Brassy blonde actress Margaret Whitton was born on November 30, 1949, at Fort Meade, a U.S. Army base in the suburbs of Baltimore. Her father being an Army colonel and mother a nurse, there was much traveling in Margaret's early life and she spent her early years in Japan. Returning to the states, the family finally settled in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where she developed an interest in acting in Northeast High School plays.
Margaret began her career onstage in New York, performing off-Broadway in "Baba Goya" (1973) and "Nourish the Beast" (1973). Billed as Peggy Whitton, she appeared in small parts in low-budget films --
Parades (1972) and
Teenage Hitchhikers (1974) and the role as Joan Dancy in the daytime soap opera
The Doctors (1963).
Now billing herself as "Margaret Whitton," she started to make a stronger name for herself when she made her Broadway debut in "Steaming" (1982). She also impressed in films, effectively cast as sexy and strong supporting characters in such movies as the prison drama
Love Child (1982), the football dramedy
The Best of Times (1986) with
Robin Williams and
Kurt Russell, and especially her breakout role in
The Secret of My Success (1987) in which she nearly stole the movie from
Michael J. Fox as his character's hard-as-nails aunt. She complemented this success with a hilarious role as scheming widow-cum-baseball-team owner Rachel Phelps in
Major League (1989) and its sequel, and as the resilient mother to young
Nick Stahl in
Mel Gibson's directorial debut
The Man Without a Face (1993).
She also worked on television. Appearing in episodes such as "Miami Vice" and "Tales from the Darkside," she was a supporting regular on the short-lived series
Hometown (1985). Other film work came her way as well with
A Fine Romance (1989) in which she starred as a bickering wife (opposite the late
Christopher Cazenove) and the soap-opera spoof
Good & Evil (1991), where she played against type as the "good girl", opposite the more wicked-minded
Teri Garr. She also appeared in the short-lived comedy series
Cutters (1993). As for made-for-television movies, she is best known for her portrayal of the tough-as-nails attorney Leslie Abramson in
Menendez: A Killing in Beverly Hills (1994). Her last film roles were in the films
The Man Without a Face (1993),
Major League II (1994) and
Trial by Jury (1994).
Returning to Broadway, Margaret appeared in "And the Apple Doesn't Fall..." (1995) and in the original, award-winning musical "Marlene" (1999), the story of legendary
Marlene Dietrich that starred
Siân Phillips. She has also made a name for herself as a theater director. Her directing credits include Marina Carr's "Portia Coughlin" (1996) and "By the Bog of Cats" (1998), and The Public Theater's production of "Dirty Tricks" (2004), starring
Judith Ivey as Martha Mitchell.
Whitton was President of independent film producer Tashtego Films, and directed
A Bird of the Air (2011), starring
Rachel Nichols and
Jackson Hurst. The film was executive produced by her second husband
Warren Spector. 67-year-old Margaret died of cancer on December 4, 2016.