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{{Short description|American film and TV actress (1902–1972)}}
[[Image:MiriamHopkinsBeckySharp.jpg|right|thumb|Miriam Hopkins in the title role of ''Becky Sharp'' (1935)]]
{{for|the Irish Olympic swimmer|Miriam Hopkins (swimmer)}}
'''Miriam Hopkins''' ([[October 18]], [[1902]]–[[October 9]], [[1972]]) was an American actress.
{{Infobox person
| name = Miriam Hopkins
| image = MiriamHopkins.jpg
| caption = Hopkins in the 1930s
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1902|10|18|mf=y}}
| birth_place = [[Savannah, Georgia]], U.S.
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1972|10|9|1902|10|18|mf=y}}
| death_place = New York City, U.S.
| years active = 1921–1970
| occupation = Actress
| birth_name = Ellen Miriam Hopkins
| party = [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]
| spouse = {{plainlist|
*Brandon Peters (1926–1927)
*Austin Parker (1928–1931)
*[[Anatole Litvak]] (1937–1939)
*Raymond B. Brock (1945–1951)}}
| children = 1
}}


'''Ellen Miriam Hopkins''' (October 18, 1902 – October 9, 1972) was an American actress known for her versatility.<ref>Obituary ''[[Variety Obituaries|Variety]]'', October 11, 1972, p. 71.</ref> She signed with [[Paramount Pictures]] in 1930.
==Biography==
Born in [[Bainbridge, Georgia]], she attended a finishing school in [[Vermont]] and [[Syracuse University]]. At the age of 20, she became a [[chorus girl]] in [[New York City]]. In 1930, she signed with [[Paramount Studios]], and made her official film debut in ''Fast and Loose''.


Her first great success was in [[Ernst Lubitsch]]'s masterpiece ''[[Trouble in Paradise]]'' (1932), in which she proved her charme and her wit as a beautiful and jealous pickpocket. During the rest of the 1930s she appeared in such films as ''[[The Smiling Lieutenant]]'' (1931), ''[[Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931 film)|Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde]]'' (1931), ''[[Becky Sharp (film)|Becky Sharp]]'' (1935), for which she was nominated for the [[Academy Award for Best Actress]], ''Barbary Coast'' (1935), ''[[These Three]]'' (1936) and ''The Old Maid'' (1939).
She portrayed a pickpocket in [[Ernst Lubitsch]]'s romantic comedy ''[[Trouble in Paradise (1932 film)|Trouble in Paradise]]'', a bar singer Ivy in [[Rouben Mamoulian]]'s ''[[Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931 film)|Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde]]'', and the titular character in the controversial drama ''[[The Story of Temple Drake]]''. She received a nomination for the [[Academy Award for Best Actress]] for the 1935 film ''[[Becky Sharp (film)|Becky Sharp]]'', becoming the first performer nominated for a color picture. She was nominated for a [[Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress - Motion Picture|Golden Globe]] for ''[[The Heiress (1949 film)|The Heiress]]''. She co-starred with [[Joel McCrea]] in five films.


Her long-running feud with actress [[Bette Davis]] was publicized for effect. Hopkins later became a pioneer of TV drama. She was considered a distinguished hostess in Hollywood and moved in intellectual and creative circles.
[[Bette Davis]] later wrote of Hopkins' difficult manner during the production of their two films ''The Old Maid'' and ''Old Acquaintance'', saying that Hopkins was a very talented actress, but her insecurity led her to constantly try to upstage her costars and "steal" their scenes. One of the scenes in ''The Old Maid'' which Davis admitted to enjoying very much was one where she slaps Hopkins hard. Davis attributed the demise of Hopkins' film career to her "temperamental" reputation in Hollywood.


==Early life==
Hopkins was one of the actresses who auditioned to portray [[Scarlett O'Hara]] in ''[[Gone with the Wind (film)|Gone with the Wind]]'', having one advantage that no other leading lady had: she was a native Georgian; however she did not get the part, which went to [[Vivien Leigh]], with [[Paulette Goddard]] close behind.
Hopkins was born in [[Savannah, Georgia]], to Homer Hopkins and Ellen Cutler.<ref>Virginia, Marriage Records 1936–2014</ref> Her early childhood home was located at 321 Whitaker St (since demolished).<ref>{{cite web|url=https://7063.sydneyplus.com/archive/final/Portal/Default.aspx?component=AABC&record=47534b0f-f314-4502-a854-8d7fa03f7dc1|title=GHS 1360 Cordray-Foltz Photography Studio photographs, Georgia Historical Society|publisher=georgiahistory.com|access-date=March 2, 2023}}</ref> She was raised in [[Bainbridge, Georgia|Bainbridge]], near the Alabama border. She had an older sister, Ruby (1900–1990).<ref>1910 United States Federal Census</ref> Her maternal great-grandfather, the fourth mayor of Bainbridge, had helped establish St. John's Episcopal Church in the city.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.episcopalchurch.org/parish/st-johns-episcopal-church-bainbridge-ga|title=St. John's Episcopal Church, Bainbridge, GA|date=June 13, 2011|website=Episcopal Church}}</ref> Hopkins sang in the choir as a girl.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/arts-culture/miriam-hopkins-1902-1972|title=Miriam Hopkins (1902–1972)|publisher=Georgiaencyclopedia.org|date=August 28, 2013|access-date=October 17, 2015}}</ref>


