Eve McVeagh

{{short description|American actress (1919–1997)}}

{{Use American English|date=July 2020}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2020}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Eve McVeagh

| image = Eve McVeagh in "Snafu".jpg

| caption = McVeagh publicity photo for Snafu on Broadway (1945)

| birth_name = Eva Elizabeth McVeagh

| birth_date = {{Birth date|1919|7|15|mf=yes}}

| birth_place = Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S.

| death_date = {{Death date and age|1997|12|10|1919|7|15|mf=yes}}

| death_place = Los Angeles, California, U.S.

| occupation = Actress

| years_active = 1937–1989

| spouse = Gene Rizzi
(m. 1939–1947; divorced)
William C. Appleby
(m. 1947–1956; his death)
Robert Cole
(m. 1956; divorced)
Clarke Gordon
(m. 1957–her death)

| children = 4

}}

Eva Elizabeth "Eve" McVeagh (July 15, 1919 – December 10, 1997) was an American actress of film, television, stage, and radio. Her career spanned 52 years from her first stage role through her last stage appearance.{{cite news|author=|title=Eve McVeagh Gordon dies at 78|url=https://www.variety.com/article/VR1117433997|newspaper=Variety|date=1998-01-05}} Her roles included leading and supporting parts as well as smaller character roles in which she proved a gifted character actress.{{cite web|title=Eve McVeagh on IBDB|url=http://www.ibdb.com/person.php?id=471313|publisher=Internet Broadway Database|access-date=2011-08-01}}

Early life

Born in Cincinnati, Ohio to Hugh McVeagh, a railroad clerk, and Eva E. Johnson, she moved to Los Angeles in 1923 with her widowed mother and maternal grandmother, Molly Johnson,1930 Federal Census Records, Los Angeles where she started acting in theater in her teens.

Stage

{{More citations needed|section|date=May 2020}}

File:Eve McVeagh Headshot circa 1965.jpg

Following stage success in Hollywood, McVeagh moved to New York City in her 20s, performing on radio and on Broadway in several productions including the roles of Martha in Snafu (1944–1945){{cite web|title=Eve McVeagh Theatre Credits|url=http://broadwayworld.com/people/Eve_McVeagh/|publisher=Broadway World|access-date=2011-07-31}} and Patsy Laverne in Too Hot for Maneuvers (1945). After the well received Broadway run of Snafu, McVeagh took over the female lead at The National Theater in Washington DC in 1945.{{cite book|last=Solomon|first=Louis|title=Snafu|year=1945|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7fxdSQAACAAJ|publisher=Richard L. Coe Theater Programs Collection (Library of Congress)|access-date=2012-09-12|display-authors=etal}}

In 1947, McVeagh played a supporting role opposite Billie Burke and Grant Mitchell in the original play Accidentally Yours. The production received very favorable reviews on the West Coast and was en route to New York where it was predicted to be the "comedy smash hit of 1948".{{cite news|last=Column|first=Arts & Entertainment|title="Accidentally Yours" Coming Here Thursday|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1983&dat=19470422&id=nEIwAAAAIBAJ&pg=3403,5756566|access-date=2013-11-09|newspaper=San Jose Evening News|date=April 22, 1947}}. However, the production was not a commercial success and never made it to Broadway. Ms McVeagh did not perform on Broadway again, but after returning to Los Angeles, and working in film and television for years, she traveled back to New York to perform in the play Scuba Duba in 1971.

After this stage work, McVeagh traveled back to her home base in Los Angeles. She starred in West Coast premieres of Broadway shows at the Pasadena Playhouse, most notably the lead in Come Back Little Sheba. Her Hollywood theater work included one year as Martha in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

Her stage career continued in Las Vegas in 1981 in The Ninety Day Mistress, playing the mother of June Wilkinson's character. She continued to act in small stage productions including several with the award-winning Theatre Forty Company in Beverly Hills. In Hollywood, her final role was as a member of a lesbian couple in 1989 concluding an over 50 year stage career.

