ETHEL BARRYMORE - AUTOGRAPH LETTER SIGNED - HFSID 20181
Price: $1,400.00
ETHEL BARRYMORE. ALS: "Ethel Barrymore.", 3p, 4x5¾, front
and verso. 6 Charles St. (London), no date. To "My own Miss
Darby". In full: "I am so awfully sorry not to have seen you at
all this summer. I've often seen you cleaning in front of your house &
wondered if I dared call upon you. But now that the chance comes I can't take
advantage of it because I am sailing for America on Saturday & Friday
I shall be so hopelessly busy packing, etc. It is so nice of you to remember me
& when I come back in the spring I shall hope for so much better luck
- Goodbye Till then - may be we shall meet in our street though before I
go." Ethel Barrymore (1879-1959), born Ethel Mae Blythe, was a member of the
long-established American theatrical family that included brothers John and
Lionel, with whom she would appear in one film, Rasputin and the
Empress (1932). First gaining popularity in Europe, Barrymore returned to
New York City after an engagement with Henry Irving in London. Under the
Frohman banner, she appeared on Broadway in Clyde Fitch's Captain Jinks of
the Horse Marines (1901), achieving instant success (the play was revived in
1907). Although her original desire was to become a concert pianist,
Barrymore made the theater her home and gained a reputation as an actress of
dignity and warmth. Her most endearing portrayal was in The Corn is
Green (on Broadway at the National and Royale Theatres from November
26,1940-January 17, 1942 and at the Martin Beck Theatre from May 3-June 19,
1943). Barrymore also appeared in several films, winning an Academy Award for
Best Supporting Actress in None But The Lonely Heart. She was also
nominated for Best Supporting Actress Oscars for The Spiral
Staircase (1946), The Paradine Case (1947) and Pinky (1949).
Her other film credits also include The Farmer's Daughter (1947),
Portrait of Jennie (1948), Main Street to Broadway (1953, with
her brother Lionel in his last film appearance) and Young at Heart
(1954), and Barrymore also hosted and occasionally acted in a TV anthology,
Ethel Barrymore Theatre (1956). Although she also acted in several
other anthology series from 1950-1956, her assessment of the medium was, "It's
hell." A theater bearing Barrymore's name was opened in New York City in 1928.
Lightly creased with folds, vertical fold at the "l" of Ethel. 4 pinhead-size
red stains on verso of integral leaf touch 1 word of writing. Fine condition.
Framed in the Gallery of History style: 21¾x18.
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