile to secure steady screen work during a period when over 90% of U.S. theaters equipped for sound by late 1929, fundamentally altering casting criteria toward dialogue proficiency.[17]Notable Film Roles
Lucile Gleason's transition to sound films included a prominent early role in The Shannons of Broadway (1929), a comedy-drama adapted from the stage play co-authored by her husband James Gleason, in which she co-starred alongside him as part of the Shannon family ensemble.[20] The production marked one of the couple's initial joint Hollywood endeavors outside vaudeville and theater circuits. In 1934, Gleason secured a rare leading role in the independent crime drama Woman Unafraid, directed by William J. Cowen, where she portrayed Augusta Winthrop, a veteran police sergeant known for her protective oversight of a local dance hall and assistance to at-risk women facing criminal threats.[21] Co-starring Richard 'Skeets' Gallagher as a gambler and Lona Andre as a young dancer, the 68-minute film emphasized Gleason's depiction of a tough yet empathetic authority figure, diverging slightly from her usual domestic supporting parts in low-budget productions.[22][23] Gleason continued in supporting capacities through the 1930s and 1940s, often as maternal or spousal characters in secondary features, such as Mrs. Cushing in A Successful Failure (1934), a comedy about an inventor's family dynamics.[24] Her roles typically embodied resilient, pragmatic women navigating household or community challenges, aligning with the B-movie archetype prevalent in her non-series output. A late-career highlight came in 1945 with The Clock, Vincente Minnelli's MGM romantic drama starring Judy Garland and Robert Walker, where Gleason reunited onscreen with James Gleason as Mrs. Al Henry, the beleaguered wife of a milkman aiding the protagonists during a brief wartime leave in New York.[25] The real-life spouses' natural rapport enhanced the authenticity of their bickering yet affectionate portrayal, though the film received modest critical notice for its sentimental tone rather than standout ensemble performances.[26] This appearance represented one of Gleason's final credited roles before her health declined.[27]Higgins Family Series
The Higgins Family series consisted of nine low-budget comedy films produced by Republic Pictures from 1938 to 1941, serving as the studio's counterpart to MGM's Andy Hardy films and Fox's Jones Family series.[28][29] Lucile Gleason played the role of Lil Higgins, the pragmatic mother, alongside her husband James Gleason as the bumbling father Joe Higgins and their son Russell Gleason as the young Sidney Higgins, with the real-life family dynamics enhancing the on-screen authenticity of working-class family interactions.[30][31] Initiated with The Higgins Family on August 29, 1938, directed by Gus Meins, the series followed a formulaic structure centered on comedic domestic mishaps and generational conflicts within a modest household.[32] Subsequent entries included Money to Burn (September 1, 1939), Should Husbands Work? (November 3, 1939), My Wife's Relatives (June 2, 1939), and The Covered Trailer (November 17, 1939), often featuring plots involving sudden windfalls, interfering kin, or entrepreneurial schemes gone awry, such as a family's attempt to capitalize on a trailer invention or debates over male domestic roles.[29][32] Later films like Grandpa Goes to Town (January 12, 1940) and Earl of Puddlestone (July 19, 1940) introduced elements of inheritance disputes and social climbing, maintaining the emphasis on relatable humor derived from economic pressures and family loyalty.[33] These B-movies, typically running 60-70 minutes and shot efficiently at Republic Studios, targeted double-bill audiences seeking affordable escapism amid the lingering effects of the Great Depression, with the Higgins clan's optimistic resilience mirroring the era's demand for light-hearted portrayals of ordinary Americans navigating adversity.[28] The series concluded after Down Mexico Way in 1941, as Russell Gleason's commitments shifted, though the Gleasons appeared together in the initial seven installments.[31]Civic Engagement and Activism
Lucile Gleason served as a founding member of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG), signing the initial group application for membership on July 10, 1933, alongside her husband James Gleason and other early organizers including Arthur Vinton and Clay Clement.[34] The Guild, incorporated on July 12, 1933, aimed to address practical labor concerns in Hollywood, such as exploitative studio contracts, inadequate working conditions, and the lack of minimum wage protections for performers amid the economic pressures of the Great Depression.[34] Gleason's participation reflected a focus on industry-specific welfare, contributing to efforts that secured collective bargaining agreements by the late 1930s, which standardized residuals and safety standards for film workers.[34] In the 1940s, Gleason remained active in SAG leadership, notably seconding a motion to approve Ronald Reagan's board membership during a meeting, underscoring her role in guild governance as World War II influenced Hollywood's labor dynamics, including wartime production demands and post-war contract negotiations.[35] Her involvement aligned with broader pre-war industry trends toward organized representation against studio overreach, though records indicate no personal endorsements of extraneous political causes beyond professional advocacy.[34] These activities supported employee funds and relief mechanisms within the film community, yielding tangible outcomes like improved grievance procedures and benefits for aging or unemployed actors by the mid-1940s.[35]Personal Life