In 1909, she briefly lived in Mexico with her family. After her parents separated, Hopkins moved as a teen with her mother to [[Syracuse, New York]], to be near her paternal uncle, Thomas Cramer Hopkins, head of the geology department at [[Syracuse University]].<ref name="syracuseuniversity">[http://archives.syr.edu/collections/fac_staff/sua_hopkins_tc.htm#d0e133 T.C. Hopkins Faculty Profile] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141113035712/http://archives.syr.edu/collections/fac_staff/sua_hopkins_tc.htm#d0e133#d0e133 |date=2014-11-13 }}, archives.syr.edu; accessed June 27, 2015.</ref>
Late in life, Hopkins adopted a child, but didn't even return home on the same flight, leading many to question her sincerity and her maternal instincts.


Hopkins attended Goddard Seminary in [[Plainfield (town), Vermont|Plainfield, Vermont]] (later renamed [[Goddard College]]), and Syracuse University in New York State.<ref name="syracuseuniversity"/>
She was also known for throwing wild parties that bordered on orgies and engaging in a bisexual lifestyle, as chronicled in ''The Sewing Circle'', a book written (by [[Boze Hadleigh]]) about lesbians in Hollywood.


==Career==
Hopkins died in [[New York, New York]] from a [[Myocardial infarction|heart attack]] nine (9) days before her 70th birthday.
{{more citations needed section|date=October 2023}}
{{synthesis|date=October 2023}}
[[File:Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde 1931.jpg|thumb|right|With [[Fredric March]] in ''[[Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931 film)|Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde]]'' (1931)]]
[[File:Design for Living film still.jpg|thumb|right|With [[Fredric March]] and [[Gary Cooper]] in ''[[Design for Living (film)|Design for Living]]'' (1933)]]
[[File:Herbert_Marshall_&_Miriam_Hopkins_-_Trouble_in_Paradise_publicity_shot.jpg|thumb|left|Hopkins and [[Herbert Marshall]] in a publicity photo for ''[[Trouble in Paradise (1932 film)|Trouble in Paradise]]'' (1932)]][[File:Hopkins-Jezebel-1934.jpg|thumb|left|Miriam Hopkins in the Broadway production of ''Jezebel'' (1933), an [[Owen Davis]] play. It was later adapted as a [[Jezebel (1938 film)|1938 film]] but Hopkins lost the lead role to [[Bette Davis]].]]


At age 20, Hopkins became a [[chorus girl]] in New York City; she also acted regularly on the stage throughout the 1920s, including in the 1926 stage adaptation of [[Theodore Dreiser]]'s ''[[An American Tragedy]]''. In 1930, she starred on [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]] in the play ''[[Ritzy (play)|Ritzy]]'' by [[Sidney Toler]]. She starred on Broadway in the lead of ''Jezebel'', a 1933 play by [[Owen Davis]]. When it was adapted as a [[Jezebel (1938 film)|1938 film]] of the same name, Hopkins was bitterly disappointed that [[Bette Davis]] was chosen for the role she had played on stage. This began a feud between them, which the motion picture studios publicized.
She has two stars on the [[Hollywood Walk of Fame]]: one for [[film|motion pictures]] at 1701 Vine Street, and one for [[television]] at 1708 Vine Street.


