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Jane Withers (b. 1926) Before
Early Career Jane Withers was born in Atlanta on April 12, 1926. Her mother, Lavinia Ruth Withers, encouraged her child's interest in theater, and Withers's career began when, as a toddler, she won an amateur talent contest in Atlanta. The award led to work on Aunt Sally's Kiddie Revue, a Saturday morning children's program for which Withers sang, danced, and performed impressions of film celebrities. The show was
In 1932 Withers traveled with her mother to Hollywood, where the young girl was soon performing on children's radio programs, doing voice-overs for cartoons, and playing bit parts in films, beginning with Handle with Care (1932). She also played an uncredited role in It's a Gift (1934) with screen comedian W. C. Fields, who selected Withers to perform in a pantomime hopscotch scene with him. Fields, who was infamous for loathing children, astonished Withers's mother by praising the girl's ability, telling her, "You have a very talented little girl here; I think she's gonna go very far." In 1934 Withers won the prized role of the cruel brat Joy in the Shirley Temple vehicle Bright Eyes. Temple was Hollywood's most popular child star, but audiences enjoyed Withers's mistreatment of little Shirley, and critics praised the performance. As a result of this success, Withers became a contract player for Fox Studios and appeared in her first starring role in the film Ginger (1935), which began production on her eighth birthday . Withers recalled, in a 2003 interview, receiving flowers on this occasion from both W. C. Fields and U.S. president Franklin D. Roosevelt, who had followed her career after seeing Withers's impression of him in a newsreel. According to Withers, she maintained a friendship with Roosevelt until his death at Warm Springs in 1945. Often
Transitional Years As Withers matured into a teenager, both she and her fans became frustrated with the childish projects assigned to her by the studio. Under the name Jerrie Walters, the fifteen-year-old Withers
As a young star Withers often visited orphanages and hospitals, where she performed for the children. During World War II (1941-45) she performed in more than 100 bond and camp tours within the United States and sent her extensive collection of 3,500 dolls, most received as gifts from her fans, on tour to raise money for the war effort. With the decline of the child-star genre, Withers's popularity began to fade, and audiences familiar with her work in comedy did not accept her in more serious films like The North Star (1943). Because her parents had managed her income carefully, Withers was financially independent. She left the film industry in 1947 and soon afterward married Bill Moss, a Texas oilman and rancher with whom she had three children. The couple divorced in 1954, and the next year Withers married Kenneth Errair, a member of the 1950s vocal group the Four Freshman. Withers and Errair had two children and were married until Errain's death in 1968. Return to Film In 1955 Withers returned to Hollywood and began film school at the University of Southern California, planning to become a director. But she resumed acting when director George Stevens invited her to take a supporting role in his film Giant (1956). She continued working as a character actor in film and television, appearing on television in episodes of The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, The United States Steel Hour, The Love Boat, and Murder, She Wrote, among others. She also played the role of Josephine the Plumber in a long-running series of commercials for Comet cleanser. In the 1990s she began doing voices for Walt Disney's animated cartoons, and she created the voice of a gargoyle named Laverne in Disney's version of The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1996) and its sequel (2002). An enthusiastic amateur photographer, Withers has participated in Internet discussions, hosted by the Kodak Corporation, of her photography. In recognition of her philanthropy, Withers received a 2003 Living Legacy Award from the Women's International Center. She continues to reside in Los Angeles, where she is currently at work on several books, including an autobiography. Suggested Reading Thomas G. Aylesworth, Hollywood Kids: Child Stars of the Silver Screen from 1903 to the Present (New York: Dutton, 1987). Tom and Jim Goldrup, "Jane Withers," Growing Up on the Set: Interviews with 39 Former Child Actors of Classic Film and Television (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2002). Leo Verswijver, "Jane Withers," Movies Were Always Magical: Interviews with 19 Actors, Directors, and Producers from the Hollywood of the 1930s through the 1950s (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2003), 202-16. S. K. Brehe, North Georgia College and State University Published 5/6/2005 |
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