This vibrant Scottish character actress managed in her seven-decade
career trek to not only brighten up the Broadway stage during the 1950s
and 1960s in roles ranging from the man-searching milliner Irene Malloy
to Hamlet's mother Queen Gertrude, but conquered the TV market too,
delighting daytime audiences for not only standing toe-to-toe against
Susan Lucci's Erica Kane character (and
later becoming her surrogate mom), but issuing in-your-face lessons on
morality to other infamous Pine Valley characters on the classic soap
opera
All My Children (1970).
Eileen Herlie was born Eileen Herlihy on March 8, 1918, in Glasgow,
Scotland, the daughter of a Catholic father and a Protestant mother.
She studied and performed for many years with the Scottish National
Players before transporting herself to England where she became
professionally associated with the late and great director
Tyrone Guthrie. Making her official stage
debut with "Sweet Aloes" in 1938, she went on to advance in such plays
as "Rebecca" (1942), "Peg o' My Heart (1943), "The Little Foxes"
(1944), "John Gabriel Borkman" (1944), "The Second Mrs. Tanqueray"
(1944), "The School for Scandal" (1945) and "Anna Christie" (1945)
before making a strong impression as Queen Gertrude in "Hamlet" in late
1945. Her film debut came in support of
Margaret Lockwood and
Dennis Price in the costume drama
Hungry Hill (1947), but her huge
breakthrough came about when
Laurence Olivier cast her as his
mother, Queen Gertrude, in his film adaptation of
Hamlet (1948) -- this despite Eileen being
11 years younger than Olivier, who won the Oscar for his superb work in
the title role. Years down the road Eileen would again earn acclaim
playing Gertrude in the 1964 Broadway production of "Hamlet" starring
Richard Burton and in its
accompanying
Hamlet (1964) film
effort.
Surprisingly, Eileen was seen very infrequently on film after this
initial success opposite Olivier. Instead she stayed true blue to her
first love -- the theatre. Although she appeared to fine advantage on
celluloid in
The Angel with the Trumpet (1950),
Gilbert and Sullivan (1953),
Uncle Willie's Bicycle Shop (1953),
Cocktails in the Kitchen (1954),
She Didn't Say No (1958) and
Freud (1962), she found even more rewarding
roles under the theatre lights where she earned enviable notices for
her work in "The Eagle Has Two Heads" (1946), "Medea" (1948) (title
role), "The Way of the World" (1953) and "Venice Preserv'd" (1953).
The feisty, flaming red-haired Scot took her first Broadway bow in 1955
as hat shop owner Irene Molloy in the highly successful production of
"The Matchmaker" with
Ruth Gordon
starring as Dolly Levi. Eileen also appeared in New York musicals,
co-starring with
Jackie Gleason
in the nostalgic "Take Me Along" (1960), which merited her a Tony
nomination, and
Ray Bolger in "All-American"
(1962). Elsewhere, she graced two of
Peter Ustinov's plays ("Photo Finish
(1963) and "Halfway Up the Tree" (1967)) and continued in classic regal
fashion with her Queen Mary role opposite
George Grizzard's Edward VIII in "Crown
Matrimonial" (1973). She played the same role a year earlier in a TV
film version opposite
Richard Chamberlain as the
abdicating King Edward and
Faye Dunaway as
paramour Wallis Simpson. Eileen's last stage role was in "The Great
Sebastians" (1974) in Chicago co-starring
Werner Klemperer, and her final film
part came with a featured role in Chekhov's
The Sea Gull (1968), directed by
Sidney Lumet and surrounded by a superb
cast that included
Simone Signoret,
Vanessa Redgrave,
David Warner and
James Mason.
In 1976, Herlie made a long and permanent switch to daytime soaps. As
bawdy, plump-figured carny Myrtle Lum Fargate who later refined herself
to a point and operated a frilly boutique store on
All My Children (1970),
audiences took a special liking to her down-to-earth character whose
impulsive bluntness, staunch integrity, briny tongue and heart of gold
made her one of Pine Valley's more beloved residents. She remained in
town for over thirty years.
Divorced twice with no children, Eileen died at age 90 on October 8,
2008, due to complications from pneumonia. The stalwart actress
continued to act almost to the end, last playing her "All My Children"
character in June of 2008.