In 1930, Hopkins signed with [[Paramount Pictures]] and made her official film debut in ''[[Fast and Loose (1930 film)|Fast and Loose]]''. Her first great success was in the 1931 horror drama film ''[[Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931 film)|Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde]]'', where she portrayed Ivy Pearson, a prostitute who becomes entangled with Jekyll and Hyde. She received rave reviews, including one from [[Mordaunt Hall]] of the ''New York Times'', saying she portrayed Ivy "splendidly".<ref>''The New York Times Book of Movies: The Essential 1,000 Films to See'', Universe Publishing, 2019, "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde", p. 310, first published January 2, 1932</ref>
==Filmography==
*''The Home Girl'' (1928) (short subject)
*''Fast and Loose'' (1930)
*''[[The Smiling Lieutenant]]'' (1931)
*''24 Hours'' (1931)
*''[[Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931 film)|Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde]]'' (1931)
*''Hollywood on Parade'' (1932) (short subject)
*''Two Kinds of Women'' (1932)
*''Dancers in the Dark'' (1932)
*''World and the Flesh'' (1932)
*''[[Trouble in Paradise]]'' (1932)
*''The Story of Temple Drake'' (1933)
*''The Stranger's Return'' (1933)
*''[[Design for Living]]'' (1933)
*''All of Me'' (1934)
*''She Loves Me Not'' (1934)
*''The Richest Girl in the World'' (1934)
*''[[Becky Sharp (film)|Becky Sharp]]'' (1935)
*''[[Barbary Coast (film)|Barbary Coast]]'' (1935)
*''Splendor'' (1935)
*''[[These Three]]'' (1936)
*''Men Are Not Gods'' (1936)
*''The Woman I Love'' (1937)
*''Woman Chases Man'' (1937)
*''Wise Girl'' (1937)
*''The Old Maid'' (1939)
*''[[Virginia City (1940 film)|Virginia City]]'' (1940)
*''Lady with Red Hair'' (1940)
*''A Gentleman After Dark'' (1942)
*''Old Acquaintance'' (1943)
*''[[The Heiress]]'' (1949)
*''[[The Mating Season (film)|The Mating Season]]'' (1951)
*''[[Sister Carrie|Carrie]]'' (1952)
*''[[The Children's Hour]]'' (1961)
*''[[Fanny Hill]]'' (1964)
*''[[The Chase (1966 film)|The Chase]]'' (1966)
*''Savage Intruder'' (1969)


Her career ascended swiftly. In 1932, she made her breakthrough in [[Ernst Lubitsch]]'s ''[[Trouble in Paradise (1932 film)|Trouble in Paradise]]'', where she proved her charm and wit as a beautiful and jealous pickpocket.<ref name=janeway /> During the pre-code Hollywood of the early 1930s, she appeared in ''[[The Smiling Lieutenant]]'', ''[[The Story of Temple Drake]]'', and ''[[Design for Living (film)|Design for Living]]'', all of which were box-office successes and critically acclaimed.<ref>{{cite news|title=The Year in Hollywood: 1984 May Be Remembered as the Beginning of the Sweetness-and-Light Era|author=Douglas W. Churchill|work=New York Times|date=December 30, 1934|page=X5}}</ref> ''Design for Living'' ranked as one of the top ten highest-grossing films of 1933.
==External links==
*{{imdb name|id=0394244|name=Miriam Hopkins}}


Hopkins' early films were considered sexually risqué; produced in the years before the [[Motion Picture Production Code]] was rigorously enforced, they featured issues that would be prohibited after 1934. For instance, ''The Story of Temple Drake'' depicted a rape scene, and ''Design for Living'' featured a ménage à trois with [[Fredric March]] and [[Gary Cooper]]. Her successes continued during the remainder of the decade with the romantic comedy ''[[The Richest Girl in the World (1934 film)|The Richest Girl in the World]]'' (1934); the historical drama ''[[Becky Sharp (film)|Becky Sharp]]'' (1935), for which she was nominated for the [[Academy Award for Best Actress]]; ''[[Barbary Coast (film)|Barbary Coast]]'' (1935); ''[[These Three]]'' (1936) (the first of four films with the director [[William Wyler]]); and ''[[The Old Maid (1939 film)|The Old Maid]]'' (1939).


Hopkins was one of the early actresses approached to play the role of Ellie Andrews in ''[[It Happened One Night]]'' (1934). She rejected the part, and [[Claudette Colbert]] was cast.<ref>{{cite book|last=Wiley|first=Mason|author2=Damien Bona|author2-link=Damien Bona|title= Inside Oscar: The Unofficial History of the Academy Awards|year=1987|publisher=Ballantine Books|isbn= 0-345-34453-7|page=54}}</ref> Hopkins auditioned for the role of [[Scarlett O'Hara]] in ''[[Gone with the Wind (film)|Gone with the Wind]]''; she was the only candidate to be a native Georgian, but the part went to British actress [[Vivien Leigh]].


Hopkins had well-publicized fights with Bette Davis. Hopkins and Davis co-starred in ''The Old Maid'' (1939) and ''[[Old Acquaintance]]'' (1943). In this period, she believed that Davis was having an affair with her husband [[Anatole Litvak]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Miriam Hopkins Biography in the Works|work=Alternative Film Guide|url=http://www.altfg.com/blog/actors/miriam-hopkins/|first=Andre |last=Soares|date=December 3, 2006}}</ref> Davis resented her jealousy and said that she had enjoyed shaking Hopkins in a scene in ''Old Acquaintance'' after Hopkins's character makes unfounded allegations against Davis's. Press photos featured the two divas in a boxing ring, gloves up, with the director [[Vincent Sherman]] between them like a referee. In later interviews, Davis described Hopkins as a "terribly good actress", but also "terribly jealous".{{Citation needed |date=August 2019}}
<!-- Becky Sharp -->

