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Anne Meacham

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Anne Meacham

Mary Anne Meacham (July 21, 1925January 12, 2006) was a noted American actress of stage, film and soap opera.

Born and raised in Chicago, Illinois, Meacham left to study drama at Yale University, graduating with a degree in 1947.

New York stage

Meacham debuted on Broadway as Ensign Jane Hilton in 1952's The Long Watch, for which she received a Clarence Derwent Award, given to outstanding newcomers to the New York stage.

She is most famous for her roles on and off-Broadway, most notably in adaptations of plays written by Tennessee Williams, who was a close personal friend. Williams once wrote an editorial in The New York Times praising Meacham, noting "There’s nothing she won’t say or do onstage without any sign of embarrassment" ([1]).

She has also portrayed roles in the Broadway productions of Candide and A Passage to India. She won two Best Actress Obie Awards, one for her role as "Catharine Holly" (the first actress to play the role which was later essayed by Elizabeth Taylor in the film version) in Tennessee Williams' Suddenly, Last Summer (1958) and another for the title role in Henrik Ibsen's Hedda Gabler (1961).

She also appeared in The Gnädiges Fraulein in 1966, and In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel in 1969. Her final Broadway credit was as Queen Gertrude in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead in 1968. Stage appearances after 1968 (including In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel) were all off-Broadway.

Television

On television, she was most famous for playing the eccentric Cory maid, Louise Goddard, on Another World. She played the role from 1972 to 1982. Meacham's character was most recognized for naming all of the Cory houseplants, which numbered well into the dozens.

The trademark of the Another World casting department was to hire heavily from the New York City stage, and it was noted by author Annie Gilbert in the book, All My Afternoons, that Meacham was one of the many cast members taken from this genre in order to infuse strong acting performances into the show, due to her experience.

Anne Meacham died, aged 80, from undisclosed causes in Canaan, New York in 2006.