Film

McVeagh's first film appearance was a supporting role in the classic High Noon (1952) in which she played Mildred Fuller alongside Gary Cooper and Grace Kelly. In the early 1950s she was under contract with Columbia Pictures. During that time, she co-starred in Tight Spot as Clara Moran playing the sister of Ginger Rogers: Of her performance, The New York Times raved "For our money, the best scene, whipped up by scenarist William Bowers, is the anything-but-tender reunion of Miss Rogers and her sister, Eve McVeagh ... an ugly, blistering pip."{{cite news|last=T.|first=H.H.|title=The Screen: Tight Spot; Crime Drama Bows on Bill at Palace|url=https://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?_r=1&res=940CE4D61F3EE53ABC4152DFB566838E649EDE&oref=slogin|newspaper=The New York Times|date=March 19, 1955}} Ms. McVeagh was also featured opposite Richard Widmark and Lauren Bacall in The Cobweb as Shirley Irwin. She starred as Viv in The Glass Web, and was featured as Mrs. Clinton in Three in the Attic, Mrs. Masters in The Way West, Mrs. Griggs in Crime & Punishment, USA, a reporter in the Dino De Laurentiis production of King Kong, and The Graduate. Her final co-starring film role was in the independent film Money to Burn (1983) as Vivian. Her last onscreen appearance was a cameo role in Creator (1985) with Peter O'Toole. Ms. McVeagh's contributions to film were recognized by the bestowal of full voting membership in the actor's branch of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in September 1974.{{cite web|author=|title=Eve McVeagh - Actors Branch Member|date=May 14, 2012|url=http://nevertooearlymoviepredictions.blogspot.com/2012/05/academy-members-project-m.html|publisher=The Academy Members Project|access-date=2014-10-01}} Her contributions in film spanned 33 years.{{Citation needed |date=September 2021}}

Television

File:Eve McVeagh as Georgia in Hitchcock's "Incident at a Corner".jpg

McVeagh's career in television began in 1946 as a primary cast member in the first American network Soap Opera, Faraway Hill. Other notable early television series on which she guest starred included Dragnet and I Love Lucy (as Lucy's hairdresser, Roberta, in the classic "Black Wig" episode). She was featured in three episodes of Perry Mason and two episodes of The Twilight Zone, and was a regular guest on The Johnny Carson Show. Alfred Hitchcock notably hired actors he liked regularly. McVeagh was featured in four episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents and two episodes of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour ("Last Seen Wearing Blue Jeans" in 1963). She co-starred on the Hitchcock-directed episode, "Incident at a Corner", of the television series Startime (pictured).{{cite book|last1=McDevitt|first1=Jim|last2=San Juan|first2=Eric|title=A Year of Hitchcock: 52 weeks with the master of suspense|date=2009|publisher=The Scarecrow Press|location=Lanham, MD|isbn=9780810863880|page=399|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VP_DGfInVBcC&q=A+Year+of+Hitchcock+52+weeks+with+the+master+of+suspense+eve+mcveagh&pg=PA399|access-date=2014-10-02}} Roles in the 1960s also included Frances Moseby, a series regular, on The Clear Horizon, a recurring character, Miss Hammond, on Petticoat Junction, as well as roles on Bonanza, Ironside and My Three Sons. Continuing in the 1970s, she appeared in the 1972 television movie "The Daughters of Joshua Cabe".

McVeagh was a regular on The Red Skelton Show for its last season. She also regularly performed in guest spots in Room 222 and McMillan & Wife. A favorite of Lucille Ball going back to I Love Lucy, she appeared with her on Here's Lucy. She guest starred in Love, American Style, and was featured in Little House on the Prairie, The Streets of San Francisco, The Virginian, The Bionic Woman, Charlie's Angels, The Jeffersons, Lou Grant, The Incredible Hulk, Knots Landing, Hill Street Blues, Hunter, and Airwolf. She rounded out the 1970s on a high note as socialite Helen Carrington in the 1979 critically acclaimed television movie Murder by Natural Causes with Hal Holbrook.

In the 1980s, her last decade in entertainment, McVeagh co-starred in an episode of Michael Landon's Highway to Heaven and was featured in two episodes of Simon & Simon. McVeagh guest starred in a 1985 episode of Cagney and Lacey as Dorothy Gantney, the grief-stricken mother of a murder victim in "The Psychic". McVeagh's last television credit was in 1988 on an episode of the Pat Morita series Ohara as Mabel Moore. Her career in television spanned 42 years.{{Citation needed |date=September 2021}}

Radio

File:Eve McVeagh CBS Publicity Photo (1952).jpg Photograph (right) was taken for "Let's Play Tennis Week" a charity event with stars of that era.