After ''Old Acquaintance'', Hopkins did not work in films again until ''[[The Heiress]]'' (1949), where she played the lead character's aunt. In [[Mitchell Leisen]]'s 1951 comedy ''[[The Mating Season (film)|The Mating Season]]'', she gave a comic performance as the mother of [[Gene Tierney]]'s character. She also acted in ''[[The Children's Hour (1961 film)|The Children's Hour]]'' (1961), a remake of her film ''[[These Three]]'' (1936). In the remake, she played the aunt to [[Shirley MacLaine]], who took Hopkins' original role.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Children's Hour (1961) |url=https://catalog.afi.com/Catalog/moviedetails/23793 |access-date=2024-07-08 |website=AFI Catalog of Feature Films}}</ref> Her last film roles included [[Robert Redford]]'s mother in ''[[The Chase (1966 film)|The Chase]]'' (1966) and as an ageing former Hollywood star in the horror film ''[[Savage Intruder]]'' (1970).

Hopkins was a television pioneer. She performed in teleplays from the late 1940s through the late 1960s, in such programs as ''[[The Chevrolet Tele-Theatre]]'' (1949), ''[[Pulitzer Prize Playhouse]]'' (1951), ''[[Lux Video Theatre]]'' (1951–1955), and in episodes of ''[[The Investigators (1961 TV series)|The Investigators]]'' (1961) and ''[[The Outer Limits (1963 TV series)|The Outer Limits]]'' (1964), and even in an episode of ''[[The Flying Nun]]'' ("Bertrille and the Silent Flicks") in 1969.

She has two stars on the [[Hollywood Walk of Fame]]: one for film at 1709 Vine Street and one for television at 1716 Vine Street.<ref>{{cite web |title=Miriam Hopkins |url=http://www.walkoffame.com/miriam-hopkins |website=Hollywood Walk of Fame |date=25 October 2019 |access-date=November 20, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191120012624/http://www.walkoffame.com/miriam-hopkins |archive-date=November 20, 2019}}</ref>

==Personal life==
Hopkins married four times. Her first marriage was to actor Brandon Peters, second to aviator and screenwriter Austin Parker, third to the director [[Anatole Litvak]], and fourth to war correspondent Raymond B. Brock.<ref>{{Cite news |date=25 October 1945 |title=Miriam Hopkins' Third Wedding |url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/128319344 |access-date=20 October 2024 |work=Adelaide News |pages=3 |quote=The film and stage actress Miriam Hopkins married Raymond Brock, war correspondent, in the Methodist Church at Alexandria (Virginia). It was her third marriage and Brock's second.}}</ref> In 1932, she adopted a son, Michael T. Hopkins (March 29, 1932 – October 5, 2010), who had a career in the U.S. Air Force.<ref>Ellenberger 2017, pp. 231, 249, 256, 273</ref>

She was known for hosting elegant parties. [[John O'Hara]], a frequent guest, noted that

{{quote|most of her guests were chosen from the world of the intellect&nbsp;... Miriam knew them all, had read their work, had listened to their music, had bought their paintings. They were not there because a secretary had given her a list of highbrows.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1972/10/10/issue.html|title=TimesMachine|publisher=Timesmachine.nytimes.com|access-date=October 17, 2015}}</ref>}}

She was a staunch [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democrat]] who strongly supported the presidency of [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]].<ref name="janeway">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vSZFAAAAQBAJ&q=Miriam+Hopkins+Democrat&pg=PT182 |title=The Fall of the House of Roosevelt: Brokers of Ideas and Power from FDR to LBJ|author=Michael Janeway |date=August 22, 2009 |page=102|publisher=Columbia University Press |isbn=9780231505772|access-date=October 17, 2015}}</ref>

==Death==
Hopkins died in New York City from a [[Myocardial infarction|heart attack]] on October 9, 1972. She is buried in Oak City Cemetery in Bainbridge, Georgia.<ref>Ellenberger 2017, p. 272</ref>

