Patricia Neal (born Patsy Louise Neal, January 20, 1926 – August 8, 2010) was an American actress of stage and screen. She was best known for her film roles as World War II widow Helen Benson in The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951), wealthy matron Emily Eustace Failenson in Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961), and the worn-out housekeeper Alma Brown in Hud (1963), for which she won the Academy Award for Best Actress. She featured as the matriarch in the television film The Homecoming: A Christmas Story (1971); her role as Olivia Walton was re-cast for the series it inspired, The Waltons.


25/05/2019
Patricia Neal :  Actress


1. Profile :


*Patricia Neal - Publicity photo from 1952

Born Patsy Louise Neal
January 20, 1926
Packard, Kentucky, U.S.
Died August 8, 2010 (aged 84)
Edgartown, Massachusetts, U.S.
Resting place Abbey of Regina Laudis
Residence Edgartown, Massachusetts, U.S.
Alma mater Northwestern University
Occupation Actress
Years active 1945–2009
Home town Knoxville, Tennessee, U.S.
Spouse(s) Roald Dahl
(m. 1953; div. 1983)
Children 5, including Tessa, Ophelia, and Lucy Dahl
Relatives Sophie Dahl (granddaughter)
Phoebe Dahl (granddaughter)

2. Introduction :




Patricia Neal (born Patsy Louise Neal, January 20, 1926 – August 8, 2010) was an American actress of stage and screen. She was best known for her film roles as World War II widow Helen Benson in The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951), wealthy matron Emily Eustace Failenson in Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961), and the worn-out housekeeper Alma Brown in Hud (1963), for which she won the Academy Award for Best Actress. She featured as the matriarch in the television film The Homecoming: A Christmas Story (1971); her role as Olivia Walton was re-cast for the series it inspired, The Waltons.

3. Early life and education :



Patsy Louise Neal was born in Packard, Whitley County, Kentucky, to William Burdette Neal (1895–1944) and Eura Mildred (née Petrey) Neal (1899–2003). She had two siblings.

She grew up in Knoxville, Tennessee, where she attended Knoxville High School, and studied drama at Northwestern University. At Northwestern, she was crowned Syllabus Queen in a campus-wide beauty pageant.

4. Career :


Neal gained her first job in New York as an understudy in the Broadway production of the John Van Druten play The Voice of the Turtle. Next, she appeared in Lillian Hellman's Another Part of the Forest (1946), winning the 1947 Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Play, in the first presentation of the Tony awards.

*John Wayne and Patricia Neal in Operation Pacific (1951)


Neal made her film debut with Ronald Reagan in John Loves Mary, followed by another role with Reagan in The Hasty Heart, and then The Fountainhead (all 1949). The shooting of the last film coincided with her affair with her married co-star, Gary Cooper, with whom she worked again in Bright Leaf (1950).

Neal starred with John Garfield in The Breaking Point (1950), in The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951) with Michael Rennie, and in Operation Pacific (also 1951) starring John Wayne. She suffered a nervous breakdown around this time, following the end of her relationship with Cooper, and left Hollywood for New York, returning to Broadway in 1952 for a revival of The Children's Hour. In 1955, she starred in Edith Sommer's A Roomful of Roses, staged by Guthrie McClintic.

While in New York, Neal became a member of the Actors Studio. Based on connections with other members, she subsequently co-starred in the film A Face in the Crowd (1957, directed by Elia Kazan), the play The Miracle Worker (1959, directed by Arthur Penn), the film Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961, co-starring George Peppard), and the film Hud (1963), directed by Martin Ritt and starring Paul Newman. During the same period, she appeared on television in an episode of The Play of the Week (1960), featuring an Actors Studio-dominated cast in a double bill of plays by August Strindberg, and in a British production of Clifford Odets' Clash by Night (1959), which co-starred one of the first generation of Actors Studio members, Nehemiah Persoff.

*Neal (r) with Andy Griffith and Lee Remick on the set of A Face in the Crowd (1957)

Neal won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance in Hud (1963), co-starring with Paul Newman. When the film was initially released it was predicted she would be a nominee in the supporting actress category, but when she began collecting awards, they were always for Best Actress, from the New York Film Critics, the National Board of Review and a BAFTA award from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts.


Neal was re-united with John Wayne in Otto Preminger's In Harm's Way (1965), winning her second BAFTA Award. Her next film was The Subject Was Roses (1968), for which she was nominated for an Academy Award. She starred as the matriarch in the television film The Homecoming: A Christmas Story (1971), which inspired the television series The Waltons; she won a Golden Globe for her performance. In a 1999 interview with the Archive of American Television, Waltons creator Earl Hamner said he and producers were unsure if Neal's health would allow her to commit to the schedule of a weekly television series; so, instead, they cast Michael Learned in the role of Olivia Walton. Neal played a dying widowed mother trying to find a home for her three children in an episode of NBC's Little House on the Prairie broadcast in 1975.


