Irene Hervey (born Beulah Irene Herwick; July 11, 1909 – December 20, 1998) was an American film, stage, and television actress who appeared in over fifty films and numerous television series spanning her five-decade career.[1]
Hervey died on December 20, 1998, of heart failure in Los Angeles. She had two children, one of whom was pop singer Jack Jones.
Early life
Hervey was born Beulah Irene Herwick on July 11, 1909 in Venice, Los Angeles, California.[i][5] Her father was a sign painter, and her mother a Christian Science practitioner whose pupil was English actress Emma Dunn.[6] Dunn agreed to become Hervey's acting coach during her childhood.[6] Hervey attended Venice High School in Venice, Los Angeles, where she appeared in school theater productions.[7]
Career
Early films
She began her acting career after being introduced to a casting agent from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). After a successful screen test, she was signed by the studio and made her screen debut in the 1933 film The Stranger's Return, opposite Lionel Barrymore.[6]
In 1943, Hervey was seriously injured in a car accident and was forced to retire from acting for five years.[6]
Though she did briefly return to acting for the stage play No Way Out, where she played Dr. Enid Karley, in 1944.[11]
Later career
Hervey returned to acting in 1948 with the film Mickey, followed by Mr. Peabody and the Mermaid. By the early 1950s, she began appearing in television. Throughout the 1950s and early 1960s, Hervey appeared in several television series, including the crime dramas Richard Diamond, Private Detective, Peter Gunn, and Hawaiian Eye. She also made three guest appearances on Perry Mason: in 1958, she played Helen Bartlett in "The Case of the Black-Eyed Blonde"; in 1961, she played Grace Davies in "The Case of the Jealous Journalist", and in 1963, she played Jill Garson in "The Case of the Lawful Lazarus". She returned to theater with a role opposite Hans Conried in Take Her, She's Mine, a comedy written by Henry and Phoebe Ephron, which had regional performances in Massachusetts and Connecticut in the summer of 1963.[12] A reviewer from a local publication noted that Hervey "registers effectively" in her role.[12] In 1965, she landed a regular role on The Young Marrieds, followed by a stint on the short-lived Anne Francis series Honey West as the titular character's Aunt Meg.
In 1969, Hervey was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Single Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role for her appearance on My Three Sons.[13] After her roles as Mrs. Durant in the comedy Cactus Flower and as Madge in the 1971 thriller film Play Misty for Me with Clint Eastwood, Hervey retired from acting. She took a job working at a travel agency in Sherman Oaks, California and briefly returned to acting in 1978 with a role in Charlie's Angels. In 1981, she made her last on-screen appearance in the television movie Goliath Awaits, which centers on a community of survivors from a World War II shipwreck who have survived decades living underwater.[14]
Personal life
As a teenager, Hervey married her first husband William Fenderson in 1929 and had a daughter, Gail; they divorced.[9] In the mid-1930s, she was [15] engaged to Robert Taylor. In 1936, she met and married actor Allan Jones. The couple had a son, singer Jack Jones, born in 1938.[16] They divorced in 1957.[6][9]
^Obituaries in the Performing Arts cites Hervey's birthdate as July 11, 1909;[2] this is corroborated by California Vital Statistics' Birth Index, which lists Beulah Irene Herwick's birthdate as July 11, 1909.[3] Hervey's birth name is corroborated by a 1936 article in the Oakland Tribune.[4]
References
^ abc"Irene Hervey". Los Angeles Times. L.A. Times Hollywood Star Walk. Retrieved April 13, 2018.
^"The Girl Said No"(PDF) (Press release). Al Greenstone. 1937. pp. 1–16. Archived(PDF) from the original on June 7, 2010 – via William K. Everson Collection (New York University).
^ ab"No Way Out". Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved April 15, 2018.
^ abc"Passing show". The Bridgeport Post. Bridgeport, Connecticut. August 6, 1963. p. 8 – via Newspapers.com.