During the "Golden Age of Radio", McVeagh had several leading and supporting series roles and episodic leads in the 1940s and 1950s. She played Mrs. Harriet Beatty on the "Clyde Beatty Show", and was a regular on "Broadway Is My Beat" and "Stars Over Hollywood". She starred in "Hollywood Hostages", an episode of "Suspense", as Grace.

McVeagh was a principal performer on "Jeff Regan, Investigator", Jack Webb's radio noir series. "McVeagh's ditzy—and sultry—characterizations were regularly featured"{{cite web|title=Digital Deli Too|url=http://www.digitaldeliftp.com/DigitalDeliToo/dd2-Research-Perry-Mason-S-01.html|work=Perry Mason Connection|publisher=digitaldeliftp.com|access-date=2012-10-02|archive-date=March 4, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304074217/http://www.digitaldeliftp.com/DigitalDeliToo/dd2-Research-Perry-Mason-S-01.html|url-status=dead}} in the series. She also played the lead in the role of convicted murderess Marie Lafarge in the 1953 episode of Crime Classics, "The Seven Layered Arsenic Cake of Madame Lafarge". McVeagh appeared as the title character in the May 29, 1960 episode of "Gunsmoke" entitled "Bad Seed" and again in the January 29, 1961 episode entitled "Harriet".

Acting and voice coach

McVeagh was an acting and voice coach at the Film Actors Workshop at Warner Brothers Studios. Additionally, she taught privately and guest lectured at the University of Southern California in the School of Theatre.

Family life

McVeagh was married to character actor and director Clarke Gordon (her fourth husband) at the time of her death and had four children and nine grandchildren.

Death

Eve McVeagh Gordon died on December 10, 1997, from natural causes in Los Angeles. She was 78 years old.

Stage, Radio, Television and Film Credits

class="wikitable sortable"
Year

! Title

! Role

! class="unsortable" | Notes

1943

|Silk Hat Harry

|Jayne Spence

|Stage (Music Box Theater, Hollywood – original cast)

1944–1945

|Snafu

|Martha

|Stage (Broadway – original cast)

1945

|Too Hot for Maneuvers

|Patsy Laverne

|Stage (Broadway – original cast)

1946

|Faraway Hill

|Series Regular

|Television Soap Opera. First soap opera on American Television network.

1947

|Public Prosecutor

|Dorcas Lyndon

|TV series, 1 episode

1947

|Accidentally Yours

|Jean Erwin

|Stage (Touring Company – original cast – see "Stage" section for more details)

1948–1950

|Jeff Regan, Investigator

|Principal Actor

|CBS Radio Series

1950–1951

|Clyde Beatty Show

|Mrs. Harriet Beatty

|Syndicated Radio Series

1949–1954

|Broadway Is My Beat

|Series Regular

|CBS Radio Series

1952–1954

|Stars Over Hollywood

|Series Regular

|CBS Radio Series

1952

|Racket Squad

|Guest Star

|TV series, 1 episode

1952

|High Noon

|Mildred Fuller

|Film

1952

|Your Jeweler's Showcase

|

|TV series, 1 episode

1952-1953

|Schlitz Playhouse

|Elly

|TV series, 2 episodes

1953

|Crime Classics

|Madame Marie Lafarge

|Episode: "The Seven Layered Arsenic Cake of Madame Lafarge" (CBS Radio Series)

1953

|The Glass Web

|Viv

|Film

1953

|Life with Luigi

|

|TV series, 1 episode

1954

|Dragnet

|

|TV series, 1 episode

1951-1954

|Fireside Theatre

|Marge / Murial Tannant

|TV series, 4 episodes

1954

|I Love Lucy

|Roberta

|TV series, 1 episode

1954

|Climax!

|

|TV series, 1 episode

1955

|The Ford Television Theatre

|Suzie

|TV series, 1 episode

1955

|Tight Spot

|Clara Moran

|Film

1955

|Stage 7

|Miss Shelby

|Episode: "The Traveling Salesman" (TV series)

