Sylvia Sidney

A petite saucer-eyed stage-trained player, Sylvia Sidney first became established on the Broadway stage while still in her teens. In 1927. at age 16, she had the ingenue role in the melodrama "Crime" and received strong notices for her work. Over the course of the next 70-plus years, Sidney proved her mettle in a wide-range of productions on stage, screen and TV.

While she had a supporting role in "Thru Different Eyes" (1929), Sidney continued to work on stage and achieved a breakthrough in the title role of "Bad Girl" in 1930. Put under contract at Paramount, she was tapped to replace Clara Bow opposite Gary Cooper in "City Streets" and followed as the doomed factory worker in the film version of Theodore Dreiser's novel "An American Tragedy" (both 1931). Reportedly studio executive Budd Schulberg took an "interest" in the rising actress and loaned her to United Artists as an anguished young woman in "Street Scene" (also 1931). Typecast in these sweet-tempered roles as working-class heroines, Sidney nevertheless became a popular performer of the decade, working with some of the cinema's finest directors and actors. After playing the title role in "Madame Butterfly" (1935), she undertook a dual role paired with Cary Grant in the lightweight but engaging "Thirty Day Princess" (1934). Sidney offered a fine portrayal of a woman whose love for a gangster wreaks havoc in her life in "Mary Burns, Fugitive" (1935) and offered marvelous turns as the fiancee of Spencer Tracy in "Fury", Fritz Lang's study of mob rule, and as the unsuspecting wife of a turncoat in Alfred Hitchcock's "Sabotage" (both 1936). In the powerful "You Only Live Once" (1937), directed by Lang, she and Henry Fonda were powerful as a couple driven to a life of crime by a combination of bad luck and circumstance. A third pairing with the helmer, however, led to the imaginative misfire "You and Me" (1938).

By that time, Sidney's patented victimized waif was beginning to grow tiresome for both the actress and the audience. Now under contract to Walter Wanger, she had been promised the role of Cathy in "Wuthering Heights" but when the project was sold to Samuel Goldwyn was offered "Algiers" instead. Refusing to play yet another slum girl, Sidney decamped for the theater returning periodically to Hollywood in the 40s for roles in such efforts as "Blood on the Sun" (1945), opposite James Cagney, and the triangular romance "The Searching Wind" (1946), based on Lillian Hellman's play. As she aged, Sidney found good film roles difficult to find, although she was fine as Fantine in the 1952 remake of "Les Miserables". For much of the late 50s and all of the 60s, however, the actress concentrated on stage work, earning praise in such diverse parts as "Auntie Mame" and the wife in "The Fourposter". TV also provided opportunities; Sidney earned an Emmy nomination for a guest appearance on "The Defenders" in 1963.

After nearly twenty years, Sidney returned to features and picked up a Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination as Joanne Woodward's overly critical mother in the character-driven "Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams" (1973). While her subsequent film appearances have been sporadic, she was memorable as a mental patient in "I Never Promised You a Rose Garden" (1977), the chain-smoking gatekeeper of purgatory in Tim Burton's "Beetlejuice" (1988) and Lukas Haas' grandmother in Burton's "Mars Attacks!" (1996). On the small screen, Sidney appeared alongside Helen Hayes, Mildred Natwick and Myrna Loy in the ABC thriller "Do Not Fold, Spindle or Mutilate" (1971) and played one of the airline hostages in the docudrama "Raid on Entebbe" (NBC, 1977). She was quietly affecting as a terminally-ill hospice resident in the Paul Newman-directed "The Shadow Box" (ABC, 1980) and as Robert Preston's senile wife in "Finnegan Begin Again" (HBO, 1985). Sidney earned a Golden Globe Award and an Emmy nomination as the understanding grandmother of an AIDS-stricken lawyer (Aidan Quinn) in the ground-breaking telefilm "An Early Frost" (NBC, 1985) before undertaking the regular role of one of several nursing home residents forced by fire to live in an orphanage in the treacly, short-lived drama "Morningstar/Eveningstar" (CBS, 1986). In 1998, she returned to regular series work on the remake of the ABC series "Fantasy Island".

