Sanford and Son Wiki
Register
Advertisement
Mary Wickes
Mary Wickes MASH
Mary Wickes, shown here in an episode of the CBS-TV series M*A*S*H, makes a guest appearance as Mary, a housekeeper in the episode of Sanford and Son titled "The Light Housekeeper" in Season 2.
Vital Information
Gender: Female
Birthname: Mary Isabella Wickenhauser
Birthplace: St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.
Died October 22, 1995(1995-10-22) (aged 85)
Deathplace: Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Occupation/
Career:
Actress
Years active: 1934-1995
Family/Personal information
Character/series involvement
Appeared on/
Involved with:
Sanford and Son
Episodes appeared in: "The Light Housekeeper" in Season 2
Character(s) played: Mary
Sanford and Son retro Wiki Script


Mary Wickes (June 13, 1910 – October 22, 1995) was a stage, film and television actress whose career spanned seven decades. She appears as the white housekeeper Mary, who Lamont hires to look after Fred in the Sanford and Son episode titled "The Light Housekeeper" in Season 2.

Early life and Career[]

Mary Isabella Wickenhauser (she later shortened her surname for acting) was born to Frank Wickenhauser (1880-1943) and his wife, Mary Isabella (née Shannon; died 1965), in St. Louis, Missouri of German, Scottish and Irish extraction, and raised Protestant.[1][2] She graduated at the age of eighteen with a degree in political science from Washington University in St. Louis, where she joined the Phi Mu women's fraternity and was initiated into Mortar Board in 1929.

Broadway stage career[]

Wickes' first Broadway theatre appearance was in Marc Connelly's The Farmer Takes a Wife in 1934 with Henry Fonda. She began acting in films in the late 1930s, and was also a member of the Orson Welles troupe on his radio drama The Mercury Theatre on the Air. One of her earliest significant film appearances was in The Man Who Came to Dinner (1942), reprising her stage role of "Nurse Preen".

Film roles[]

A tall (5'10"), gangling woman with a distinctive voice, Mary would ultimately prove herself adept as a comedienne, but she first attracted attention in the 1942 film Now, Voyager as the wisecracking nurse who helped Bette Davis's character during her mother's illness. (She had already appeared earlier that year with Davis in The Man Who Came To Dinner, and joined her again six years later in June Bride.) In 1942, she also had a large part in the Abbott and Costello comedy Who Done It?. She continued playing supporting roles in films during the next decade, usually playing wisecracking characters. A prime example was her deadpan characterization of the harassed housekeeper in the Doris Day vehicles By the Light of the Silvery Moon and On Moonlight Bay, a character type she would repeat in the holiday classic White Christmas (1954), starring Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney and Vera-Ellen. She played similar roles in two later movies with Rosalind Russell: The Trouble with Angels and Where Angels Go, Trouble Follows in the mid-1960s.

Television[]

Moving to the new medium of television in the 1950s, Wickes played the warm, yet jocular maid Katie in the Mickey Mouse Club serial Walt Disney Presents: Annette and regular roles in the sitcoms Make Room for Daddy and Dennis the Menace. She also played the part of a ballet teacher, Madame Lamond, in the I Love Lucy episode "The Ballet" in 1952. Wickes also served as the live-action reference model for Cruella De Vil in Walt Disney's One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961), and played Mrs. Squires in the film adaptation of Meredith Willson's The Music Man (1962).

In 1953, Wickes played the housekeeper, Martha, to Ezio Pinza's character in NBC's short-lived Bonino sitcom. Pinza portrayed an Italian-American opera singer trying to rear six children. Among the child actors on the program were Van Dyke Parks and Chet Allen.[3] In 1954-1955, she played Alice, the housekeeper to a college president, in the CBS sitcom The Halls of Ivy. In 1956, Wickes appeared with Thelma Ritter in "The Babysitter" episode of Alfred Hitchcock Presents.

In the 1961-1962 season, she appeared as Maxfield with Gertrude Berg in CBS's Mrs. G. Goes to College. For her work in the sitcom, Wickes was nominated for an Emmy Award for "Outstanding Performance in a Supporting Role by an Actress".[4] In 1964, she appeared on ABC's The Donna Reed Show in the episode "First Addition."[5]

A longtime friend of Lucille Ball, Wickes played frequent guest roles in Ball's three CBS series, I Love Lucy, The Lucy Show and Here's Lucy. In 1970-1971, she guest starred on CBS's The Doris Day Show. (Day was another of her friends.) She was also a regular on the Sid and Marty Krofft children's television show, Sigmund and the Sea Monsters, and the sitcom Doc. She made numerous appearances as a celebrity panelist on the CBS game show Match Game. By the 1980s, her appearances in television series such as Our Man Higgins, M*A*S*H, The Love Boat, Kolchak: The Night Stalker and Murder, She Wrote had made her a widely recognizable character actress.[5] She also appeared in a variety of Broadway shows, including a 1979 revival of Oklahoma!, in which she portrayed Aunt Eller.

Later career credits[]

She was cast as the mother of Shirley MacLaine's character in the 1990 film Postcards from the Edge and from 1989 to 1991 portrayed Marie Murkin in the television movie and series adaptations of Father Dowling Mysteries. She played Sister Mary Lazarus in Sister Act (1992) and in the sequel Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit (1993). She appeared in the 1994 film version of Little Women before she became ill.

Death and legacy[]

Wickes suffered from numerous ailments in the last years of her life, which cumulatively resulted in her dying while undergoing surgery on October 22, 1995, at age 85. Her final film role, voicing the gargoyle Laverne in Disney's animated feature The Hunchback of Notre Dame was released posthumously in 1996. She was interred beside her parents at the Shiloh Valley Cemetery in Shiloh, Illinois.

Wickes was posthumously inducted into the St. Louis Walk of Fame in 2004.[6]

Personal[]

Unmarried, Wickes left a large estate and made a $2 million bequest, in memory of her parents, the Isabella and Frank Wickenhauser Memorial Library Fund for Television, Film and Theater Arts.


References[]

  1. U.S. Census, 1920, State of Missouri, City of St. Louis, enumeration district 410, p. 18-B, family 470.
  2. U.S. Census, 1880, State of Missouri, City of St. Louis, enumeration district 333, p. 160-A, family 147.
  3. IMDB, Bonino: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0045374/
  4. IMDB, The Gertrude Berg Show, Emmy nominations: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0054542/awards
  5. 5.0 5.1 Mary Wickes. Intenet Movie Data Base. Retrieved on January 15, 2013.
  6. St. Louis Walk of Fame. St. Louis Walk of Fame Inductees. stlouiswalkoffame.org. Retrieved on 25 April 2013.

External links[]

Advertisement