Bethel Leslie


An actress since her early teens, Bethel Leslie made her Broadway bow opposite Conrad Janis in 1944's Snafu. Leslie later appeared as Rachel in the original 1956 production of Inherit the Wind; she went on to gain near-legendary status among West Coast actors for her work in a 1959 staging of Career, aging 30 years in the third act simply by wearing a hat. Though she has been in films sporadically since 1958, she is most widely known for her television work. Her first series stint was as Cornelia Otis Skinner in The Girls (1950), a TV-sitcom adaptation of Ms. Skinner's autobiography Our Hearts Were Young and Gay. Together with Vera Miles and Beverly Garland, she was one of the busiest and most-in-demand TV guest actresses of the 1950s and 1960s; she played everything from kidnap victims to cold-blooded murderesses, and was seen as three different defendants on three different Perry Mason episodes. Her versatility really got a workout on The Richard Boone Show (1963), a weekly TV anthology wherein a repertory company of eleven actors played parts in all the plays. More recently, Bethel Leslie has evinced a preference for the stage; one of her most formidable assignments was the killer part of Mary Tyrone in Eugene O'Neill's Long Day's Journey Into Night. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

  • Born:
    August 3, 1929 in New York, New York
  • Died:
    November 28, 1999.
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Screenwriter
Family
  • Brother: Warren Leslie.
  • Daughter: Leslie McCullough Jeffries.
Education
  • Brearly School, New York, New York
Milestones
  • 1944 Made acting debut on Broadway in "Snafu" at age 15
  • 1946 Appeared with Fredric March in "Year Ago"
  • 1948 Had supporting role in "Goodbye, My Fancy", starring Sam Wannamaker
  • 1950 Co-starred with Helen Hayes in "The Wisteria Trees", an Americanization of Chekhov's "The Cherry Orchard"
  • 1955 Breakthrough stage role in "Inherit the Wind"
  • 1964 Feature film debut, "Captain Newman, M.D."
  • 1965 Moved back to NYC
  • 1986 Starred opposite Jack Lemmon in revival of "Long Day's Journey Into Night"; earned Tony nomination
  • 1999 Final stage appearance in the Off-Broadway staging of "The Exact Center of the Universe"
  • Moved to Hollywood and appeared in TV productions

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