1955

|The Cobweb

|Mrs. Shirley Irwin

|Film

1955

|Not as a Stranger

|Mr. Ferris

|Film, Uncredited

1955

|Crossroads

|Myrtle Greenspant

|TV series, 1 episode

1955

|I'll Cry Tomorrow

|Ethel

|Film, Uncredited

1955

|It's a Dog's Life

|Elsa, Piano Player

|Film, Uncredited

1955

|I Led 3 Lives

|Miss Cutler

|TV series, 1 episode

1956

|Crusader

|Pearl Winacheck

|TV series, 1 episode

1956

|The 20th Century-Fox Hour

|Nurse

|TV series, 1 episode

1956

|Science Fiction Theatre

|Ann Page

|TV series, 1 episode

1956

|Highway Patrol

|Mrs. West

|TV series, 1 episode

1956

|Reprisal!

|Nora Shipley

|Film, Uncredited

1956

|The Opposite Sex

|Departing Woman

|Film, Uncredited

1956

|The Rack

|Woman at Airfield

|Film, Uncredited

1956

|Suspense

|Grace

|Episode: "Hollywood Hostages" (CBS Radio Series)

1957

|The Shadow on the Window

|Bessie Warren

|Film, Uncredited

1957

|The Jack Benny Program

|Reunion Guest

|TV series, 1 episode

1957

|Sierra Stranger

|Ruth Gaines

|Film

1957

|Adventures of Superman

|Mrs. Wilson

|TV series, 1 episode

1957

|The George Sanders Mystery Theater

|Thelma

|TV series, 1 episode

1957

|Casey Jones

|Nell Dixon

|TV series, 1 episode

1958

|The Court of Last Resort

|Edith Elwell

|TV series, 1 episode

1958

|Mike Hammer

|Veronica Karnes

|TV series, 1 episode

1958

|The Left Handed Gun

|Mrs. McSween

|Film, Uncredited

1958

|General Electric Theater

|Woman

|TV series, 1 episode

1958

|Unwed Mother

|

|Film

1958

|Man with a Camera

|Mrs. Collins

|TV series, 1 episode

1959

|Alcoa Theatre

|Miss Bellows

|TV series, 1 episode

1959

|Crime and Punishment U.S.A.

|Mrs. Griggs

|Film

1959

|The Thin Man

|Dakota Dane

|TV series, 1 episode

1959

|Rawhide

|Beulah

|TV series, 1 episode

1959

|Dennis the Menace

|Mrs. Purcell

|TV series, 1 episode

1959

|Alfred Hitchcock Presents

|Waitress

|Season 5 Episode 4: "Coyote Moon"

1960

|Johnny Ringo

|Molly Crawford

|TV series, 1 episode

1957-1960

|Perry Mason

|Saleswoman / Laura Richards / Nora Fleming

|TV series, 3 episodes

1960

|Lawman

|Josie, Saloon Gal

|TV series, 1 episode

1960

|Riverboat

|Julie Scott

|TV series, 1 episode

1960

|Man on a String

|Madame Pusawa

|Film, Uncredited

1960

|Startime

|Georgia

|TV series, 1 episode

1960

|The Clear Horizon

|Frances Moseby (1960-1962)

|TV series

1960

|The Wizard of Baghdad

|Oracle

|Film, Uncredited

1961

|Alfred Hitchcock Presents

|Eve the Reporter (uncredited)

|Season 6 Episode 31: "The Gloating Place"

1961

|Coronado 9

|Laura Tyler

|TV series, 1 episode

1961

|Surfside 6

|Blosson McKenzie

|TV series, 1 episode

1961

|The Real McCoys

|Myra McCoy

|TV series, 3 episodes

1961

|Tales of Wells Fargo

|The Woman

|TV series, 1 episode

1961

|Cain's Hundred

|Bunny Baxter

|TV series, 1 episode

1962

|Alfred Hitchcock Presents

|Mrs. Archer

|Season 7 Episode 20: "The Test"

1962

|Alfred Hitchcock Presents

|Mae

|Season 7 Episode 30: "What Frightened You, Fred?"

