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Peggy Ann Garner

American child actress (1932–1984) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Peggy Ann Garner
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Peggy Ann Garner (February 3, 1932 October 16, 1984) was an American child actress.

Quick facts Born, Died ...

As a child actress, Garner had her first film role in 1938. At the 18th Academy Awards, Garner won the Academy Juvenile Award, recognizing her body of contributions to film in 1945, particularly in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn and Junior Miss.[1][2]

Featured roles in such films as Black Widow (1954) did not help to establish her in mature film roles, although she progressed to theatrical work and she made acting appearances on television as an adult.

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Early years

Peggy Ann Garner was born on February 3, 1932, at Aultman Hospital in Canton, Ohio. She was the daughter of William H. Garner,[3] an attorney,[4] and Virginia Craig Garner; they were married in Toledo, Ohio on April 7, 1931.[5] She attended University High School in Los Angeles.[6] She was pushed by her mother into the limelight[4] and entered in talent quests while still a child. Her parents divorced on February 26, 1947.[5]

Garner was a child model for still photographers for two years before she began working in films in 1938.[7]

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Film

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James Dunn and Peggy Ann Garner in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945)

In 1938, Garner made her first film appearance at the age of six in the Warner Bros. film Little Miss Thoroughbred (1939), in which she had a small role as an orphan. Over the next few years, she continued to appear in small roles in the films In Name Only (1939), Blondie Brings Up Baby (1939), Abe Lincoln in Illinois (1940), and Eagle Squadron (1942). She was offered a more substantial role in The Pied Piper (1942) after the actress originally cast came down with measles.[8]

In 1943, she was cast in Twentieth Century Fox's Jane Eyre (1943), in which she played the young Jane Eyre. Her performance received acclaim from critics, who praised her acting skills.[9]

She played Young Nora in The Keys of the Kingdom (1944). Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer wanted her to star in their film National Velvet (1944), but Twentieth Century Fox wouldn't allow her contract to be half-sold. Instead, the part went to Garner's Jane Eyre co-star Elizabeth Taylor.[10]

In 1944, she was cast as Francie Nolan in Elia Kazan's adaptation of the Betty Smith novel A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. Her performance in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) was universally acclaimed. At the 18th Academy Awards she was awarded the Academy Juvenile Award largely for this performance.[11]

After the success of A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, she had a relatively smaller role in the musical Nob Hill (1945). That same year, she starred in the comedy Junior Miss (1945), which Twentieth Century Fox produced specifically with Garner in mind for the leading role.

Garner continued to star in films throughout the rest of the 40's including Home Sweet Homicide (1946), Thunder in the Valley (1947), Daisy Kenyon (1947), The Sign of the Ram (1948), Bomba, the Jungle Boy (1949), The Big Cat (1949), and The Lovable Cheat (1949). In 1947, Garner appeared as herself in a promotional trailer for Miracle on 34th Street.[12]

Like many child performers, Garner was unable to make a successful transition into adult film roles and she only had roles in two films throughout the 50's, Teresa (1951), and Black Widow (1954).[citation needed]

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Garner with Frank Sinatra, 1946
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Stage

In 1949, Garner starred in Peg O' My Heart at the Famous Artists Playhouse in Fayetteville, New York.[3] In 1954, she toured with a troupe in several states, performing in The Moon Is Blue.[13] Garner headlined the national tour of the William Inge hit Broadway play Bus Stop beginning in 1955. She starred with Albert Salmi, who later became her husband. Garner also appeared with Dick York in the touring production.[citation needed]

Garner's Broadway credits include Home Is the Hero, First Lady, The Royal Family, and The Man.[14]

Radio and television

In 1950, Garner starred as Esther Smith in the radio comedy Meet Me in St. Louis. The program ran two months on NBC.[15]

Garner was a panelist in two television programs, Leave It to the Girls on ABC and NBC[16] and Who Said That? on NBC. In 1951, she starred in the comedy Two Girls Named Smith on ABC.[16]:1121

In summer 1960, Garner appeared in "The Unfamiliar", an episode of Producer's Choice,[17] and she was cast as Julie in the episode "Stopover" of David McLean's Western series Tate. In 1960 and again in 1962, Garner was cast in the episodes "Once Around the Circuit" and "Build My Gallows Low", respectively, on the ABC series Adventures in Paradise, with Gardner McKay. Garner appeared as Edie Brewer in the 1961 Naked City episode "Button in the Haystack" alongside Albert Salmi, to whom she was married at the time, and in which the couple played husband and wife onscreen. In 1961, she starred with Richard Boone in the episode "Dream Girl" on Have Gun – Will Travel. During the early 1960s, Garner also appeared in one episode each of Bonanza ("The Rival") and Combat!, both under director Robert Altman (see next section).

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Later years

After Garner's film career ended, she ventured into stage acting and had some success, but also worked as a real estate agent[18] and fleet car executive between acting jobs to support herself. After a decade away from work in feature films, she appeared as the pregnant aunt in the critically acclaimed film, A Wedding (1978), directed by Robert Altman, with whom she had worked on television in the early 1960s. Her final screen performance was a small part in a made-for-television feature This Year's Blonde (1980).

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Personal life and death

Garner married singer/game show host Richard Hayes on February 22, 1951;[19] the couple divorced in 1953. She then married actor Albert Salmi on May 16, 1956; they divorced on March 13, 1963. (Another source says that Garner and Salmi were married May 18, 1956.)[20] Garner's final marriage was to Kenyon Foster Brown. After a few years, that marriage also ended in divorce.[citation needed]

In 1984, at age 52, Garner died from pancreatic cancer in the Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital in Los Angeles.[21] Her only child, Catherine Ann Salmi, died of heart disease on May 17, 1995. She was 38 years old.[22] Peggy's mother, Virginia, outlived both her only child and only grandchild.[citation needed]

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Filmography

Film

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Television

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References

Further reading

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