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Mary Eaton

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Mary Eaton
Born
Mary Eaton

(1901-01-29)January 29, 1901
DiedOctober 10, 1948(1948-10-10) (aged 47)
Hollywood, California, U.S.
Other names
  • Actress
  • singer
  • dancer
Years active1916–1932; 1942
Spouses
(m. 1929; died 1935)
Charles A. Emery
(m. 1937; div. 1942)
(m. 1944⁠–⁠1948)
[1]

Mary Eaton (January 29, 1901 – October 10, 1948) was an American stage actress, singer, and dancer in the 1910s and 1920s, probably best known today from her appearance in the first Marx Brothers film, The Cocoanuts (1929). A professional performer since childhood, she enjoyed success in stage productions such as the Ziegfeld Follies. She appeared in another early sound film, Glorifying the American Girl (1929). Her career declined sharply during the 1930s.

Biography

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Early life and career

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Eaton, a native of Norfolk, Virginia, began attending dance lessons in Washington, DC, along with her sisters Doris and Pearl, at the age of seven. In 1911, all three sisters were hired for a production of Maurice Maeterlinck's fantasy play The Blue Bird at the Shubert Belasco Theatre in Washington, D.C. While Eaton had a minor role in the show, it marked the beginning of her career in professional theatre.

After The Blue Bird ended, in 1912, the three Eaton sisters and their younger brother Joe began appearing in various plays and melodramas for the Poli stock company. They quickly gained reputations as professional, reliable, and versatile actors, and were rarely out of work. A 1914 newspaper article described Mary Eaton as "the newest and littlest member of the company", adding that she had "admirable poise and grace."[2]

In 1915, all three sisters appeared in a new production of The Blue Bird for Poli; Doris and Mary were given the starring roles of Mytyl and Tytyl. The siblings then were invited to reprise their roles for a New York and road tour of the play, produced by the Shubert Brothers. When the show closed, on the recommendation of the Shuberts, Mary began studying ballet in earnest with Theodore Kosloff.

Professional theatre

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Eaton in 1923

Of all of the Eatons, Mary was perhaps the most famous and the most popular. An exceptionally talented dancer, she earned raves in a production of Intime in Washington, DC in 1917.

In 1916, she made her Broadway debut, dancing a ballet specialty in Follow Me.[3] The next year, she performed in the Shubert Brothers' Over the Top with Fred and Adele Astaire. Throughout the 1920s, Eaton was a constant presence on Broadway, appearing in eight different productions.

She was featured in three editions of the Ziegfeld Follies, those of 1920, 1921, and 1922.[4] Eaton's trademark dance routine, which she performed in the Follies, involved a complicated sequence of pirouettes around the stage en pointe. Broadway impresario Florenz Ziegfeld groomed Mary Eaton as the successor to his star attraction Marilyn Miller, but as historian Richard Barrios noted, "Beautiful, blonde, and a dancer, all like Miller, Eaton could not match her predecessor's charisma."[5]

Film career

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Eaton also had a brief film career, appearing in two important early sound movies that were filmed at Paramount's New York studios in Astoria, Queens. She was the ingenue in The Cocoanuts (1929), the first film starring the Marx Brothers, and might have gone on to play similar featured roles in early talkies. Instead, Paramount decided to build a major feature film around her.

Glorifying the American Girl (1929) was to be a spectacular, all-talking extravaganza worthy of Ziegfeld (who receives screen credit), with musical pageants filmed in Technicolor. Paramount gave Eaton the starring role of an ambitious shopgirl who goes into show business and fights her way to the top, with little regard for her friends and colleagues. Eaton's singing and dancing routines, including her signature pirouette sequence, were featured, but they couldn't overcome her limited screen personality. Her speaking voice on film was a carefully affected, high-pitched twitter that enunciated dialogue carefully, probably a remnant of her stage training. Her actual speaking voice, without the affectation and in a lower, more realistic range, can be heard briefly in Glorifying the American Girl. The film was completed in June 1929 but Paramount executives considered it too weak to release, and shot new footage of celebrities Eddie Cantor. Helen Morgan, and Rudy Vallée to bolster it. After a terrible preview, Paramount actually sneaked the film out in late 1929 to smaller towns,[6] hoping to attract curious audiences with Broadway luster, and avoiding a New York premiere until early 1930. Critics panned it and audiences stayed away. The film's commercial failure abruptly halted Eaton's screen career.

Personal life

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Many of the Eaton siblings, including Mary, found their careers waning in the early 1930s. She made her final stage appearance in 1932. Beset by career woes and three consecutive difficult marriages, Eaton struggled with alcoholism. Although her siblings tried to intervene on numerous occasions, and she entered rehabilitation programs several times, she was unable to overcome her alcohol addiction.[citation needed]

Eaton married Millard Webb (her director of Glorifying the American Girl) in the summer of 1929.[7] At the time of her death she was married to actor Eddie Laughton.[citation needed]

Eaton died at age 47 in Hollywood, California of a heart attack.[8]

Filmography

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Year Title Role Notes
1923 His Children's Children Mercedes
1924 Broadway After Dark Herself, cameo appearance
1929 A Ziegfeld Midnight Frolic Herself short
1929 The Cocoanuts Polly Potter
1929 Glorifying the American Girl Gloria Hughes
1942 We'll Smile Again Continuity Girl British
Uncredited, (final film role)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Mary Eaton Wed Here to Long-Time Admirer". The Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California. October 17, 1944. p. 13.
  2. ^ "Poli's". The Washington Herald. D.C, Washington. February 17, 1914. p. 7. Retrieved March 11, 2018 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  3. ^ "Mary Eaton". Internet Broadway Database. The Broadway League. Archived from the original on March 12, 2018. Retrieved March 12, 2018.
  4. ^ Slide, Anthony (2012). The Encyclopedia of Vaudeville. Univ. Press of Mississippi. p. 572. ISBN 9781617032509. Retrieved March 12, 2018.
  5. ^ Barrios, Richard. A Song in the Dark, Oxford University Press, 2010, p. 189.
  6. ^ Barrios, p. 190.
  7. ^ Abrams, Brett L. (2008). Hollywood Bohemians: Transgressive Sexuality and the Selling of the Movieland Dream. McFarland. p. 89. ISBN 9780786439294. Retrieved March 12, 2018.
  8. ^ "Famous Danseuse Of Ziegfeld Follies Dies". The News-Review. Oregon, Roseburg. Associated Press. October 14, 1948. p. 8. Retrieved March 11, 2018 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
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