Neal played the title role in Robert Altman's movie Cookie's Fortune (1999). She worked on Silvana Vienne's movie Beyond Baklava: The Fairy Tale Story of Sylvia's Baklava (2007), appearing as herself in the portions of the documentary talking about alternative ways to end violence in the world. In the same year as the film's release, Neal received one of two annually-presented Lifetime Achievement Awards at the SunDeis Film Festival in Waltham, Massachusetts. (Academy Award nominee Roy Scheider was the recipient of the other.)


Having won a Tony Award in their inaugural year (1947) and eventually becoming the last surviving winner from that first ceremony, Neal often appeared as a presenter in later years. Her original Tony was lost, so she was given a surprise replacement by Bill Irwin when they were about to present the 2006 Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Play to Cynthia Nixon. In April 2009, Neal received a lifetime achievement award from WorldFest Houston on the occasion of the debut of her film, Flying By. Neal was a long-term actress with Philip Langner's Theatre at Sea/Sail With the Stars productions with the Theatre Guild. In her final years she appeared in a number of health-care videos.


Neal was inducted into the American Theatre Hall of Fame in 2003. She was a subject of the British television show This Is Your Life in 1978 when she was surprised by Eamonn Andrews at a cocktail party on London's Park Lane.

5. Personal life :


*Patricia Neal at the Tribeca Film Festival (2007)


During the filming of The Fountainhead (1949), Neal began an affair with her married co-star, Gary Cooper, whom she had met in 1947 when she was 21 and he was 46. At one point in their relationship, Cooper hit Neal in the face after he caught Kirk Douglas trying to seduce her. Cooper persuaded Neal to have an abortion when she became pregnant with his child. A few months later, Neal hoped that tempers would cool while she went to London, England, to film The Hasty Heart, starring Ronald Reagan. Reagan was unhappy over his breakup with Jane Wyman, adding to what would be a depressing shoot for Neal.

*Patricia Neal and Roald Dahl, photo by Carl Van Vechten (1954)


Neal met British writer Roald Dahl at a dinner party hosted by Lillian Hellman in 1951. They married on July 2, 1953, at Trinity Church in New York. The marriage produced five children: Olivia Twenty (April 20, 1955 – November 17, 1962); Chantal Sophia "Tessa" (b. 1957); Theo Matthew (b. 1960); Ophelia Magdalena (b. 1964); and Lucy Neal (b. 1965). Her granddaughters include author, television presenter and model Sophie Dahl, and fashion designer Phoebe Dahl.


In the early 1960s, the couple suffered through grievous injury to one child and the death of another. On December 5, 1960, their son Theo, four months old, suffered brain damage when his baby carriage was struck by a taxicab in New York City. In May 1961, the family returned to Gipsy House in Great Missenden, Buckinghamshire, where Theo continued his rehabilitation. Neal would later describe the two years of family life during Theo's recovery as one of the most beautiful periods of her life. However, on November 17, 1962, their daughter Olivia died at age 7 from measles encephalitis.


Neal was a heavy smoker. While pregnant in 1965, Neal suffered three burst cerebral aneurysms and was in a coma for three weeks. One newspaper ran an obituary, but she survived with the assistance of Dahl and a number of volunteers, who developed a gruelling style of therapy that fundamentally changed the way stroke patients were treated. She subsequently relearned to walk and talk ("I think I'm just stubborn, that's all") and on August 4, 1965, she gave birth to a healthy daughter, Lucy. Her 1968 performance in The Subject Was Roses led to an Oscar nomination the following year.


Neal's and Dahl's marriage ended in divorce in 1983. In 1981, Glenda Jackson played her in a television movie, The Patricia Neal Story which co-starred Dirk Bogarde as Neal's husband Dahl. Neal's autobiography, As I Am, was published in 1988. In the final year of her life Neal became a Catholic.

Neal was a Democrat who supported the campaign of Adlai Stevenson during the 1952 presidential election.

6. Legacy :


In 1978, Fort Sanders Regional Medical Center in Knoxville dedicated the Patricia Neal Rehabilitation Center in her honor. The center provides intense treatment for stroke, spinal cord, and brain injury patients. It serves as part of Neal's advocacy for paralysis victims. She regularly visited the center in Knoxville, providing encouragement to its patients and staff. Neal appeared as the center's spokeswoman in advertisements until her death.[citation needed]

7. Death :


Neal died at her home in Edgartown, Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, on August 8, 2010, from lung cancer. She was 84 years old.

She had become a Catholic four months before she died and was buried in the Abbey of Regina Laudis in Bethlehem, Connecticut, where the actress Dolores Hart, her friend since the early 1960s, had become a nun and ultimately prioress. Neal had been a longtime supporter of the abbey's open-air theatre and arts program.