==Filmography==
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
! Year
! style="width:200px;"|Title
! style="width:150px;"|Role
! Notes
|-
| 1928
| ''[[The Home Girl]]''
|
| short Paramount film
|-
| 1930
| ''[[Fast and Loose (1930 film)|Fast and Loose]]''
| Marion Lenox
| Hopkins's feature film debut
|-
| rowspan=3 | 1931
| ''{{sortname|The|Smiling Lieutenant}}''
| Princess Anna
| The first of three films Hopkins made with Lubitsch
|-
| ''[[24 Hours (1931 film)|24 Hours]]''
| Rosie Duggan
|
|-
| ''[[Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931 film)|Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde]]''
| Ivy Pearson
|
|-
| rowspan=4 | 1932
| ''[[Two Kinds of Women (1932 film)|Two Kinds of Women]]''
| Emma Krull
|
|-
| ''[[Dancers in the Dark]]''
| Gloria Bishop
|
|-
| ''[[The World and the Flesh]]''
| Maria Yaskaya
|
|-
| ''[[Trouble in Paradise (1932 film)|Trouble in Paradise]]''
| Lily
| Second film directed by Lubitsch and starring Hopkins
|-
| rowspan=3 | 1933
| ''{{sortname|The|Story of Temple Drake}}''
| [[Temple Drake]]
| Based on Faulkner's scandalous novel ''[[Sanctuary (Faulkner novel)|Sanctuary]]''
|-
| ''{{sortname|The|Stranger's Return}}''
| Louise Starr
|
|-
| ''[[Design for Living (film)|Design for Living]]''
| Gilda Farrell
| Third and final film Hopkins and Lubitsch made together
|-
| rowspan=3 | 1934
| ''[[All of Me (1934 film)|All of Me]]''
| Lydia Darrow
|
|-
| ''[[She Loves Me Not (1934 film)|She Loves Me Not]]''
| Curly Flagg
|
|-
| ''{{sortname|The|Richest Girl in the World|dab=1934 film}}''
| Dorothy Hunter
| First of five films Hopkins and [[Joel McCrea]] made together
|-
| rowspan=3 | 1935
| ''[[Becky Sharp (film)|Becky Sharp]]''
| Becky Sharp
| Nominated – [[Academy Award for Best Actress]]<br />The first feature film made in three-strip Technicolor
|-
| ''[[Barbary Coast (film)|Barbary Coast]]''
| Mary 'Swan' Rutledge
| Second film starring Hopkins and McCrea
|-
| ''[[Splendor (1935 film)|Splendor]]''
| Phyllis Manning Lorrimore
| Third film starring Hopkins and McCrea
|-
| rowspan=2 | 1936
| ''[[These Three]]''
| Martha Dobie
| The film was adapted from the 1934 play ''The Children's Hour'' by Lillian Hellman.<br /> Fourth film starring Hopkins and McCrea
|-
| ''[[Men Are Not Gods]]''
| Ann Williams
|
|-
| rowspan=3 | 1937
| ''{{sortname|The|Woman I Love|dab=1937 film}}''
| Madame Helene Maury
| Hopkins married director Anatole Litvak shortly after this film was made.
|-
| ''[[Woman Chases Man]]''
| Virginia Travis
| Final film Hopkins and [[Joel McCrea]] made together
|-
| ''[[Wise Girl (film)|Wise Girl]]''
| Susan 'Susie' Fletcher
|
|-
| 1939
| ''{{sortname|The|Old Maid|dab=1939 film}}''
| Delia Lovell Ralston
| The first of two films Hopkins made with Bette Davis
|-
| rowspan=2 | 1940
| ''[[Virginia City (film)|Virginia City]]''
| Julia Hayne
| Hopkins co-starred with [[Errol Flynn]]
|-
| ''[[Lady with Red Hair]]''
| [[Mrs. Leslie Carter]]
|
|-
| 1942
| ''{{sortname|A|Gentleman After Dark}}''
| Flo Melton
|
|-
| 1943
| ''[[Old Acquaintance]]''
| Millie Drake
| Second of two films Hopkins made with [[Bette Davis]].
|-
| 1949
| ''{{sortname|The|Heiress}}''
| Lavinia Penniman
| Nominated – [[Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress&nbsp;– Motion Picture]]
|-
| 1951
| ''{{sortname|The|Mating Season|dab=film}}''
| Fran Carleton
|
|-
| rowspan=2 | 1952
| ''[[The Outcasts of Poker Flat (1952 film)|The Outcasts of Poker Flat]]''
| Mrs. Shipton / 'The Duchess'
|
|-
| ''[[Carrie (1952 film)|Carrie]]''
| Julie Hurstwood
|
|-
| 1961
| ''{{sortname|The|Children's Hour|dab=film}}''
| Lily Mortar
| Hopkins had starred in the original film adaptation of the play ''The Children's Hour'' titled ''These Three'' in the role of Martha Dobie. In this film, Shirley MacLaine played Martha, and Miriam Hopkins played her Aunt Lily.
|-
| 1964
| ''[[Fanny Hill (1964 film)|Fanny Hill]]''
| Mrs. Maude Brown
|
|-
| 1966
| ''{{sortname|The|Chase|dab=1966 film}}''
| Mrs. Reeves
| Hopkins played the mother of Robert Redford's character
|-
| 1970
| ''[[Savage Intruder]]''
| Katharine Parker
|
|}

==Sources==
* Ellenberger, Allan R. (2017). ''[[Miriam Hopkins: Life and Films of a Hollywood Rebel]]''. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky. {{ISBN|978-0-8131743-1-0}}

==References==
{{Reflist}}

==External links==
{{commons category|Miriam Hopkins}}
*{{IMDb name|0394244}}
* {{Tcmdb name}}
*{{IBDB name}}
*{{Find a Grave|8672}}
*[http://film.virtual-history.com/person.php?personid=658 Photographs of Miriam Hopkins]
*[http://www.altfg.com/blog/actors/miriam-hopkins-interview/ Miriam Hopkins Interview with Biographer Allan Ellenberger]