1962

|Checkmate

|Bess Conrad

|TV series, 1 episode

1962

|Have Gun - Will Travel

|Katherine

|TV series, 1 episode

1962

|Thriller

|Bonnie / Mrs. Curtis

|TV series, 2 episodes

1962

|The Law and Mr. Jones

|Mrs. Pierce

|TV series, 1 episode

1962

|The Tall Man

|Lily Varnell

|TV series, 1 episode

1963

|The Alfred Hitchcock Hour

|Rose Cates

|Season 1 Episode 28: "Last Seen Wearing Blue Jeans"

1963

|The Lieutenant

|Marge Fowler

|TV series, 1 episode

1961–1963

|77 Sunset Strip

|Landlady / Elizabeth Dawson

|TV series, 2 episodes

1962-1963

|Wagon Train

|Mrs. Sharp / Yolanda

|TV series, 2 episodes

1963

|Petticoat Junction

|Miss Hammond

|TV series, 3 episodes

1964

|Arrest and Trial

|Mrs. Nello

|TV series, 1 episode

1964

|Twilight Zone

|Ella Koch / Nurse

|TV series, 2 episodes

1964

|Karen

|Mrs. Peters

|TV series, 1 episode

1965

|The Man from U.N.C.L.E

|Baroness

|TV series, 1 episode

1965

|The Alfred Hitchcock Hour

|Sylvia Boggs

|Season 3 Episode 27: "The Second Wife"

1965

|Dr. Kildare

|Dr. Ruth Becker

|TV series, 1 episode

1965

|Daniel Boone

|Eleanor Tully / Kate Bothwell

|TV series, 1 episode

1966

|Hank

|Miss Krimmer

|TV series, 1 episode

1966

|My Favorite Martian

|Mother

|TV series, 1 episode

1966

|My Mother the Car

|Goldie

|TV series, 1 episode

1966

|F Troop

|Wilma McGee

|TV series, 1 episode

1966

|My Three Sons

|Clara

|TV series, 1 episode

1967

|The F.B.I.

|Bea Jensen

|TV series, 1 episode

1967

|The Way West

|Mrs. Masters

|Film

1967

|Bonanza

|Harriet Guthrie

|TV series, 1 episode

1967

|The Graduate

|Mrs. Carlson, Party Guest

|Film, Uncredited

1968

|Ironside

|Manager

|TV series, 1 episode

1968

|Three in the Attic

|Mrs. Clinton

|Film

1969

|Mayberry R.F.D.

|Mrs. Whitakker

|TV series, 1 episode

1969

|Dragnet

|Mrs. Shore / Margaret Chance / Bonnie McKenzie

|TV series, 3 episodes

1969

|Roberta

|Anna

|TV movie

1969

|The Virginian

|Mrs. Foster / Maude

|TV series, 2 episodes

1970

|Airport

|Mrs. Henry Bron, Passenger

|Film, Uncredited

1970

|The Liberation of L.B. Jones

|Miss Griggs

|Film

1970

|The Odd Couple

|Mrs. Lachman

|TV series, 1 episode

1970–1971

|The Red Skelton Show

|Series Regular (Various Characters)

|Television Variety Series

1969-1971

|Room 222

|Madge Morano / PTA member

|TV series, 2 episodes

1971

|Love, American Style

|Eloise Hempsted

|TV series, 1 episode, (segment "Love and the Artful Codger")

1971

|Scuba Duba

|Landlady

|Stage Studio Arena Theater (Buffalo, NY)