8. Filmography :


1. Film :


Year Title Role Notes

1949 John Loves Mary Mary McKinley
The Fountainhead Dominique Francon
It's a Great Feeling Herself cameo
The Hasty Heart Sister Parker

1950 Bright Leaf Margaret Jane Singleton
Three Secrets Phyllis Horn
The Breaking Point Leona Charles


1951 Operation Pacific Lt. (j.g.) Mary Stuart
Raton Pass Ann Challon
The Day the Earth Stood Still Helen Benson
Weekend With Father Jean Bowen

1952 Diplomatic Courier Joan Ross
Washington Story Alice Kingsley
Something for the Birds Anne Richards

1954 Stranger from Venus Susan North
La tua donna Countess Germana De Torri

1957 A Face in the Crowd Marcia Jeffries


1961 Breakfast at Tiffany's Mrs. Emily Eustace '2E' Failenson

1963 Hud Alma Brown Academy Award for Best Actress*
BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role*
Laurel Award for Top Female Dramatic Performance*
National Board of Review Award for Best Actress*
New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress*
Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture*


1964 Psyche 59 Alison Crawford

1965 In Harm's Way Lt. Maggie Haynes BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role*
1968 The Subject Was Roses Nettie Cleary Nominated—Academy Award for Best Actress*
Nominated—Laurel Award for Top Female Dramatic Performance

1971 The Night Digger Maura Prince

1973 Baxter! Dr. Roberta Clemm
Happy Mother's Day, Love George Cara also starring Tessa Dahl

1975 Hay que matar a B. Julia

1977 Nido de Viudas Lupe US title: Widow's Nest

1979 The Passage Mrs. Bergson


1981 Ghost Story Stella Hawthorne

1989 An Unremarkable Life Frances McEllany

1999 Cookie's Fortune Jewel Mae 'Cookie' Orcutt Nominated—Las Vegas Film Critics Society Award for Best Supporting Actress*

2009 Flying By Margie (final film role)

9. Television :


Year Project Role Notes

1954 Goodyear Playhouse episode: Spring Reunion

1958 Suspicion Paula Elgin episode: Someone Is After Me

1957–1958 Playhouse 90 Rena Menken
Margaret episode: The Gentleman from Seventh Avenue
episode: The Playroom

1954–1958 Studio One in Hollywood Caroline Mann
Miriam Leslie episode: Tide of Corruption
episode: A Handful of Diamonds

1958 Pursuit Mrs. Conrad episode: The Silent Night

1959 Rendezvous Kate Merlin episode: London-New York
Clash by Night Mia Wilenski

1960 The Play of the Week Mistress
Grace Wilson episode: Strindberg on Love
episode: The Magic and the Loss

1961 Special for Women: Mother and Daughter Ruth Evans

1962 Drama 61-67 Beebee Fenstermaker episode: Drama '62: The Days and Nights of Beebee
Checkmate Fran Davis episode: The Yacht-Club Gang
The Untouchables Maggie Storm episode: The Maggie Storm Story
Westinghouse Presents: That's Where the Town Is Going Ruby Sills
Winter Journey Georgie Elgin
Zero One Margo episode: Return Trip

1963 Ben Casey Dr. Louise Chapelle episode: My Enemy Is a Bright Green Sparrow
Espionage Jeanne episode: The Weakling

1971 The Homecoming: A Christmas Story Olivia Walton Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Television Series Drama*
Nominated—Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Single Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role*

1972 Circle of Fear Ellen Alexander episode: Time of Terror

1974 Kung Fu Sara Kingsley episode: Blood of Dragon
Things in Their Season Peg Gerlach

1975 Eric Lois Swensen TV movie
Little House on the Prairie Julia Sanderson episode: Remember Me
Movin' On Maddie episode: Prosperity #1

1976 The American Woman: Portraits of Courage Narrator

1977 Tail Gunner Joe Sen. Margaret Chase Smith Nominated—Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Performance by a Supporting Actress in a Comedy or Drama Special*

1978 A Love Affair: The Eleanor and Lou Gehrig Story Mrs. Gehrig
The Bastard Marie Charboneau

1979 All Quiet on the Western Front Paul's Mother Nominated—Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or a Special*

1981 All Quiet on the Western Front Paul's Mother TV movie

1984 Glitter Madame Lil episode: Pilot
Love Leads the Way: A True Story Mrs. Frank TV movie
Shattered Vows Sister Carmelita TV movie

1990 Caroline? Miss Trollope TV movie
Murder, She Wrote Milena Maryska episode: Murder in F Sharp

1992 A Mother's Right: The Elizabeth Morgan Story Antonia Morgan

1993 Heidi (miniseries) Grandmother

10. Stage :


Run Play Role Notes

November 20, 1946 – April 26, 1947 Another Part of the Forest Regina Hubbard Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Play*

11. Theatre World Award* :


December 18, 1952 – May 30, 1953 The Children's Hour Martha Dobie

October 17, 1955 – December 31, 1955 A Roomful of Roses Nancy Fallon

October 19, 1959 – July 1, 1961 The Miracle Worker Kate Keller


THE END.

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