{{Authority control}}
[[Category:1902 births|Hopkins, Miriam]]
[[Category:1972 deaths|Hopkins, Miriam]]
[[Category:American actors|Hopkins, Miriam]]
[[Category:Best Actress Oscar Nominee|Hopkins, Miriam]]
[[Category:Film actors|Hopkins, Miriam]]
[[Category:The Outer Limits actors|Hopkins, Miriam]]
[[Category:Hollywood Walk of Fame|Hopkins, Miriam]]
[[Category:Television actors|Hopkins, Miriam]]
[[Category:Bisexual actors|Hopkins, Miriam]]
[[Category:Entertainers who died in their 60s|Hopkins, Miriam]]


[[de:Miriam Hopkins]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hopkins, Miriam}}
[[fi:Miriam Hopkins]]
[[Category:1902 births]]
[[Category:1972 deaths]]
[[Category:20th-century American actresses]]
[[Category:20th-century American Episcopalians]]
[[Category:Actresses from Greater Los Angeles]]
[[Category:Actresses from Manhattan]]
[[Category:Actresses from Savannah, Georgia]]
[[Category:Actresses from Syracuse, New York]]
[[Category:American expatriates in Mexico]]
[[Category:American film actresses]]
[[Category:American stage actresses]]
[[Category:American television actresses]]
[[Category:Broadway theatre people]]
[[Category:California Democrats]]
[[Category:Deaths from heart disease]]
[[Category:Disease-related deaths in New York (state)]]
[[Category:Episcopalians from California]]
[[Category:Episcopalians from Georgia (U.S. state)]]
[[Category:Episcopalians from New York (state)]]
[[Category:Georgia (U.S. state) Democrats]]
[[Category:Goddard College alumni]]
[[Category:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract players]]
[[Category:New York (state) Democrats]]
[[Category:Paramount Pictures contract players]]
[[Category:People from Bainbridge, Georgia]]
[[Category:Syracuse University alumni]]
[[Category:Warner Bros. contract players]]

Latest revision as of 03:08, 8 December 2024

Miriam Hopkins
Hopkins in the 1930s
Born
Ellen Miriam Hopkins

(1902-10-18)October 18, 1902
DiedOctober 9, 1972(1972-10-09) (aged 69)
New York City, U.S.
OccupationActress
Years active1921–1970
Political partyDemocratic
Spouses
  • Brandon Peters (1926–1927)
  • Austin Parker (1928–1931)
  • Anatole Litvak (1937–1939)
  • Raymond B. Brock (1945–1951)
Children1

Ellen Miriam Hopkins (October 18, 1902 – October 9, 1972) was an American actress known for her versatility.[1] She signed with Paramount Pictures in 1930.

She portrayed a pickpocket in Ernst Lubitsch's romantic comedy Trouble in Paradise, a bar singer Ivy in Rouben Mamoulian's Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, and the titular character in the controversial drama The Story of Temple Drake. She received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress for the 1935 film Becky Sharp, becoming the first performer nominated for a color picture. She was nominated for a Golden Globe for The Heiress. She co-starred with Joel McCrea in five films.

Her long-running feud with actress Bette Davis was publicized for effect. Hopkins later became a pioneer of TV drama. She was considered a distinguished hostess in Hollywood and moved in intellectual and creative circles.

Early life

[edit]

Hopkins was born in Savannah, Georgia, to Homer Hopkins and Ellen Cutler.[2] Her early childhood home was located at 321 Whitaker St (since demolished).[3] She was raised in Bainbridge, near the Alabama border. She had an older sister, Ruby (1900–1990).[4] Her maternal great-grandfather, the fourth mayor of Bainbridge, had helped establish St. John's Episcopal Church in the city.[5] Hopkins sang in the choir as a girl.[6]

In 1909, she briefly lived in Mexico with her family. After her parents separated, Hopkins moved as a teen with her mother to Syracuse, New York, to be near her paternal uncle, Thomas Cramer Hopkins, head of the geology department at Syracuse University.[7]

Hopkins attended Goddard Seminary in Plainfield, Vermont (later renamed Goddard College), and Syracuse University in New York State.[7]

Career

[edit]
With Fredric March in Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931)
With Fredric March and Gary Cooper in Design for Living (1933)
Hopkins and Herbert Marshall in a publicity photo for Trouble in Paradise (1932)
Miriam Hopkins in the Broadway production of Jezebel (1933), an Owen Davis play. It was later adapted as a 1938 film but Hopkins lost the lead role to Bette Davis.

At age 20, Hopkins became a chorus girl in New York City; she also acted regularly on the stage throughout the 1920s, including in the 1926 stage adaptation of Theodore Dreiser's An American Tragedy. In 1930, she starred on Broadway in the play Ritzy by Sidney Toler. She starred on Broadway in the lead of Jezebel, a 1933 play by Owen Davis. When it was adapted as a 1938 film of the same name, Hopkins was bitterly disappointed that Bette Davis was chosen for the role she had played on stage. This began a feud between them, which the motion picture studios publicized.