1972

|Glass Houses

|

|

1972

|The Courtship of Eddie's Father

|Lorraine Karn

|TV series, 1 episode

1972

|The Daughters of Joshua Cabe

|Mother Superior

|TV movie

1972

|Alias Smith and Jones

|Woman

|TV series, 1 episode

1973

|The Streets of San Francisco

|Mrs. Logan

|TV series, 1 episode

1973

|Here's Lucy

|Woman with Dog

|TV series, 1 episode

1968-1973

|Adam-12

|Margaret Willis / Marge Jenkins / Thelma Walker

|TV series, 3 episodes

1972-1974

|McMillan & Wife

|Lady in Elevator / Mrs. Denny / Woman

|TV series, 3 episodes

1974

|The Snoop Sisters

|Coven Member

|TV series, 1 episode

1974

|Police Story

|Ethel

|TV series, 1 episode

1974

|Movin' On

|Rosalie

|TV series, 1 episode

1975

|The Texas Wheelers

|Mrs. Klate

|TV series, 1 episode

1975

|Little House on the Prairie

|Mrs. Hillstrom

|TV series, 1 episode

1975

|Maude

|Renee

|TV series, 1 episode

1976

|King Kong

|Reporter

|Film, Uncredited

1977

|The Bionic Woman

|Middle Aged Woman

|TV series, 1 episode

1979

|Charlie's Angels

|Old Lady (with Lasso)

|TV series, 1 episode

1979

|Murder by Natural Causes

|Helen Carrington

|TV movie

1979

|Barnaby Jones

|Millie Kelley

|TV series, 1 episode

1980

|Days of Our Lives

|Mrs. Kositchek (Recurring)

|Television Soap Opera

1980

|Spoon River Anthology

|Several Characters

|Stage (Theatre Forty Company, Beverly Hills)

1980

|The Jeffersons

|Mrs. Simpson

|TV series, 1 episode

1980

|CHiPs

|Wife

|TV series, 1 episode

1979-1981

|Lou Grant

|Clare / Elizabeth Benson

|Television

1981

|The Incredible Hulk

|Landlady

|TV series, 1 episode

1982

|Long Day's Journey Into Night

|Mary

|Stage (Richmond Shepard Theater Studios, Hollywood)

1982

|Knots Landing

|Mrs. Green

|TV series, 1 episode

1982

|Life of the Party: The Story of Beatrice

|Mrs. Rugolo

|TV movie

1982

|Hill Street Blues

|Tenant

|TV series, 1 episode

1983

|Knight Rider

|Slot Granny

|TV series, 1 episode

1983

|Money to Burn

|Vivian

|Film

1984

|Jennifer Slept Here

|Mrs. McGovern

|TV series, 1 episode

1984

|Hunter

|Mrs. Onadon

|TV series, 1 episode

1984

|Airwolf

|Annie

|TV series, 1 episode

1985

|Highway to Heaven

|Flora

|TV series, 1 episode

1985

|T. J. Hooker

|Manager

|TV series, 1 episode

1985

|Creator

|Woman with monkey

|Film

1985

|Cagney & Lacey

|Dorothy Gantney

|TV series, 1 episode

1985-1986

|Simon & Simon

|Mrs. Talbot

|TV series, 2 episodes

1987

|Mathnet

|Mrs. Swaggle

|TV series, 1 episode

1987

|Square One TV

|Mrs. Swaggle

|TV series, 1 episode

1988

|Ohara

| Mabel Moore

| TV Series, 1 episode (final appearance)

{{cite web|author=|title=77 Sunset Strip: A Titles and Airdates Guide|url=http://epguides.com/77SunsetStrip/|publisher=epguides.com|access-date=2011-09-17}}{{cite web|title=Eve McVeagh – Filmography|url=https://movies.yahoo.com/person/eve-mcveagh/filmography.html|publisher=Yahoo! Movies|access-date=2012-03-09}}{{cite web|last=Miller|first=Christine A.|title=Escape and Suspense!|url=http://www.escape-suspense.com/2011/09/suspense-hollywood-hostages.html|publisher=escape-suspense.com|access-date=2012-03-16}}

{{cite magazine|last=Abbott|first=Sam|title=Silk Hat Harry (Reviewed at the Music Box Theater, Hollywood)|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rgwEAAAAMBAJ&q=eve+mcveagh++understudy&pg=PT25|magazine=Billboard|date=August 28, 1943|access-date=2012-09-18}}

{{cite web|title=The Digital Deli Too: Preserving the Golden Age of Radio for a Digital Future|url=http://www.digitaldeliftp.com/DigitalDeliToo/dd2jb-Jeff-Regan-Investigator.html|publisher=thedigitaldeliftp.com|access-date=2012-10-02|archive-date=February 8, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130208165747/http://www.digitaldeliftp.com/DigitalDeliToo/dd2jb-Jeff-Regan-Investigator.html|url-status=dead}}

References

{{Reflist}}