Marriage to James Gleason
Lucile Webster Russell married actor and playwright James Austin Gleason on August 22, 1906, in Alameda County, California.[36] [37] The marriage endured for 41 years until her death in 1947, during which time the couple navigated the demands of the entertainment industry as a unified professional unit.[38] Their partnership quickly developed into a collaborative enterprise, with Lucile initially performing in stock companies linked to James's family theatrical background before joint appearances solidified their joint career trajectory.[39] By the 1920s, they co-starred in Broadway productions, leveraging each other's presence to secure roles in an era when familial acting teams provided competitive advantages in securing contracts and audience draw. A prime example is their shared lead roles in the 1927 play The Shannons of Broadway, which transitioned to film in 1929, demonstrating how their on-stage chemistry translated to screen credits and enhanced mutual employability.[3] This alliance functioned pragmatically as a business strategy amid the uncertainties of vaudeville, legitimate theater, and emerging cinema, where co-credited spouses could pool resources for writing, directing, and performing opportunities.[39] Their joint ventures, including multiple film appearances together through the 1930s and 1940s, underscored a model of spousal interdependence that prioritized career longevity over individual pursuits in a cutthroat field.Family Dynamics and Challenges
Lucile and James Gleason's marriage produced one child, actor Russell Gleason, born on February 6, 1908, in Portland, Oregon, during the couple's theater tour.[41] Russell closely mirrored his parents' careers, debuting on stage in their productions before transitioning to film, where he frequently co-starred with them in the Higgins Family series (1938–1941), embodying an idealized, cohesive American family unit on screen.[42] This portrayal emphasized domestic harmony and mutual support, reflecting the Gleasons' collaborative professional life but glossing over underlying tensions inherent to the entertainment industry's demands on family members.[43] In stark contrast to their cinematic depictions, the Gleason family confronted profound challenges, most acutely manifested in Russell's death on December 26, 1945, at age 37. While awaiting deployment to Europe as a sergeant in the U.S. Army at the Hotel Sutton in New York City—re-purposed as military barracks—Russell fell from a 15th-floor window, dying from injuries sustained upon impact with the street below.[42] [44] Official accounts wavered between accident and suicide, with police noting the window's position and Russell's recent military obligations as potential factors, though no definitive suicide note or prior warnings were reported; causal analysis from period observers linked it to acute psychological strain from wartime service amid Hollywood's erratic career cycles, which had similarly burdened his parents' generation.[42] [43] The tragedy underscored causal vulnerabilities in actor families, where professional immersion often blurred boundaries between work and personal life, fostering isolation and unaddressed emotional tolls without the stability of conventional employment. Russell's prior divorce from actress Cynthia Hobart in 1941, coupled with stalled post-Higgins career momentum, likely compounded these pressures, diverging sharply from the unbroken success narratives sometimes projected onto the Gleasons.[43] No further children were born to Lucile and James, leaving the family's legacy marked by this irrecoverable loss rather than expansion.[3]Later Years and Death
Health Decline
Following the accidental death of her son, actor Russell Gleason, on December 26, 1945, Lucile Gleason suffered from a heart ailment that marked the onset of her health decline.[5] This condition emerged in the immediate aftermath of the tragedy and persisted, limiting her physical capacity during her late 50s.[5] Gleason's final film appearance was in a supporting role as Mrs. Al Henry in The Clock (1945), released in April of that year, after which she undertook no further acting projects.[25] The combination of advancing age and the heart ailment contributed to a gradual withdrawal from professional commitments, as she focused on recovery amid personal grief. No records indicate additional stage or screen work in 1946 or 1947, reflecting the toll on her endurance after decades in the demanding entertainment industry.[5]Circumstances of Death
Lucile Gleason died on May 18, 1947, at her home in Brentwood, California, at the age of 59.[5][2] She was discovered deceased in her bed by family members, having apparently passed away in her sleep.[5] The cause of death was determined to be myocardial infarction, a form of heart attack consistent with a familial heart ailment.[3][45] Her husband, actor James Gleason, survived her by twelve years; no public statements from him regarding the immediate events were recorded in contemporary reports.[3] Gleason was interred at Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California.[3]Career Legacy
Contributions to Cinema
