Una O'Connor (actress)
Una O'Connor was an Irish-American actress who worked extensively in theatre before becoming a character actress in film and in television. She often portrayed comical wives, housekeepers and servants. In 2020, she was listed at number 19 on The Irish Times list of Ireland's greatest film actors.
Life and work
O'Connor was born to a Catholic nationalist family in Belfast, Ireland. Her mother died when she was two; her father was a landowner/ farmer, ensuring that the family always had income from family land. He soon left for Australia and McGlade was brought up by an aunt, studying at St Dominic's School, Belfast, convent schools and in Paris. Thinking she would pursue teaching, she enrolled in the South Kensington School of Art.Before taking up teaching duties, she enrolled in the Abbey School of Acting. Her career with the Abbey was between 1912 - 1934 where she performed in many productions; these are listed in the Abbey Theatre Archives. She changed her name when she began her acting career with the Abbey Theatre. One of her earliest appearances was in George Bernard Shaw's The Shewing-Up of Blanco Posnet in which she played the part of a swaggering American ranch girl. The production played in Dublin as well as in New York, opening 20 November 1911 at the Maxine Elliott Theatre, marking O'Connor's American debut.
By 1913 she was based in London, where she appeared in The Magic Jug, The Starlight Express, and Paddy the Next Best Thing. In the early 1920s she appeared as a cockney maid in Plus Fours followed in 1924 by her portrayal of a cockney waitress in Frederick Lonsdale's The Fake. In a single paragraph review, an unnamed reviewer noted "Una O'Connor's low comedy hotel maid was effectively handled." The latter show also played in New York, opening 6 October 1924 at the Hudson Theatre. A review of the New York performances of The Fake recounts details of the plot, but then mentions
... two players of more than ordinary excellence. In the third act of The Fake occurs a scene between Una O'Connor and Godfrey Tearle, with Miss O'Connor as a waitress trying a crude sort of flirtation with Mr. Tearle. He does not respond at all and the longing, the pathos of this servant girl when she has exhausted her charms and receives no encouragement, is the very epitome of what careful character portrayal should be. Miss O'Connor is on the stage for only this single act, but in that short space of time she registers an indelible impression. Rightly, she scored one of the best hits of the performance.
These two plays in which she portrayed servants and waitresses appear to have portended her future career. Returning to London, she played in The Ring o' Bells, Autumn Fire, Distinguished Villa, and Quicksands of Youth. When Autumn Fire toured the U.S., opening first in Providence, Rhode Island, a critic wrote: "Una O'Connor, who plays Ellen Keegan, the poor drudge of a daughter, bitter against life and love, does fine work. Her excellence will undoubtedly win her the love of an American public."
She made her first appearance on film in Dark Red Roses, followed by Murder! directed by Alfred Hitchcock, and an uncredited part in To Oblige a Lady.
Despite her lengthy apprenticeship, she had not attracted much attention. British critic Eric Johns recalled meeting her in 1931 in which she confessed "I don't know what I'm going to do if I don't get work... The end of my savings is in sight and unless something happens soon, I'll not be able to pay the rent". Her luck changed when she was chosen by Noël Coward to appear in Cavalcade at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in 1933. Expressing surprise that Coward noticed her, Coward responded that he had watched her for years and wrote the part with her in mind. She portrayed an Edwardian servant who transforms herself into a self-made woman. When the curtain came down after a performance attended by Hollywood executives, they exclaimed to each other "We must have that Irish woman. That is obvious". Her success led her to reprise her role in the film version of Cavalcade, released in 1933, and with its success, O'Connor decided to remain in the United States.
Among O'Connor's most successful and best remembered roles are her comic performances in James Whale's The Invisible Man as the publican's wife, and in Bride of Frankenstein as the Baron's housekeeper. She also appeared in The Informer and The Plough and the Stars for director John Ford. Feeling homesick, in 1937 she returned to London for twelve months in the hope of finding a good part but found nothing that interested her. While in England she appeared in three live BBC Television productions, including a play by Irish playwright Teresa Deevy called In Search of Valour in which she played the part of Stasia Claremorris. After her return to America, the storage facility that housed her furniture and car was destroyed in one of The Blitz strikes, which she took as a sign to remain in America.
Her film career continued with roles in Michael Curtiz's The Adventures of Robin Hood and The Sea Hawk ; and in Leo McCarey's The Bells of St. Mary's. She also appeared in supporting roles in stage productions and achieved an outstanding success in the role of Janet McKenzie, the nearly deaf housemaid, in Agatha Christie's Witness for the Prosecution at Henry Miller's Theatre on Broadway from 1954–56; she also appeared in the film version in 1957, directed by Billy Wilder. As one of the witnesses, in what was essentially a serious drama, O'Connor's character was intended to provide comic relief. It was her final film performance.
