Beatrice Straight

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Beatrice Straight as parapsychologist Dr. Martha Lesh in the 1982 film Poltergeist
Beatrice Straight as parapsychologist Dr. Martha Lesh in the 1982 film Poltergeist

Beatrice Whitney Straight (August 2, 1914April 7, 2001) was an Academy Award and Tony Award-winning American theatre, film, and television actress.

Born in Old Westbury, New York, she was the daughter of investment banker Willard Dickerman Straight and Dorothy Payne Whitney. She was four years old when her father died in France of influenza during the great epidemic while serving with the United States Army during World War I.

Following her mother's remarriage to British agronomist Leonard K. Elmhirst in 1925, the family moved to England. It was there that Straight was educated and began acting in amateur theater productions

Returning to the United States, she made her Broadway debut in 1939 in the play The Possessed. Most of her theatre work was in the classics, including Twelfth Night (1941), Macbeth, and The Crucible (1953), for which she won the Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Play.

Straight was active in the early days of television, appearing in anthology series such as Armstrong Circle Theatre, Hallmark Hall of Fame, Kraft Television Theatre, Studio One, The United States Steel Hour, Playhouse 90, and Alfred Hitchcock Presents and dramatic series like Dr. Kildare, Ben Casey, The Defenders, Mission: Impossible, and St. Elsewhere.

Straight worked infrequently in film, and is remembered best for her role as a devastated wife confronting husband William Holden's infidelity in Network (1976). She won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance which, at five minutes and forty seconds, remains the shortest ever to win an Oscar [1].

Further film and television performances include the role of the mother of Lynda Carter in the Wonder Woman series, and Marion Hillyard, the icy, controlling mother of Stephen Collins in The Promise (1979 film). She also played the role of the paranormal investigator Dr. Martha Lesh in the film Poltergeist (1982), the most widely seen role of her film career.

Straight was married twice, first to Frenchman Louis Dolivet, a left-wing activist who became editor of United Nations World magazine and later an Academy Award winning film producer. They divorced in 1949, and she immediately married film and Broadway actor/producer Peter Cookson, with whom she had two sons.

Straight died from pneumonia in Los Angeles, California at age 86 and was cremated.

Preceded by
Lee Grant
for Shampoo
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress
1976
for Network
Succeeded by
Vanessa Redgrave
for Julia

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