Lucile Gleason's contributions to cinema were centered in the realm of low-budget B-movies, where she excelled as a supporting actress portraying maternal and working-class figures in family comedies during Hollywood's Golden Age. Her most notable involvement was in Republic Pictures' Higgins Family series, which produced nine films between 1938 and 1941, positioning the studio as a competitor to MGM's acclaimed Andy Hardy series and 20th Century Fox's Jones Family films.[46] These program pictures, designed for double features, sustained Republic's output by delivering formulaic, relatable narratives of domestic mishaps and economic pressures faced by average American families, reflecting the era's socioeconomic realities without the gloss of major studio prestige.[28] Gleason's authentic screen presence stemmed from her real-life marriage to actor James Gleason and their son Russell, who co-starred as the Higgins family unit—Joe, Lillian, and Sidney Higgins—infusing the roles with unscripted familial chemistry that enhanced the series' appeal to audiences seeking escapist yet grounded entertainment.[31] This collaborative dynamic, rather than individual virtuosity, drove the series' viability, as evidenced by its extension over multiple years amid Republic's focus on cost-effective productions; the films capitalized on the Gleasons' established rapport from earlier stage and screen work, such as The Shannons of Broadway (1929), to minimize rehearsal costs and maximize output.[47] While not box-office juggernauts comparable to A-list vehicles, the series contributed to the B-movie ecosystem by providing consistent filler content that theaters relied on during the late 1930s, when the Hardy-style family formula proved resilient amid Depression-era recovery.[28] Critically, Gleason was regarded as a reliable ensemble player whose portrayals avoided melodrama, offering pragmatic maternal realism that aligned with causal depictions of household economies and interpersonal frictions, though period reviews seldom singled her out beyond noting the family's cohesive performances. Her work underscored the efficiency of family-based casting in B-film production, where personal relationships reduced logistical risks and fostered believable ensemble dynamics, countering any notion of her as a solitary innovator by emphasizing systemic reliance on proven units over nascent talent discovery. Beyond the series, sporadic roles in films like The Clock (1945) extended this niche, reinforcing her utility in underscoring everyday resilience in supporting capacities.[48]Family Influence in Entertainment
The Gleason family maintained a collaborative presence in early Hollywood cinema, with James Gleason, Lucile Gleason, and their son Russell sharing screen credits in productions that emphasized ensemble family portrayals. In the Higgins Family film series, spanning seven entries from 1938 to 1940, James played patriarch Joe Higgins, Lucile portrayed Lil Higgins, and Russell depicted son Sydney Higgins, fostering a template for comedic domestic narratives rooted in authentic familial interplay.[49][39] This on-screen synergy extended to earlier works like the 1929 adaptation of The Shannons of Broadway, where the trio's real-life bonds informed their roles as a theatrical family unit, contributing to the era's tradition of stock company-derived comedies.[39] Russell Gleason's acting trajectory, beginning with a minor role in All Quiet on the Western Front (1930), positioned him as a second-generation performer but was abruptly halted by his accidental death on December 25, 1945, at age 37, following a fall from a fourth-floor window at the Hotel Sutton in New York City while awaiting Army deployment.[42][44] Enlisting as a private in November 1943, his military interruption and untimely end underscored the precarious risks faced by young actors in the industry, limiting any sustained intergenerational momentum.[41] Despite this, Russell's credits in over 40 films, often alongside his parents, perpetuated the family's imprint on B-movie comedy lineages.[44] Following Lucile's death in 1947, James Gleason sustained the family's professional footprint through a prolific output of over 150 film appearances, extending into the 1950s with roles in Man in the Shadow (1957) and The Last Hurrah (1958), where his established everyman persona—honed in family-centric projects—provided indirect continuity to their collective style.[50][51] This persistence yielded a modest legacy, verifiable through shared production credits rather than dominant dynastic expansion, as no further descendants pursued entertainment careers, tempering the Gleasons' ripple effects amid personal tragedies.[15]Filmography
Selected Films
- The Shannons of Broadway (1929): Portrayed Emma Shannon in this comedy directed by Emmett J. Flynn, co-starring her husband James Gleason as Mickey Shannon.[18]
- The Higgins Family (1938): Appeared as Lillian Higgins in the inaugural film of the Higgins Family comedy series directed by Gus Meins, alongside James Gleason and son Russell Gleason.[32]
- Should Husbands Work? (1939): Played Lillian Higgins in this entry of the Higgins Family series directed by James Tinling.
- My Wife's Relatives (1939): Continued as Lillian Higgins in the Higgins Family series under direction of Gus Meins.
- The Clock (1945): Depicted Mrs. Al Henry in Vincente Minnelli's romantic drama, marking her final screen appearance with James Gleason as her on-screen husband Al Henry.[25]
References
- https://www.[imdb](/page/IMDb).com/search/title/?keywords=gleason-and-l.-gleason
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