After a break from her initial forays in television, she took up the medium again by 1950. In 1952, she was able to state that she had been in 38 productions that year alone. In a rare article that she authored, O'Connor called working in television "the most exacting and nerve-racking experience that has ever come my way. It is an attempt to do two things at once, a combination of stage and screen techniques with the compensations of neither". Noting that many actors dislike television work, O'Connor said that she liked it because it allowed her to play many parts. She lamented that preparation for television work was too short a period for an actor to fully realize the depths of role characterization, but that it showed an actor's mettle by the enormous amount of work needed. "Acting talent alone is not enough for the job. It requires intense concentration, an alert-quickmindedness that can take changes in direction at the last minute". O'Connor concluded presciently: "It sounds fantastic and that is just exactly what it is, but it also an expanding field of employment that has come to stay. As such it is more than welcome here, where the living theatre seems determinedly headed the opposite way".
Reportedly she was "happily resigned" to being typecast as a servant. "There's no such thing as design in an acting career. You just go along with the tide. Nine times out of ten one successful part will set you in a rut from which only a miracle can pry you".
Her weak heart was detected as early as 1932, when her arrival in America began with detention at Ellis Island because of a "congenital heart condition". By the time of her appearance in the stage version of Witness for the Prosecution she had to stay in bed all day, emerging only to get to the theater and then leaving curtain calls early to return to her bed. Her appearance in the film version was intended to be her last.
Critical responses
Eric Johns described O'Connor as... a frail little woman, with enormous eyes that reminded one of a hunted animal. She could move one to tears with the greatest of ease, and just as easily reduce an audience to helpless laughter in comedies of situation. She was mistress of the art of making bricks without straw. She could take a very small part, but out of the paltry lines at her disposal, create a real flesh-and-blood creature, with a complete and credible life of its own.
She admired John Galsworthy and claimed to have read all his works.
She once said "Acting is a gift from God. It is like a singer's voice. I might quite easily wake up one morning to find that it has been taken from me."
Personal life and death
She became a United States citizen on 3 March 1952. She died, having never married nor had children, in New York City from heart disease, aged 78, on 4 February 1959 at the Mary Manning Walsh Home. She had been living at the Windsor House at 100 West 58th Street in Manhattan.Complete filmography
- Dark Red Roses as Mrs. Weeks
- Murder! as Mrs. Grogram
- To Oblige a Lady
- Cavalcade as Ellen Bridges
- Pleasure Cruise as Mrs. Signus
- Timbuctoo as Myrtle
- Horse Play as Clementia
- Mary Stevens, M.D. as Mrs. Arnell Simmons
- The Invisible Man as Jenny Hall
- Orient Express as Mrs. Peters
- The Poor Rich as Lady Fetherstone
- All Men Are Enemies as Annie
- Stingaree as Annie
- Chained as Amy, Diane's Maid
- The Barretts of Wimpole Street as Wilson
- Father Brown, Detective as Mrs. Boggs
- David Copperfield as Mrs. Gummidge
- Bride of Frankenstein as Minnie
- The Informer as Mrs. McPhillip
- Thunder in the Night as Julie - Hotel Chambermaid
- The Perfect Gentleman as Harriet Chatteris
- Rose-Marie as Anna Roderick
- Little Lord Fauntleroy as Mary
- Suzy as Landlady
- Lloyd's of London as Widow Blake
- The Plough and the Stars as Mrs. Gogan
- Personal Property as Clara, Crystal's Maid
- Call It a Day as Mrs. Milson, the Housekeeper
- The Adventures of Robin Hood as Bess
- The Return of the Frog as Mum Oaks
- We Are Not Alone as Susan O'Connor, Newcome's Maid
- All Women Have Secrets as Mary
- His Brother's Keeper as Eva