In 1930, Hopkins signed with Paramount Pictures and made her official film debut in Fast and Loose. Her first great success was in the 1931 horror drama film Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, where she portrayed Ivy Pearson, a prostitute who becomes entangled with Jekyll and Hyde. She received rave reviews, including one from Mordaunt Hall of the New York Times, saying she portrayed Ivy "splendidly".[8]

Her career ascended swiftly. In 1932, she made her breakthrough in Ernst Lubitsch's Trouble in Paradise, where she proved her charm and wit as a beautiful and jealous pickpocket.[9] During the pre-code Hollywood of the early 1930s, she appeared in The Smiling Lieutenant, The Story of Temple Drake, and Design for Living, all of which were box-office successes and critically acclaimed.[10] Design for Living ranked as one of the top ten highest-grossing films of 1933.

Hopkins' early films were considered sexually risqué; produced in the years before the Motion Picture Production Code was rigorously enforced, they featured issues that would be prohibited after 1934. For instance, The Story of Temple Drake depicted a rape scene, and Design for Living featured a ménage à trois with Fredric March and Gary Cooper. Her successes continued during the remainder of the decade with the romantic comedy The Richest Girl in the World (1934); the historical drama Becky Sharp (1935), for which she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress; Barbary Coast (1935); These Three (1936) (the first of four films with the director William Wyler); and The Old Maid (1939).

Hopkins was one of the early actresses approached to play the role of Ellie Andrews in It Happened One Night (1934). She rejected the part, and Claudette Colbert was cast.[11] Hopkins auditioned for the role of Scarlett O'Hara in Gone with the Wind; she was the only candidate to be a native Georgian, but the part went to British actress Vivien Leigh.

Hopkins had well-publicized fights with Bette Davis. Hopkins and Davis co-starred in The Old Maid (1939) and Old Acquaintance (1943). In this period, she believed that Davis was having an affair with her husband Anatole Litvak.[12] Davis resented her jealousy and said that she had enjoyed shaking Hopkins in a scene in Old Acquaintance after Hopkins's character makes unfounded allegations against Davis's. Press photos featured the two divas in a boxing ring, gloves up, with the director Vincent Sherman between them like a referee. In later interviews, Davis described Hopkins as a "terribly good actress", but also "terribly jealous".[citation needed]

After Old Acquaintance, Hopkins did not work in films again until The Heiress (1949), where she played the lead character's aunt. In Mitchell Leisen's 1951 comedy The Mating Season, she gave a comic performance as the mother of Gene Tierney's character. She also acted in The Children's Hour (1961), a remake of her film These Three (1936). In the remake, she played the aunt to Shirley MacLaine, who took Hopkins' original role.[13] Her last film roles included Robert Redford's mother in The Chase (1966) and as an ageing former Hollywood star in the horror film Savage Intruder (1970).

Hopkins was a television pioneer. She performed in teleplays from the late 1940s through the late 1960s, in such programs as The Chevrolet Tele-Theatre (1949), Pulitzer Prize Playhouse (1951), Lux Video Theatre (1951–1955), and in episodes of The Investigators (1961) and The Outer Limits (1964), and even in an episode of The Flying Nun ("Bertrille and the Silent Flicks") in 1969.

She has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame: one for film at 1709 Vine Street and one for television at 1716 Vine Street.[14]

Personal life

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Hopkins married four times. Her first marriage was to actor Brandon Peters, second to aviator and screenwriter Austin Parker, third to the director Anatole Litvak, and fourth to war correspondent Raymond B. Brock.[15] In 1932, she adopted a son, Michael T. Hopkins (March 29, 1932 – October 5, 2010), who had a career in the U.S. Air Force.[16]

She was known for hosting elegant parties. John O'Hara, a frequent guest, noted that

most of her guests were chosen from the world of the intellect ... Miriam knew them all, had read their work, had listened to their music, had bought their paintings. They were not there because a secretary had given her a list of highbrows.[17]

She was a staunch Democrat who strongly supported the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt.[9]

Death

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Hopkins died in New York City from a heart attack on October 9, 1972. She is buried in Oak City Cemetery in Bainbridge, Georgia.[18]

