Eleanor Parker Overview:

Legendary actress, Eleanor Parker, was born Eleanor Jean Parker on Jun 26, 1922 in Cedarville, OH. Parker appeared in over 75 film and TV roles. Her best known films include Between Two Worlds, Hollywood Canteen, Pride of the Marines, Never Say Goodbye, Detective Story, Scaramouche, The Naked Jungle and The Man with the Golden Arm. Parker is probably most famously remembered for her role as Baroness Elsa Schraeder in the 1965 film, The Sound Of Music (starring Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer). Parker died at the age of 91 on Dec 9, 2013 in Palm Springs, CA .

MINI BIO:

Warmly upper-bracket, Eleanor Parker was at her best in films where she had the dominant role or played a strong-willed woman. Less effective as straight-forward heroines, she played substantial leading roles from 1946 to 1957, surprisingly declining before she was 40. She was just the sort of actress that one would expect to have won an Oscar, although in fact she hadn't, having been unsuccessfully nominated three times.

(Source: available at Amazon Quinlan's Film Stars).

HONORS and AWARDS:

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Although Parker was nominated for three Oscars, she never won a competitive Academy Award.

Academy Awards

YearAwardFilm nameRoleResult
1950Best ActressCaged (1950)Marie AllenNominated
1951Best ActressDetective Story (1951)Mary McLeodNominated
1955Best ActressInterrupted Melody (1955)Marjorie LawrenceNominated
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She was honored with one star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in the category of Motion Pictures.

BlogHub Articles:

, Patricia Neal, and Ruth Roman have "Three Secrets"

By Stephen Reginald on Oct 3, 2022 From Classic Movie Man

, Patricia Neal, and Ruth Roman have "Three Secrets" Three Secrets (1950) is an American drama directed by Robert Wise and starring , Patricia Neal, and Ruth Roman. The supporting cast includes Frank Lovejoy, Leif Erickson, and Ted de Corsia.Three women (Parker, Neal... Read full article


THE BLOGATHON: Between Two Worlds, 1944

on Oct 10, 2020 From Caftan Woman

Maddy Loves Her Classic Films is saluting the beautiful and versatile with a blogathon running October 10th and 11th. Join the online tributes HERE. My contribution is a look at Between Two Worlds, 1944. Sutton Vane's play Outward Bound premiered in London in 1923. The fantasy... Read full article


Was “Caged”

By Virginie Pronovost on Oct 9, 2020 From The Wonderful World of Cinema

When I was introduced to as Baroness Elsa Schraeder in The Sound of Music (Robert Wise, 1965), I didn’t immediately become a fan of her. Her character annoyed me, and, perhaps, I was too focused on Julie Andrews to take the time to focus on her performance. And this, even tho I ... Read full article


Sum Up | : Oscar Nominee

By Andrew Wickliffe on Feb 22, 2019 From The Stop Button

did not win any Academy Awards, which is simultaneously obvious and inexplicable. The latter because she obviously deserved one (or six), the former because if she had won any, she?d have been better known in the eighties and nineties, when home video and basic cable drove classic fil... Read full article


Sum Up | : Oscar Nominee

on Feb 22, 2019 From The Stop Button

did not win any Academy Awards, which is simultaneously obvious and inexplicable. The latter because she obviously deserved one (or six), the former because if she had won any, she?d have been better known in the eighties and nineties, when home video and basic cable drove classic fil... Read full article


See all articles

Eleanor Parker Quotes:

Joanna Leiningen: If you knew anything about music, you'd know that the best piano is one that's been played.


Marie Allen: Kill her. Kill her. Kill her.


Lenore: Your brain is gone! Where did you fall, on your head?


read more quotes from Eleanor Parker...



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Eleanor Parker Facts
Grandmother of Chase Parker.

Broke the champagne bottle on the nose on the locomotive, launching the "California Zephyr" a well-known passenger train on its inaugural eastbound run from San Francisco to Chicago at the Western Pacific Depot (San Francisco) on March 19, 1949.

Discovered at age 18 by a Warner Bros. talent agent while merely sitting in the audience of the Pasadena Playhouse, and after just one semester of student training there.

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