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Jeanette Nolan – biography, family, facts about the American actress
Jeanette Nolan was a popular American actress and radio personality during the golden age of radio in the 1930s to 1940s. Her long and varied career encompassed stage, film, television and most notably radio, where she has acted in comedies, dramas, soap operas and documentaries. She is also known for being the wife of famous Western actor and Western radio personality, John McIntire, with whom she has appeared in various projects including Disney animations.
The Emmy-nominated actress has portrayed various character roles, both in film and television. Some of her television work includes the series The Virginian where she starred opposite her husband Dirty Sally ; and in the films, Macbeth and The Big Heat
She has provided the voices of various characters for radio programs such as The March of Time, Cavalcade of America, Court of the Fallen Heirs, The Adventures of Mr. Meek, and Midnight Manhattan.
Biography of Jeanette Nolan
Jeanette Nolan was born on December 30, 1911 in Los Angeles, California, under the zodiac Capricorn. She is one of three children of her parents, Ada and Edward Nolan. Nolan always had an eye for entertainment from an early age; she aspired to be an opera singer. So, after graduating from Abraham Lincoln High School in Los Angeles, she went to Los Angeles City College to study music.
While in college, she joined the Pasadena Playhouse and also worked part-time as a clerk at a local department store. However, what she was paid in her job couldn’t cover both college and acting, so she had to drop both. Then she accepted a friend’s suggestion to audition for a radio show. She was asked if she could do a Scottish dialect, she did and even added three more. Jeanette Nolan’s radio career took off in 1932 and she never stopped working.
Nolan began his radio work with a role as a voice actor in a production of Omar Khayyam, the first transcontinental broadcast from station KHJ, LA. Next, she worked in radio soap operas Tarzan of the Apes and Tarzan and Asher’s Diamond, and would also play major roles on The March of Time. Nolan has also starred in several radio shows, including Calling All the Cars, Big Games, The Pearl Show, The Shadow, Escape, Suspense, The Whistler, Radio Guild, One Man’s Family, and Young Doctor . Malone. By the 1940s, Nolan became one of radio’s busiest and most in-demand actresses.
She returned to acting in 1948, making her film debut with Orson Welles’ Macbeth as Lady Macbeth. Her role in the film and the film itself were discussed in the media, but that didn’t put a damper on her career. Nolan evolved on the small screen, becoming one of the most famous actresses of her time. She appeared in no less than 300 television works such as Crossroads, Dirty Sally, Crusader, The Virginian, State Trooper, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, and Richard Diamond. On the big screen, she made her mark in film noir, popular between 1944 and 1954 as the scheming wife of a dead and also corrupt policeman in the classic 1953 film The Big Heat
Although Nolan never gave up her work in radio, even acting, appearing in many films, she made more of an impression on the small screen. There, she racked up an impressive number of credits and earned four Emmy Award nominations for her awesomeness.
The family life of Jeanette Nolan
Jeanette Nolan was married to popular Western film actor John McIntire from August 26, 1935 until his death on January 30, 1991. The duo met while working together in radio. John has also made a name for himself on radio, notably as the narrator of the series March of Time. They had two children, daughter Holly and son, Tim, both actors.
Nolan and McIntire were an entire Hollywood super couple of their time. They have worked together on several radio, film and television projects. Some of their notable works include Disney animated films; The rescuers (1977) and The fox and the hunting dog (1981). The couple have been dubbed the radio lunt and fontanne for often performing together.
The McIntires lived in a property nicknamed The Yaak because of its proximity to the Yaak River, which they purchased in Montana in the mid-1940s until their deaths.
Jeanette Nolan died on June 5, 1998, of a stroke at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, seven years after her husband. His remains were interred at Eureka, Tobacco Valley Cemetery in Montana. Meanwhile, their son Tim McIntyre, known for his portrayal of disc jockey Alan Freed in American Hot Wax (1971), predeceased his parents, who died of heart failure in 1986.
Facts about the American actress
Nolan’s final film appearance was in Robert Redford’s The Horse Whisperer (1998), as Tom Booker’s mother, Ellen.
During her career, she received four Emmy Award nominations.
Starting out in life, Nolan looked forward to the time when she would become an opera singer, but life had a different course for her. She became a radio and screen make-up artist.
She often starred on the CBS series Perry Mason. In addition, she was cast as a witch on television several times, including on episodes of The Twilight Zone (1959), twice on Thriller (1960), and Night Gallery (1970).
A very talented actress, Jeanette Nolan could do more than three accents: Spanish, Italian, German or Russian and produce an Irish dialect on demand.