Filmography

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Year Title Role Notes
1928 The Home Girl short Paramount film
1930 Fast and Loose Marion Lenox Hopkins's feature film debut
1931 The Smiling Lieutenant Princess Anna The first of three films Hopkins made with Lubitsch
24 Hours Rosie Duggan
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Ivy Pearson
1932 Two Kinds of Women Emma Krull
Dancers in the Dark Gloria Bishop
The World and the Flesh Maria Yaskaya
Trouble in Paradise Lily Second film directed by Lubitsch and starring Hopkins
1933 The Story of Temple Drake Temple Drake Based on Faulkner's scandalous novel Sanctuary
The Stranger's Return Louise Starr
Design for Living Gilda Farrell Third and final film Hopkins and Lubitsch made together
1934 All of Me Lydia Darrow
She Loves Me Not Curly Flagg
The Richest Girl in the World Dorothy Hunter First of five films Hopkins and Joel McCrea made together
1935 Becky Sharp Becky Sharp Nominated – Academy Award for Best Actress
The first feature film made in three-strip Technicolor
Barbary Coast Mary 'Swan' Rutledge Second film starring Hopkins and McCrea
Splendor Phyllis Manning Lorrimore Third film starring Hopkins and McCrea
1936 These Three Martha Dobie The film was adapted from the 1934 play The Children's Hour by Lillian Hellman.
Fourth film starring Hopkins and McCrea
Men Are Not Gods Ann Williams
1937 The Woman I Love Madame Helene Maury Hopkins married director Anatole Litvak shortly after this film was made.
Woman Chases Man Virginia Travis Final film Hopkins and Joel McCrea made together
Wise Girl Susan 'Susie' Fletcher
1939 The Old Maid Delia Lovell Ralston The first of two films Hopkins made with Bette Davis
1940 Virginia City Julia Hayne Hopkins co-starred with Errol Flynn
Lady with Red Hair Mrs. Leslie Carter
1942 A Gentleman After Dark Flo Melton
1943 Old Acquaintance Millie Drake Second of two films Hopkins made with Bette Davis.
1949 The Heiress Lavinia Penniman Nominated – Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture
1951 The Mating Season Fran Carleton
1952 The Outcasts of Poker Flat Mrs. Shipton / 'The Duchess'
Carrie Julie Hurstwood
1961 The Children's Hour Lily Mortar Hopkins had starred in the original film adaptation of the play The Children's Hour titled These Three in the role of Martha Dobie. In this film, Shirley MacLaine played Martha, and Miriam Hopkins played her Aunt Lily.
1964 Fanny Hill Mrs. Maude Brown
1966 The Chase Mrs. Reeves Hopkins played the mother of Robert Redford's character
1970 Savage Intruder Katharine Parker

Sources

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  • Ellenberger, Allan R. (2017). Miriam Hopkins: Life and Films of a Hollywood Rebel. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0-8131743-1-0

References

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  1. ^ Obituary Variety, October 11, 1972, p. 71.
  2. ^ Virginia, Marriage Records 1936–2014
  3. ^ "GHS 1360 Cordray-Foltz Photography Studio photographs, Georgia Historical Society". georgiahistory.com. Retrieved March 2, 2023.
  4. ^ 1910 United States Federal Census
  5. ^ "St. John's Episcopal Church, Bainbridge, GA". Episcopal Church. June 13, 2011.
  6. ^ "Miriam Hopkins (1902–1972)". Georgiaencyclopedia.org. August 28, 2013. Retrieved October 17, 2015.
  7. ^ a b T.C. Hopkins Faculty Profile Archived 2014-11-13 at the Wayback Machine, archives.syr.edu; accessed June 27, 2015.
  8. ^ The New York Times Book of Movies: The Essential 1,000 Films to See, Universe Publishing, 2019, "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde", p. 310, first published January 2, 1932
  9. ^ a b Michael Janeway (August 22, 2009). The Fall of the House of Roosevelt: Brokers of Ideas and Power from FDR to LBJ. Columbia University Press. p. 102. ISBN 9780231505772. Retrieved October 17, 2015.
  10. ^ Douglas W. Churchill (December 30, 1934). "The Year in Hollywood: 1984 May Be Remembered as the Beginning of the Sweetness-and-Light Era". New York Times. p. X5.
  11. ^ Wiley, Mason; Damien Bona (1987). Inside Oscar: The Unofficial History of the Academy Awards. Ballantine Books. p. 54. ISBN 0-345-34453-7.
  12. ^ Soares, Andre (December 3, 2006). "Miriam Hopkins Biography in the Works". Alternative Film Guide.
  13. ^ "The Children's Hour (1961)". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Retrieved 2024-07-08.
  14. ^ "Miriam Hopkins". Hollywood Walk of Fame. 25 October 2019. Archived from the original on November 20, 2019. Retrieved November 20, 2019.
  15. ^ "Miriam Hopkins' Third Wedding". Adelaide News. 25 October 1945. p. 3. Retrieved 20 October 2024. The film and stage actress Miriam Hopkins married Raymond Brock, war correspondent, in the Methodist Church at Alexandria (Virginia). It was her third marriage and Brock's second.
  16. ^ Ellenberger 2017, pp. 231, 249, 256, 273
  17. ^ "TimesMachine". Timesmachine.nytimes.com. Retrieved October 17, 2015.
  18. ^ Ellenberger 2017, p. 272
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