Martha Scott

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Martha Scott

in the trailer for The Ten Commandments (1956)
Born Martha Ellen Scott
September 22, 1912
Jamesport, Missouri, USA
Died April 5, 2003 (aged 91)
Van Nuys, California, USA

Martha Ellen Scott (September 22, 1912May 28, 2003) was an American actress.

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[edit] Biography

Scott was born in Jamesport, Missouri, the daughter of Letha (née McKinley) and Walter Scott, an engineer and garage owner; her mother was a second-cousin of U.S. President William McKinley.[1][2] Scott became interested in acting in high school, but failed to earn a degree from the University of Michigan before pursuing her acting dream. She got her start acting in shortened Shakespeare productions at the Century of Progress world's fair in Chicago, Illinois in 1933 - 1934.

Scott eventually went to New York City, where she was cast as the original Emily in the Broadway production of Our Town. Her film debut in Our Town in 1940 saw her receiving an Academy Award nomination Best Actress for her luminous and critically acclaimed performance as Emily Webb. Scott's co-star was William Holden in the role of George Gibbs. Unfortunately the censors sanitized the film's last scene after Emily has died (set in a cemetery after Emily's death during childbirth in the stage production), and allowed her to live to make for a happy ending.

She never again achieved such acclaim, although she appeared in such films as The Howards of Virginia, Cheers for Miss Bishop, One Foot in Heaven, The Desperate Hours, The Ten Commandments, Ben-Hur, Airport 1975 and The Turning Point. In both The Ten Commandments and Ben-Hur, she played Charlton Heston's mother. She married radio producer and announcer Carlton Alsop in 1940, and jazz pianist and composer Mel Powell in 1946.

[edit] Filmography

  • Our Town (1940)
  • The Howards of Virginia (1940)
  • They Dare Not Love (1941)
  • One Foot in Heaven (1941)
  • Hi Diddle Diddle (1943)
  • In Old Oklahoma (1943)
  • So Well Remembered (1947)
  • Strange Bargain (1949)
  • The Cut Glass Bowl (1950)
  • When I Grow Up (1951)
  • The Cat's Cradle (1951)
  • Lights Out (1951)
  • The Clock (1951)
  • Bewitched (1951)
  • Way of Courage (1952)
  • The Sister (1953)
  • Center Stage (1954
  • TV Reader's Digest (1955)
  • Prairie Night (1956)
  • The Ten Commandments (1956)
  • Sayonara (1957)
  • Playhouse 90 (1959)
  • Ben-Hur (1959)
  • You're Only Young Twice (1960)
  • The Wooden Dish (1961)
  • Play of the Week (1961)
  • Ghost Story (1962)
  • Two Faces of Treason (1963)
  • A Dark World (1963)
  • The Nurses (1963)
  • Color Him Red (1965)
  • The Search (1967)
  • The F.B.I. (1967)
  • Ironside (1967)
  • Paris 7000 (1970)
  • Longstreet (1971)
  • Hooray for Harriet (1972)
  • The Sandy Duncan Show (1972)
  • The Mod Squad (1973)
  • Charlotte's Web (1973)
  • Police Woman (1974)


In 1968 she joined Henry Fonda and Robert Ryan in forming a theatrical production company called "The Plumstead Playhouse". It later became the Plumstead Theatre Company and moved to Los Angeles, California. The company produced such fare as First Monday in October, both on stage and on film (Walter Matthau and Jill Clayburgh appeared in the film). Scott co-produced both versions.

Her last production was 12 Angry Men, which was performed at the [Henry Fonda Theatre in Hollywood, California. In the 1970s, she played Bob Newhart's mother on his CBS TV show. She also played Linda Gray's mother on the TV series Dallas and Lee Majors' mother on The Six Million Dollar Man. She was also a surrogate mother of sorts to Lindsay Wagner on The Bionic Woman.

Scott has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, next to the Fonda Theatre.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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