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Celebrities / Actors / Kathryn Grayson / Biography
Kathryn Grayson

Kathryn Grayson

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Biography

This page uses content from the Kathryn Grayson biography page on the English version of Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. This list of authors can be seen in the page history. Rotten Tomatoes disclaims any and all warranties as to the accuracy or reliability of the content.


Kathryn Grayson (born February 9, 1922) is an American actress and singer who was born Zelma Kathryn Elisabeth Hedrick in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

She married twice: first to actor John Shelton; secondly to actor/singer Johnnie Johnston. She has one daughter. Throughout the 1950's, she carried on an affair with mogul Howard Hughes, and was briefly engaged to him (although this was not included in the film The Aviator, as the film only profiled Hughes through the late 1940s).

Though she started out as MGM's answer to Deanna Durbin (with films such as Seven Sweethearts and Anchors Aweigh), she proved herself a decent star in the film versions of the Broadway hits Show Boat (1951) and Kiss Me, Kate (1953). Grayson also appeared in a duo of films with tenor Mario Lanza, and Howard Keel, whom she teamed successfully with in a highly lauded cabaret act in the 1960's.

With the end of MGM's great era of musicals, so ended Miss Grayson's film career. Kathryn was on stage in numerous stage musicals such as Show Boat, Rosalinda, Kiss Me, Kate, Naughty Marietta, and The Merry Widow, for which she was nominated for Chicago's Sarah Siddons Award. This lead to her as a replacement for Julie Andrews on Broadway in 1962 in Camelot, scoring a great success, before going on to star in the National tour for over sixteen months, before leaving the show due to health problems. During her period with the Camelot tour, all box-office records were broken and she gained uniformly excellent notices. She would later play the role of Guenevere during that decade. Grayson had a lifelong dream of being an opera star, and she appeared number of operas in the '60s, such as La Boheme, Madame Butterfly, Orpheus in the Underworld and La Traviata. Her dramatic and comedy stage roles included Night Watch, Noises Off, Love Letters and Something's Afoot as Dottie Otterling.

She also appeared on television occasionally. Her first TV appearances were in the 1950s, and she received an Emmy nomination in 1956 for her performance in the General Electric Theater episode Shadow on the Heart with John Ericson. Most recently, she appeared in several episodes of Angela Lansbury's long-running series Murder, She Wrote in the late 1980s.

Never to be overshadowed these days by other talented or exciting MGM contemporaries such as Jane Powell, Ann Miller, Cyd Charisse, Esther Williams and Ann Blyth, Miss Grayson has gained cult status among a large, and wildly devoted, crowd of fans. Today, Kathryn supervises the Voice and Choral Studies Program at the Idaho State University.

Filmography

  • Andy Hardy's Private Secretary (1941)
  • The Vanishing Virginian (1942)
  • Rio Rita (1942)
  • Seven Sweethearts (1942)
  • Thousands Cheer (1943)
  • Anchors Aweigh (1945)
  • Ziegfeld Follies (1946)
  • Two Sisters from Boston (1946)
  • Till the Clouds Roll By (1946)
  • It Happened in Brooklyn (1947)
  • The Kissing Bandit (1948)
  • That Midnight Kiss (1949)
  • The Toast of New Orleans (1950)
  • Grounds for Marriage (1951)
  • Show Boat (1951)
  • Lovely to Look At (1952)
  • The Desert Song (1953)
  • So This Is Love (1953)
  • Kiss Me, Kate (1953)
  • The Vagabond King (1956)
  • The Amazing World of Psychic Phenomena (1977) (documentary)
  • A Century of Cinema (1994) (documentary)

External links

  • YouTube - Mario Lanza Madama Butterfly Soprano Kathryn Grayson and tenor Mario Lanza sing Puccini's Vogliatemi Bene in this scene from their 1950 film The Toast of New Orleans.

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify the biographical information on this page under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.



 
 
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