- Patricia Morison
Infobox actor
name = Patricia Morison
caption = Patricia Morison in a 1939 publicity portrait. At the time she was under contract toParamount Pictures and being promoted as a dark-haired beauty similar toDorothy Lamour .
birthname = Eileen Patricia Agusta Fraser Morison
birthdate = birth date and age|1915|3|19Some sources give the year of her birth as 1914.]
birthplace = New York, NY, USA
occupation = actress,singer
yearsactive = 1933-1989
parents = William R. Morison
Selena (Carson) MorisonPatricia Morison (born
March 19 ,1915 ) is an American stage andmotion picture actress andsinger . She made her feature film debut in 1939 after several years on the stage. During her time as a screen actress she was lauded for herpatrician beauty , with her blueeyes and extremely long, darkhair among her most notable physical attributes. Unfortunately, during this period of her career she was generally misused, largely in unsympathetic roles as a "femme fatale" or a haughty "other woman." It was only when she returned to the Broadway stage that she achieved her greatest success as the lead in the original production ofCole Porter 's "Kiss Me, Kate ."Early life
Background
Patricia Morison was born in New York City. Her
father , William Morison, was aplaywright and occasional actor who billed himself under the name Norman Rainey.Biography of Patricia Morison at theInternet Movie Database . [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0605685/bio] ] Her mother, Selena Morison (née Fraser) worked forBritish Intelligence duringWorld War I . After graduating fromWashington Irving High School in New York, Morison studied at the Arts Students League while taking acting classes at the Neighborhood Playhouse. She also studied dance underMartha Graham . During this time she was employed as a dress shop designer at Russeks Department Store.First stage appearances
Morison made her stage debut at the
Provincetown Playhouse in the musicalrevue "Don't Mind the Rain," in which she sang asong entitled "Simple Silly I." Her Broadway debut came in November 1933, with a short-lived play, "Growing Pains." Following that, she proceeded to understudyHelen Hayes in her classic role of "Victoria Regina ." She also understudied all the other women in the cast. However, Hayes never missed a performance and, thus, Morison never had the opportunity to play her role.In 1935, four years before her official film debut, Morison made her actual first appearance on film in an
automobile propaganda short called "Wreckless".In 1938, Morison appeared in the musical "The Two Bouquets," which ran for only 55 performances. Among the other cast members was
Alfred Drake , who, years later, would co-star with Morison in "Kiss Me, Kate."Film career
Paramount contract player
While appearing in "The Two Bouquets," Morison was noticed by talent scouts from
Paramount Pictures , who — at the time — were looking for exotic, dark-haired glamorous types similar toDorothy Lamour , one of their star commodities. Morison (who did indeed bear a slight resemblance to Lamour, notably in that they both had very long, dark hair) was subsequently signed to a contract with Paramount. She made her feature film debut in the "B" film "Persons in Hiding" (1939). Also in 1939, Paramount considered her for the role of Isobel in their adventure film "Beau Geste", starringGary Cooper andRay Milland . However, she was replaced bySusan Hayward . [cite book |last= Dickens |first= Homer |title= The Films of Gary Cooper|year= 1970|publisher= Citadel |id= auto isbn|0|8|0|6|5|0|2|7|9|7|0-8065-02797 |pages= p 13] The following year she appeared opposite Milland in theTechnicolor romance "Untamed," a re-make of theClara Bow vehicle, "Man Trap" (1926).Despite the promising beginnings, she was assigned to several second-tier pictures such as "Rangers of Fortune" (1940) and "One Night in Lisbon" (1941), both with
Fred MacMurray , and "The Roundup" (1941) withRichard Dix andPreston Foster . On a loan-out to20th Century-Fox she played one of her first villainess roles in "Romance of the Rio Grande" (1941), which starredCesar Romero asthe Cisco Kid .Morison subsequently left Paramount after playing unrewarding roles in "Night in New Orleans" (1942) with Preston Foster, the Technicolor musical "Beyond the Blue Horizon" (1942) with the sarong-clad
Dorothy Lamour , and "Are Husbands Necessary?" (1942), which re-teamed her with Ray Milland.USO tour
By 1942, the
United States had become involved inWorld War II and, as a result, Morison became one of many celebrities who entertained American troops and their allies. In November of that year she joinedAl Jolson ,Merle Oberon ,Allen Jenkins , andFrank McHugh on aUSO Tour inGreat Britain .Return to film
Morison returned to acting in the cinema as a freelance performer. As before, however, her roles were generally unimpressive. One of her better roles — albeit a small supporting one — was that of Empress Eugénie in "The Song of Bernadette" (1943) starring Jennifer Jones. She also appeared in "The Fallen Sparrow" (1943) with
John Garfield andMaureen O'Hara , and "Calling Dr. Death" (1945), one of the "Inner Sanctum " films starringLon Chaney, Jr. "Allah Be Praised!"
