Biography
Ohioan Eleanor Parker chose a career in acting when she was still in her teens and began appearing in professional stage productions in Cleveland and at California's Pasadena Playhouse. Signed at Warner Bros. in 1941, the red-haired actress was given the slow buildup in such B's as
The Mysterious Doctor before graduating to leads in prestige pictures like
Pride of the Marines (1945). As the sluttish Mildred in the 1946 remake
Of Human Bondage, Parker was not nearly as effective as
Bette Davis in the 1934 version, but she learned from this comparative failure and matured into a versatile actress, equally adept at comedy and heavy dramatics. She was Oscar nominated for
Caged (1950), in which she plays an utterly deglamorized prison inmate;
Detective Story (1951), wherein, as
Kirk Douglas' wife, she agonizingly harbors the secret of a past abortion; and
Interrupted Melody (1955), in which she portrays polio-stricken opera diva Marjorie Lawrence. Though she tended toward down-to-earth portrayals, Eleanor could be flamboyantly sexy if required, vide her performance as a tempestuous lover in
Scaramouche. Still regally beautiful into the 1960s and 1970s, Eleanor Parker was always worth watching no matter if the role was thankless (the Countess in
Sound of Music [1965]) or "Baby Jane"-style horrific (the terrorized, elderly cripple in
Eye of the Cat [1969]). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide