Katharine Houghton

Katharine Houghton

Houghton with Carl Betz as a guest star on Judd, for the Defense, 1968
Born Katharine Houghton Grant
March 10, 1945
Hartford, Connecticut, USA
Nationality American
Alma mater Sarah Lawrence College
Occupation Actress, playwright
Years active 1966present
Spouse(s) Ken Jenkins (m. 1970)
Parent(s) Ellsworth Grant
Marion Hepburn
Relatives Katharine Martha Houghton Hepburn (grandmother)
Katharine Hepburn (aunt)
Schuyler Grant (niece)

Katharine Houghton (born Katharine Houghton Grant; March 10, 1945) is an American actress and playwright. She is best known for playing Joanna "Joey" Drayton, a white American woman who brings home her black American fiancé to meet her parents, in the 1967 film Guess Who's Coming to Dinner. Katharine Hepburn, who played the mother of Houghton's character in the film, was in real life Houghton's aunt.

Early life

Houghton was born in Hartford, Connecticut, the second child of Marion Hepburn and Ellsworth Grant. She attended Kingswood-Oxford School and Sarah Lawrence College, where she majored in philosophy and art. Houghton was named after her maternal grandmother, Katharine Martha Houghton Hepburn. Her aunt, Katharine Hepburn, was instrumental in helping Houghton launch her career. The acting torch was further passed along in the family to actress Schuyler Grant, Houghton's niece.

Career

Acting

Houghton has played leading roles in over 60 productions on Broadway, off-Broadway and in regional theatres across America. She won the Theatre World Award for her performance in A Scent of Flowers off Broadway in 1969.[1]

She has appeared in 10 films, most recently The Last Airbender, directed by M. Night Shyamalan, in 2010.

Houghton has presented lectures at venues across the country including the 2001 Fall Concert & Lectures Series at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and at The Cosmopolitan Club. She lectured at MOMA again in June, 2008, presenting "Saucy Gamine, Reluctant Penitent, and Glorious Victor," a review of her aunt's career in Hollywood as reflected in three of her films.

Writing

Houghton is also a playwright and has translated the works of others for the stage, as well as writing her own plays.[2] Eleven of her plays have been produced. Her play Buddha was published in Best Short Plays of 1988. Her musical Bookends premiered at NJ Rep Co. summer of 2007, received rave notices and garnered the theater the highest box office sales in their 11-year history. Since then it has twice been part of The York Theatre’s Developmental Reading Series.

In 1975, Houghton wrote for her husband, actor/writer Ken Jenkins, a children's story, "The Wizard's Daughter," which is collected in the book, Two Beastly Tales, illustrated by Joan Patchen, her husband's first wife.

Personal life

Houghton has been married to fellow actor Ken Jenkins since 1970.[3] Houghton is the stepmother of Jenkins' three sons from his first marriage to actress and painter Joan Patchen.[4]

See also

References

  1. "Katharine Houghton". playbillvault.com. Retrieved February 23, 2013.
  2. Genzlinger, Neil (August 1, 2007). "A Writer Finds the Rare Lives of Two Rare-Book Dealers Worth Singing About". The New York Times. Retrieved May 7, 2010.
  3. Chesek, Tom (July 20, 2007). ""BOOKENDS" OVER BROADWAY". Asbury Park Press.
  4. "Father, son appear together on stage". The News and Courier. April 6, 1986. pp. 8–E. Retrieved February 23, 2013.

External links