In 1944, Morison briefly abandoned her film work and returned to the Broadway stage. In April of that year, she opened at the Adelphi Theatre in a musical comedy, "Allah Be Praised!" The play, however, was unsuccessful and closed after a very brief run on only 20 performances.
More cinematic roles
Returning to films once again, Morison "still" continued to be cast in supporting roles, all too often as a "femme fatale" or an unsympathetic "other woman." These included the
Spencer Tracy -Katharine Hepburn vehicle "Without Love" (1945) and theDeanna Durbin comedy -mystery "Lady on a Train " (1945). She also played the villainess in the final installments of Universal'sSherlock Holmes series and MGM'sThin Man series — respectively, "Dressed to Kill" (1946), starringBasil Rathbone andNigel Bruce , and "Song of the Thin Man " (1947), starringWilliam Powell andMyrna Loy . In addition to these, she appeared — "again" as a villainess — in "Tarzan and the Huntress" (1947), the penultimate film starringJohnny Weissmuller asEdgar Rice Burroughs ' jungle hero.Her few leading roles during this time were in "B" pictures, notably as
Maid Marian toJon Hall 'sRobin Hood in theCinecolor production "The Prince of Thieves" (1947) and withRichard Arlen in the sepiatoned western "The Return of Wildfire" (1948).What may have been one of her best film roles was that of
Victor Mature 's despairing,suicide -drivenwife in "Kiss of Death" (1947). Unfortunately, the film's producers cut her role from the final print, as they (reputedly) felt audiences of the time were not ready for such a shocking scene as someone taking their own life.Broadway triumphs
"Kiss Me, Kate"
Excerpts from the 1949 Original Cast Recording of "----multi-listen itemKiss Me, Kate :"
filename=03_Wunderbar.ogg|title="Wunderbar"
description=Fred (Alfred Drake ) and Lili (Patricia Morison) remember their early days together.
format=Ogg multi-listen item
filename=So in Love.ogg
title="So In Love"
description=Lili's joy when she has received flowers from Fred …
format=Ogg multi-listen item
filename=I Hate Men.ogg|title="I Hate Men"
description= … and her wrath when she learns the flowers were meant for another woman.
format=Ogg In 1948, Morison again abandoned her film career and retuned to the stage, but this time she finally succeeded in finding major stardom in a role worthy of her talent.
