Ann Sothern

Classically trained singer who briefly appeared in several films from the late 1920s before making her mark on Broadway. Sothern joined Columbia in 1933 and coasted as a star of B vehicles there; she also teamed five times with Gene Raymond for a series of modest programmer comedies and musicals at RKO. Sothern signed on with MGM in 1939 and emerged as the slightly dizzy but wisecracking lead of the popular, long-running comedy-adventure series, "Maisie." She also went on to enliven a number of musical comedies (even though she was miscast recreating Ethel Merman's stage role in "Panama Hattie" 1942) and exhibited a flair for dramatics in such engaging melodramas as "A Letter to Three Wives" (1949).

Sothern and MGM parted company after a decade and fewer good leading roles came her way in early middle age. So she turned her attention to TV in the early 1950s, starring in two very successful series "Private Secretary" (1953-57) and "The Ann Sothern Show" (1958-61), and intermittently appeared in features from the mid-60s. She did well in the political drama "The Best Man" (1964), and pulled off an especially striking dramatic performance as the mother of a compulsive murderer in Curtis Harrington's harrowing "The Killing Kind" (1973). Sothern also made another noteworthy return to the screen in a supporting role in "The Whales of August" (1987), for which she received an Oscar nomination as Best Supporting Actress. Married to actors Roger Pryor and Robert Sterling and mother of actress Tisha Sterling.

  • Also Credited As:
    Harriet Lake, Harriette Lake
  • Born:
    January 22, 1909 in Valley City, North Dakota
  • Died:
    March 15, 2001.
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Singer
Education
  • University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
Milestones
  • 1929 Had bit in early sound musical, "The Show of Shows" (as Harriet Lake)
  • 1930 Broadway debut in chorus of Florenz Ziegfeld's "Smiles"
  • 1931 First leading role on Broadway in Rodgers and Hart's "America's Sweetheart"
  • 1933 Returned to Hollywood and appeared (unbilled) in "Broadway Through a Keyhole"
  • 1933 Signed contract with Columbia; dyed hair from red to platinum blonde
  • 1934 Began achieving success in leading roles
  • 1936 Left Columbia and signed seven-year contract with RKO; acted opposite Gene Raymond in several popular comedies and musicals
  • 1939 Sought to be released from RKO contract and joined MGM in first of series of "Maisie" films
  • 1947 Last film as Maisie, "Undercover Maisie"
  • 1950 Left MGM; last films there, "Nancy Goes to Rio" and "Shadow on the Wall"
  • 1987 Returned to films to play supporting role in "The Whales of August"; received Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination
  • Nomadic childhood, following mother's travels as a concert singer
  • Provided the voice of a woman reincarnated as an automobile on the sitcom "My Mother, the Car"
  • Starred on first TV series, "Private Secretary"
  • Toured in "The Glass Menagerie", "Gypsy" and "The Solid Gold Cadillac"

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