Mary Wickes

Biography: "I'm not a comic," insisted Mary Wickes. "I'm an actress who plays comedy." True enough; still Wickes was often heaps funnier than the so-called comics she supported. The daughter of a well-to-do St. Louis banker, Wickes was an excellent student, completing a political science degree at the University of Washington at the age of 18. She intended to become a lawyer, but she was deflected into theatre. During her stock company apprenticeship, Wickes befriended Broadway star Ina Claire, who wrote the young actress a letter of introduction to powerful New York producer Sam Harris. She made her Broadway debut in 1934, spending the next five seasons in a variety of characterizations (never the ingenue). In 1939, she found time to make her film bow in the Red Skelton 2-reeler Seein' Red. After a string of Broadway flops, Wickes scored a hit as long-suffering Nurse Preen (aka "Nurse Bedpan") in the Kaufman-Hart comedy classic The Man Who Came to Dinner. She was brought to Hollywood to"I'm not a comic," insisted Mary Wickes. "I'm an actress who plays comedy." True enough; still Wickes was often heaps funnier than the so-called comics she supported. The daughter of a well-to-do St. Louis banker, Wickes was an excellent student, completing a political science degree at the University of Washington at the age of 18. She intended to become a lawyer, but she was deflected into theatre. During her stock company apprenticeship, Wickes befriended Broadway star Ina Claire, who wrote the young actress a letter of introduction to powerful New York producer Sam Harris. She made her Broadway debut in 1934, spending the next five seasons in a variety of characterizations (never the ingenue). In 1939, she found time to make her film bow in the Red Skelton 2-reeler Seein' Red. After a string of Broadway flops, Wickes scored a hit as long-suffering Nurse Preen (aka "Nurse Bedpan") in the Kaufman-Hart comedy classic The Man Who Came to Dinner. She was brought to Hollywood to repeat her role in the 1941 film version of Dinner. After a brief flurry of movie activity, Wickes went back to the stage, returning to Hollywood in 1948 in a role specifically written for her in The Decision of Christopher Blake. Thereafter, she remained in great demand in films, playing an exhausting variety of nosy neighbors, acerbic housekeepers and imperious maiden aunts. Though her characters were often snide and sarcastic, Wickes was careful to inject what she called "heart" into her portrayals; indeed, it is very hard to find an out-and-out villainess in her manifest. Even when she served as the model for Cruella DeVil in the 1961 animated feature 101 Dalmations, Cruella's voice was dubbed by the far more malevolent-sounding Betty Lou Gerson. Far busier on TV than in films, Wickes was a regular on ten weekly series between 1953 and 1985, earning an Emmy nomination for her work on 1961's The Gertrude Berg Show. She also has the distinction of being the first actress to essay the role of Mary Poppins in a 1949 Studio One presentation. Throughout the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, Wickes did a great deal of guest-artist work in colleges and universities; during this period she herself went back to school, earning a master's degree from UCLA. Maintaining her professional pace into the 1990s, Wickes scored a hit with modern moviegoers as Sister Mary Lazarus in the two Sister Act comedies. Mary Wickes' final performance was a voiceover stint as one of the gargoyles in Disney's animated Hunchback of Notre Dame; she died a few days before finishing this assignment, whereupon Jane Withers dubbed in the leftover dialogue. Expand

Mary Wickes' Scores

Average career score: N/A
Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 0 out of
  2. Mixed: 0 out of
  3. Negative: 0 out of
0 tv reviews
Title: Year: Credit: User score:
tbd Father Dowling Mysteries: Season 3 Sep 20, 1990 Marie Murkin / Marie tbd
tbd Father Dowling Mysteries: Season 2 Jan 4, 1990 Marie Murkin / Marie tbd
tbd Father Dowling Mysteries: Season 1 Nov 30, 1987 Marie Murkin / Marie tbd
tbd Highway to Heaven: Season 4 Sep 16, 1987 Minnie tbd
tbd Murder, She Wrote: Season 2 Sep 29, 1985 Alva Crane tbd
tbd The Love Boat: Season 4 Oct 25, 1980 Mrs. Randolph tbd
tbd Match Game 73: Season 7 Jan 3, 1979 Semi-Regular tbd
tbd Match Game 73: Season 6 Jan 3, 1978 Herself / Herself tbd
tbd Match Game 73: Season 5 Jan 3, 1977 Semi-Regular tbd
tbd Match Game 73: Season 4 Jan 2, 1976 Semi-Regular tbd
tbd Match Game 73: Season 3 Jan 2, 1975 Semi-Regular tbd
tbd M*A*S*H: Season 3 Sep 10, 1974 Col. Reese tbd
tbd Match Game 73: Season 2 Jan 2, 1974 Semi-Regular tbd
tbd Match Game 73: Season 1 Jun 25, 1973 Semi-Regular tbd
tbd Sanford and Son: Season 2 Sep 15, 1972 Mary tbd
tbd The Beverly Hillbillies: Season 6 Sep 13, 1967 Actor tbd
tbd The Lucy Show: Season 6 Sep 11, 1967 Aunt Agatha / Miss Hurlow tbd
tbd The Lucy Show: Season 5 Sep 12, 1966 Mrs. Winslow tbd
tbd Bonanza: Season 8 Sep 11, 1966 Hattie tbd
tbd F Troop: Season 2 Sep 8, 1966 Samantha Oglesby tbd
tbd The Lucy Show: Season 4 Sep 13, 1965 Aunt Gussie tbd
tbd My Three Sons: Season 5 Sep 17, 1964 Jeri tbd
tbd The Lucy Show: Season 2 Sep 30, 1963 Fran / Frances tbd
tbd Make Room for Daddy: Season 11 Sep 30, 1963 Liz O'Neal / Mary Wickes tbd
tbd The Lucy Show: Season 1 Oct 1, 1962 Mrs. Rodney tbd
tbd Make Room for Daddy: Season 10 Oct 1, 1962 Liz O'Neal tbd
tbd Dennis the Menace: Season 4 Sep 30, 1962 Miss Cathcart / Mary Wickes / Miss Cathcart tbd
tbd Bonanza: Season 4 Sep 23, 1962 Martha tbd
tbd Make Room for Daddy: Season 9 Oct 2, 1961 Liz O'Neal / Liz tbd
tbd Make Room for Daddy: Season 8 Oct 3, 1960 Liz O'Neal tbd