Cole Porter had heard her sing while inHollywood and decided that she had the vocal expertise and right feistiness to play the female lead in his new show, "Kiss Me, Kate". Morison went on to major Broadway stardom when she created the role of Lilli Vanessi, the imperious stage diva whose own volatile personality coincided with that of her onstage role (Kate from "The Taming of the Shrew )." "Kiss Me, Kate" featured the songs "I Hate Men," "Wonderbar" and "So in Love", and also reunited Morison with her former Broadway co-starAlfred Drake . The play ran on Broadway fromDecember 30 ,1948 untilJuly 28 ,1951 , for a total of 1,077 performances. Morison also played in theLondon production of "Kiss Me, Kate," which ran for 400 performances."The King and I"
In February 1954, Morison took over role of
Anna Leonowens in theRogers and Hammerstein production of "The King and I," which co-starredYul Brynner in his star-making role as the King of Siam. The play premiered in 1951, originally withGertrude Lawrence as Leonowens. Lawrence was subsequently replaced byCeleste Holm , Constance Carpenter, Annamary Dickey and, finally, Patricia Morison. Morison appeared in "The King and I" until its Broadway closing onMarch 20 ,1954 , and then continued with the production on tour.She appeared in further productions of "The King and I" at the Los Angeles Civic Light Opera (opening
May 5 ,1954 ) and at the Municipal Theatre inSt. Louis, Missouri (openingJune 11 ,1959 ).Television
During the 1950s and 1960s, Morison made several appearances on television, including several variety shows. Among these were a production of "
Rio Rita " on "Robert Montgomery Presents " (1950) and a segment from "The King and I " on a 1955 broadcast of "The Toast of the Town" starringEd Sullivan . Morison andAlfred Drake recreated their "Kiss Me, Kate" roles in a "Hallmark Hall of Fame " production of the play broadcasted in color onNovember 20 ,1958 . She also appeared withHoward Keel in a production of "Kate" on British television in 1964. In 1971 she andYul Brynner performed "Shall We Dance" from "The King and I " on a broadcast of theTony Awards .Among her non-musical television performances were a recurring role on the
detective series "The Cases of Eddie Drake" (1952) co-starringDon Haggerty , and a guest appearance withVincent Price on "Have Gun — Will Travel " (1958) starringRichard Boone . Years later she appeared in the made-for-TV movie "Mirrors" (1985) and a guest role in 1989 on the popular sitcom "Cheers ".Last film and stage appearances
Quote box
quote = "I used to think every night before I went on stage, a lot of people think of the audience as one mass, but it's not — it's all individual people. And that's why I love the theater ... And I always feel that if in some way you can touch somebody, either touch them emotionally, or if it's a young person who wants to be an actor, touch them so he or she, too, wants to be an actor ... it's so worthwhile. I've enjoyed everything I've done in life."
source = Patricia Morison
width = 33%
align = rightThroughout the 1960s and 1970s, Morison performed on stage numerous times — largely in stock and touring productions. These included both musical and dramatic plays, among them "Milk and Honey, Kismet,
The Merry Widow ,Song of Norway ,Do I Hear a Waltz? ,Bell, Book and Candle ,The Fourposter ,Separate Tables ," and "Private Lives ".She performed in still more productions of "Kiss, Me Kate" at the Seattle Opera House (opening in April 1965) and the New York City Center (opening
May 12 ,1965 ). In August 1972, she appeared in a production of "The Sound of Music " at theDorothy Chandler Pavilion inLos Angeles .Morison made only three film appearances after her stage triumph in "Kiss Me, Kate." These were a cameo part as writer
George Sand in the biopic "Song Without End" (1960), co-starringDirk Bogarde as composerFranz Liszt , another cameo in the comedy film "Won-Ton-Ton — The Dog Who Saved Hollywood" (1976), and as herself in the documentary "Broadway — The Golden Years" (2003).Recent years
In recent years Patricia Morison has devoted herself to painting — one of her early passions — and has had several showings in and around
Los Angeles . She never married and currently resides in thePark La Brea area of Los Angeles, California.Credits
"See:
Patricia Morison chronology of stage, film, and television credits "References
External links
*
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* YouTube: [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=205BqSO6lwk Alfred Drake and Patricia Morison singing "Wunderbar" from "Kiss, Me Kate" on "The Hallmark Hall of Fame" (1958)]Persondata
NAME= Morison, Patricia
ALTERNATIVE NAMES= Morison, Eileen Patricia Agusta Fraser
SHORT DESCRIPTION= actress,singer
DATE OF BIRTH=March 19 ,1915
PLACE OF BIRTH= New York, NY, USA
DATE OF DEATH=
PLACE OF DEATH=
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