  • Also Credited As:
    Sophia Kosow
  • Born:
    August 8, 1910 in Bronx, New York
  • Died:
    July 1, 1999.
  • Job Titles:
    Actor
Significant Others
  • Companion: B P Schulberg. head of Paramount Pictures; had long-term romantic relationship in the 1930s
Education
  • Theatre Guild Drama School, New York, New York, 1925
  • Washington Irving High School, New York, New York
Milestones
  • 1926 Broadway debut, "The Squall"
  • 1926 Stage acting debut in "The Challenge of Youth" in Washington, DC
  • 1927 Won acclaim as the ingenue in "Crime"
  • 1929 Film acting debut "Thru Different Eyes"
  • 1930 Breakthrough stage role "Bad Girl"
  • 1931 First of six films with director Marion Gering, "Jennie Gerhardt" and "Pick Up"
  • 1931 Loaned to United Artists to appear in King Vidor's "Street Scene"
  • 1931 Starred in film version of "An American Tragedy"
  • 1932 Had title role in "Madame Butterfly"
  • 1934 Paired with Cary Grant in "Thirty Day Princess", co-written by Preston Sturges
  • 1935 Starred as "Mary Burns, Fugitive"
  • 1936 Appeared opposite Spencer Tracy in "Fury"; first of three films directed by Fritz Lang
  • 1936 Starred in Alfred Hitchcock's "Sabatoge"
  • 1937 Played major role in "Dead End", directed by William Wyler
  • 1939 Last Broadway appearance for 11 years, "The Gentle People"; performed with the Group Theatre
  • 1942 Toured in the stage play "Angel Street"
  • 1945 Appeared alongside James Cagney in the melodrama "Blood on the Sun"
  • 1946 Starred opposite Robert Young and Ann Richards in the Lillian Hellman-scripted "The Searching Wind"
  • 1951 Returned to Broadway in "The Fourposter"
  • 1952 Played Fantine in remake of "Les Miserables"
  • 1955 Was a regular performer on the omnibus NBC series "Star Stage"
  • 1956 Last film for 17 years, "Behind the High Wall"
  • 1958 Had title role in the touring company of "Aunti Mame"
  • 1962 Earned first Emmy Award nomination for guest appearance in "The Madman" episode of "The Defenders"
  • 1963 Had featured role in the Broadway production "Enter Laughing"
  • 1966 Assumed the role of Mrs. Banks in the Broadway play "Barefoot in the Park"; also toured in the part
  • 1971 TV-movie debut, "Don Not Fold Spindle or Mutilate" (ABC)
  • 1973 Received Academy Award nomination as Best Supporting Actress for her performance as Joanne Woodward's critical mother in "Summer Wishes, Winter Dreams"
  • 1975 Had recurring role on the ABC daytime drama "Ryan's Hope"
  • 1976 Returned to Broadway in the short-lived "Me Jack, You Jill"
  • 1977 Appeared in the docudrama "Raid on Entebbe" (NBC)
  • 1980 Portrayed a hospice resident in the TV-movie "The Shadow Box" (ABC), directed by Paul Newman
  • 1985 Garnered second Emmy nomination as Aidan Quinn's understanding grandmother in the ground-breaking NBC TV-movie "An Early Frost"
  • 1986 Was series regular on the short-lived CBS drama "Mornigstar/Eveningstar"
  • 1988 First collaboration with Tim Burton, played the gatekeeper of purgatory in "Beetlejuice"
  • 1990 Co-starred in the PBS drama "Andre's Mother"
  • 1990 Honored by the Film Society of Lincoln Center
  • 1990 Hospitalized with a near-fatal bronchial infection
  • 1992 Appeared alongside Shirley MacLaine in "Used People"
  • 1995 Sustained injuries after being struck by a car
  • 1996 Returned to features in Burton's "Mars Attacks!"
  • 1998 Appeared as a regular in the remake of the ABC series "Fantasy Island"
  • Put under contract at Paramount

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