Margaret Lindsay (born Margaret Kies; September 19, 1910 – May 9, 1981) was an American film actress. Her time as a Warner Bros. contract player during the 1930s was particularly productive. She was noted for her supporting work in successful films of the 1930s and 1940s such as Baby Face, Jezebel (1938) and Scarlet Street (1945) and her leading roles in lower-budgeted B movie films such as the Ellery Queen series at Columbia in the early 1940s. Critics regard her portrayal of Nathaniel Hawthorne's Hepzibah Pyncheon in the 1940 film The House of the Seven Gables as Lindsay's standout career role.
Early life
Lindsay was born in Dubuque, Iowa, the eldest of six children of a pharmacist father who died in 1930. According to Tom Longden of the Des Moines Register, "Peg" was "a tomboy who liked to climb pear trees" and was a "roller-skating fiend". She graduated in 1930 from Visitation Academy in Dubuque.[3]
Career
1930s
She was often mistaken as being British due to her convincing English accent. Her fellow dramatic-school student Robert Cummings was then posing as the Englishman "Blade Stanhope Conway" and convinced Margaret Kies to follow his example and adopt a new British identity - Margaret Lindsay.[citation needed]
She impressed Universal Studios enough to sign her for their 1932 version of The Old Dark House. As James Robert Parish and William T. Leonard wrote in Hollywood Players: The Thirties (Arlington House, 1976), Lindsay returned to America and arrived in Hollywood, only to discover that Gloria Stuart had been cast in her role in the film. After some minor roles in Pre-Code films such as Christopher Strong and the groundbreaking Baby Face, which starred Barbara Stanwyck, Lindsay was cast in the Fox Film Corporation's award-winning Cavalcade. Lindsay was selected for a role as Edith Harris, a doomed English bride whose honeymoon voyage takes place on the Titanic.
Michael Brunas, John Brunas, and Tom Weaver wrote in Universal Horrors: The Studio's Classic Films, 1931–46 that Lindsay "...one of the loveliest and most talented of '30s leading ladies, contributes a fine, mature performance that's probably the best, certainly the most striking, in the picture... [h]ad a Bette Davis played Hepzibah, this same performance would be hailed as a classic..."[4]
In a 2004 Classic Images article about actor Jon Hall, film historian Colin Briggs wrote that a letter he had received from Lindsay indicated that her part in The House of the Seven Gables was her "favorite role."[citation needed] Lindsay's letter to Briggs also stated that the film she had the most fun with was The Vigilantes Return (1947), in which she co-starred with Jon Hall. That "role was a complete departure from my usual parts and I grabbed it...I even warbled a Mae West type ditty. As a man-chasing saloon singer after Jon Hall it was for me a totally extroverted style and I relished the opportunity...I have a framed still from that film on a wall in my home."[citation needed]
Her 1940s film series work in Hollywood included Columbia's first entry in its Crime Doctor series, as well as her continuing role as Nikki Porter in Columbia's Ellery Queen series (1940–1942). Author Jon Tuska's affection for the Ellery Queen series mystified its star Ralph Bellamy. During an interview by Tuska for his 1978 book, The Detective in Hollywood, he remarked, "I'm one of the few who does [like the series]." "I don't know how...They were such quickie pictures", Bellamy replied.[citation needed]
Jon Tuska cited Ellery Queen, Master Detective (1940) and Ellery Queen's Penthouse Mystery (1941) as the best of the Bellamy-Lindsay pairings. "The influence of The Thin Man series was apparent in reverse," Tuska noted about Ellery Queen's Penthouse Mystery. "Ellery and Nikki are unmarried but obviously in love with each other. Probably the biggest mystery...is how Ellery ever gets a book written. Not only is Nikki attractive and perfectly willing to show off her figure...but she also likes to write her own stories on Queen's time, and gets carried away doing her own investigations", Tuska opined.[citation needed]
She made her television debut in 1950 in "The Importance of Being Earnest",[6] which allowed her to display her finely honed British accent. More television work followed. Lindsay appeared in only four films during the 1950s and two in the 1960s. Her final feature film was "Tammy and the Doctor" (1963).
Personal life
Early in her career, Lindsay lived with her sister Helen in Hollywood. Later in life, she lived with her youngest sister Mickie. She never married.
Lindsay died at the age of 70 of emphysema in 1981 at the Good Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles.[15] She was buried at Holy Cross Cemetery, Culver City, California.[16]
Family
Lindsay's sister, Jane Kies, was also an actress under the stage name Jane Gilbert.[17]
^"Polo players and motion picture stars: Midwick Five, Janet Gaynor Among 228 Who Board Lurline Here". San Pedro News Pilot. cdnc.ucr.edu — California Digital Newspaper Collection. July 27, 1935. Retrieved June 27, 2023. Janet Gaynor and Margaret Lindsay were the movie stars sailing. Miss Lindsay will be the guest of Miss Gaynor, her sister, Mrs. Hilory Gordon, and their mother, Mrs. Hilory Gordon, at the Gaynors' cottage near Waikiki Beach. Janet and her mother in one, and Miss Lindsay and Mrs. Gordon in the other, occupied adjoining suites on the liner.
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