- It All Came True as Maggie Ryan
- Lillian Russell as Marie
- The Sea Hawk as Miss Latham
- He Stayed for Breakfast as Doreta
- The Strawberry Blonde as Mrs. Mulcahey
- Her First Beau as Effie
- Kisses for Breakfast as Ellie
- Three Girls About Town as Maggie O'Callahan
- Always in My Heart as Angie
- My Favourite Spy as Cora
- Random Harvest as Tobacconist
- Forever and a Day as Mrs. Caroline Ismay
- This Land Is Mine as Mrs. Emma Lory
- Holy Matrimony as Sarah Leek
- Government Girl as Mrs. Harris
- The Canterville Ghost as Mrs. Umney
- My Pal Wolf as Mrs. Blevin
- Christmas in Connecticut as Norah
- The Bells of St. Mary's as Mrs. Breen
- Cluny Brown as Mrs. Wilson
- Of Human Bondage as Mrs. Foreman
- Child of Divorce as Nora, the Maid
- The Return of Monte Cristo as Miss Beedle
- Unexpected Guest as Matilda Hackett
- Lost Honeymoon as Mrs. Tubbs
- Banjo as Harriet
- The Corpse Came C.O.D. as Nora
- Ivy as Matilda Thrawn
- Fighting Father Dunne as Miss O'Rourke
- Adventures of Don Juan as Duenna
- Ha da venì... don Calogero! as Angelica, perpetua
- Witness for the Prosecution as Janet MacKenzie
Stage credits
Date | Title | Author | City | Theater | Role |
1911-11-20 | The Playboy of the Western World | John Millington Synge | New York City | Maxine Elliott's Theatre | IBDB. |
1911-11-20 | The Well of the Saints | John Millington Synge | New York City | Maxine Elliott's Theatre | IBDB. |
1911-12-15 | The Shewing-Up of Blanco Posnet | George Bernard Shaw | New York City | Maxine Elliott's Theatre | Jessie |
1912-02-12 | The Countess Cathleen | William Butler Yeats | Dublin | Abbey Theatre | Angel |
1912-02-16 | An Tincear agus an t-Sidheog | Douglas Hyde | Dublin | Abbey Theatre | Bean Og |
1912-02-22 | The Land of Heart's Desire | William Butler Yeats | Dublin | Abbey Theatre | Maire Bruin |
1912-02-29 | Spreading the News | Lady Gregory | Dublin | Abbey Theatre | Mrs. Fallon |
1912-10-03 | The Country Dressmaker | George Fitzmaurice | Dublin | Abbey Theatre | Ellie Clohessy |
1913-01-03 | The Dean of St. Patrick's | G. Sidney Paternoster | Dublin | Abbey Theatre | Mistress Anne Long |
1913-02-20 | Hannele | Gerhart Hauptmann | Dublin | Abbey Theatre | Sister Martha |
1913-04-17 | The Stronger | August Strindberg translated by Edith and Warner Oland | Dublin | Abbey Theatre | Mdlle. Y |
1913-04-17 | Broken Faith | Suzanne R. Day and Geraldine Cummins | Dublin | Abbey Theatre | Mrs. Gara |
1913-06-28 | The Country Dressmaker | George Fitzmaurice | London | Royal Court Theatre | Min |
1913-06-28 | The Magic Glasses | George Fitzmaurice | London | Royal Court Theatre | Aunt Jug |
1915-12-29 | The Starlight Express | Algernon Blackwood | London | Kingsway Theatre | Grannie |
1916-01-18 | Bauldy | Patrick Wilson | London | Royalty Theatre | Martha Doyle |
1916-02-25 | The Holy Bond | Monica Ewer | London | New Theatre | Mary |
1917-12-16 | Insurrection | W. F. Casey | London | Criterion Theatre | Nora O'Connell |
1920-04-05 | Paddy the Next Best Thing | Gayer Mackay and Robert Ord | London | Strand Theatre | Miss O'Hara |
1923-01-17 | Plus Fours | Horace Annesley Vachell and Harold Simpson | London | Haymarket Theatre | Mrs. Plumbridgea |
1923-12-26 | Paddy the Next Best Thing | Gayer Mackay and Robert Ord | London | Savoy Theatre | Miss O'Hara |
1924-03-13 | The Fake | Frederick Lonsdale | London | Apollo Theatre | Waitress |
1925-05-10 | By Right of Conquest | Michael Morton | London | Scala Theatre | Annie |
1925-07-01 | The Show | John Galsworthy | London | St Martin's Theatre | Cook |
1925-07-01 | The Ring o' Bells | Neil Lyons | London | Comedy Theatre | Miss Bibby |
1926-01-20 | The Man Who Was Thursday | Ada Elizabeth Chesterton and Ralph Neale | London | Everyman Theatre | Cook |
1926-01-31 | Beyond the Horizon | Eugene O'Neill | London | Regent Theatre | Mrs. Atkins |
1926-03-28 | The Rescue Party | Phyllis Morris | London | Regent Theatre | Maid |
1926-04-13 | Autumn Fire | T. C. Murray | London | Little Theatre | Ellen Keegan |
1926-05-02 | Distinguished Villa | Kate O'Brien | London | Aldwych Theatre | Mabel Hemworth |
