Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Patricia Morison, Broadway and Hollywood star, dies at age of 103

- By Mark Kennedy and Andrew Dalton

LOS ANGELES » Patricia Morison, who originated the role of an overemotio­nal diva in the Broadway musical “Kiss Me, Kate,” starred on stage opposite Yul Brynner in “The King and I” and appeared in films alongside Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn, died Sunday at age 103.

Morison died of natural causes at her home in Los Angeles, publicist Harlan Boll said.

With her long auburn hair and fiery blue-gray eyes, Morison radiated a sophistica­ted sex appeal.

She had “the most sensual mouth of any lady in the movies,” Gregory William Mank wrote in his book “Women in Horror Films, 1940s.”

Broadway actress Merle Dandridge posted a picture of herself with Morison on Sunday and tweeted out a tribute.

“Rest, Beautiful Patricia Morison,” Dandridge said. “It was an honor to follow in your footsteps.”

Morison’s career got off to a rocky start. At 18 she was cast in the 1933 Broadway comedy “Growing Pains,” which lasted 29 performanc­es. “I was so bad in it, they fired me in rehearsals,” Morison told the Los Angeles Times in 2015. “I cried so hard they gave me a walk-on.”

Her second Broadway role five years later was only marginally better — “The Two Bouquets” with Alfred Drake lasted 55 performanc­es — but Hollywood noticed and Paramount signed her. (The New York Times praised her “willowy elegance.”) Morison made her film debut in 1939’s “Persons in Hiding,” but she often found her options in the studio system frustratin­g.

She appeared as Empress Eugenie in 1943’s “The Song of Bernadette,” opposite John Garfield in the 1943 thriller “The Fallen Sparrow” and in the 1945 Tracy-Hepburn romantic comedy “Without Love.”

She was often cast as the femme fatale or villain, including the mastermind in 1946’s “Dressed to Kill,” sparring with Sherlock Holmes, played by Basil Rathbone. Her other films included “Danger Woman” and “Tarzan and the Huntress.”

Morison’s death was first reported Sunday by The Hollywood Reporter.

Born in New York, she was the daughter of playwright and actor William R. Morison and Salina Morison. She studied acting and movement with Martha Graham. In 1935, she understudi­ed Helen Hayes in “Victoria Regina” on Broadway.

After Paramount replaced her in several films, Morison left the studio and joined Al Jolson on a USO tour of Britain to entertain troops in 1942. She returned to get a part in one of her most-remembered films — “Hitler’s Madman.” She also played opposite Lon Chaney Jr. in “Calling Dr. Death” in 1943 and Victor Mature in “Kiss of Death.”

To appear in “Kiss Me, Kate,” Morison needed to get out of a commitment to appear in what was a new line of work for actors in 1947 — a TV series. She had been cast as a psychiatri­st who helps a detective solve cases. The producer shot all of her 13 segments on the show in a quick twoweek period.

“Kiss Me, Kate,” in which she was reunited with Drake, turned out to be Cole Porter’s biggest musical success and gave Morison the opportunit­y to play the temperamen­tal Lili Vanessi and sing such songs as “Wunderbar” and “So in Love.”

 ?? FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this file photo, Alfred Drake, left, and Patricia Morison, costarring in the musical “Kiss Me Kate,” play checkers backstage at the New Century Theatre in New York. Broadway and Hollywood star Patricia Morison has died at age 103. Publicist Harlan...
FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this file photo, Alfred Drake, left, and Patricia Morison, costarring in the musical “Kiss Me Kate,” play checkers backstage at the New Century Theatre in New York. Broadway and Hollywood star Patricia Morison has died at age 103. Publicist Harlan...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States