1926-07-04 | Quicksands of Youth | Roy Jordan | London | Scala Theatre | Mrs. Redmain |
1927-07-18 | The Village | Vere Sullivan | London | Globe Theatre | Martha Smith |
1927-09-11 | Chance Acquaintance | John Van Druten | London | Strand Theatre | Miss Cathcart |
1927-09-24 | Master | Marjorie Ling | London | Arts Theatre | Mrs. Kerridge |
1927-10-23 | Mr. Sleeman | Hjalmar Bergman | London | Arts Theatre | Mrs. Mina |
1927-09-11 | Chance Acquaintance | John Van Druten | London | Criterion Theatre | Miss Cathcart |
1927-11-14 | The Big Drum | Harold Holland | London | Adelphi Theatre | Mrs. Jowett |
1927-12-11 | Tamaresque | Clive Currie | London | Strand Theatre | Mrs. Bonnett |
1927-12-13 | The Soul of Nicholas Snyders | Jerome K. Jerome | London | Everyman Theatre | Dame Toelast |
1928-02-06 | Macbeth | William Shakespeare | London | Royal Court Theatre | Third Witch |
1928-03-11 | Nicholas Nickleby | H. Sims, adapted from Charles Dickens | London | Arts Theatre | Fanny Squeers |
1928-03-25 | The Way | Lady Constance Malleson | London | Arts Theatre | Greta |
1928-03-25 | Love in a Village | Isaac Bickerstaffe and Thomas Arne | London | Lyric Theatre | Mrs. Deborah Woodcock |
1928-07-01 | The Tragic Muse | Hubert Griffith | London | Arts Theatre | Mme. Carré |
1928-10-25 | Birthright | T. C. Murray | London | Arts Theatre | Maura Morrissey |
1928-11-05 | The Silver Box | John Galsworthy | London | Everyman Theatre | Mrs. Jones |
1928-12-09 | Wrongs and Rights | Gordon Whitehead | London | Strand Theatre | Fanny Hunt |
1928-12-22 | The Passing of the Third Floor Back | Jerome K. Jerome | London | Everyman Theatre | Miss Kite |
1929-03-08 | The Pleasure Garden | Beatrice Mayor | London | Everyman Theatre | Clergyman's wife |
1929-05-05 | After All | John Van Druten | London | Apollo Theatre | Miss Minnister |
1929-05-15 | Wrongs and Rights | Gordon Whitehead | London | Strand Theatre | Fanny Hunt |
1929-06-19 | Exiled | John Galsworthy | London | Wyndham's Theatre | Woman |
1929-10-11 | The Silver Tassie | Sean O'Casey | London | Apollo Theatre | Mrs. Foran |
1929-12-23 | The Passing of the Third Floor Back | Jerome K. Jerome | London | Everyman Theatre | Miss Kite |
1930-06-18 | Long Shadows | Philip Johnson | London | Everyman Theatre | Mrs. Dodd |
1930-09-01 | The Far-Off Hills | Lennox Robinson | London | Everyman Theatre | Ellen Nolan |
1930-10-26 | Chassis | Aubrey Ensor | London | Apollo Theatre | Bridget Maloney |
1931-02-17 | Etienne | Gilbert Wakefield | London | St James's Theatre | Cousin Valérie |
1931-02-22 | Something Strange | Frank Vosper | London | Phoenix Theatre | Mrs. Highley |
1931-03-15 | The Accomplice | Frank Popham-Young | London | Arts Theatre | Mercy |
1931-03-15 | The Gaol Gate | Lady Gregory | London | Arts Theatre | Mary Cushin |
1931-03-15 | Love at First Sight | - | London | Arts Theatre | |
1931-03-15 | The Perfect Plot | Aubrey Ensor | London | Arts Theatre | Sara Allgood |
1931-03-15 | Strange Adventure of a Maiden Lady | Rosalind Wade | London | Arts Theatre | Maiden Lady |
1931-10-13 | Cavalcade | Noel Coward | London | Drury Lane Theatre | Ellen Bridges |
1931-10-25 | The Nag's Head | Ernest George | London | Arts Theatre | Barmaid |
1939-02-12 | The Appointment | Reginald Purdell | London | Vaudeville Theatre | Woman |
1945-09-24 | The Ryan Girl | Edmund Goulding | New York City | Plymouth Theatre | Weavy Hicks |
1948-03-02 | The Linden Tree | J. B. Priestley | New York City | Music Box Theatre | Mrs. Cotton |
1949-01-18 | The Shop at Sly Corner | Edward Percy | New York City | Booth Theatre | Mrs. Catt |
1950-01-18 | The Enchanted | Jean Giraudoux | New York City | Lyceum Theatre | Leonide Mangebois |
1954-01-13 | The Starcross Story | Diana Morgan | New York City | Royale Theatre | Ellen |
1954-12-16 | Witness for the Prosecution | Agatha Christie | New York City | Henry Miller's Theatre | Janet Mackenzie |
Television
- The Moon in the Yellow River as Aunt Columba
- Death at Newtown-Stewart
- In Search of Valour as Stasia Claremorris