The Daily Telegraph

Ted Donaldson

Teen star who worked with Cary Grant and Edward G Robinson

- Ted Donaldson, born August 30 1933, died March 1 2023

TED DONALDSON, who has died aged 89, rose to prominence as a teen star during the tail-end of the Second World War, working alongside a string of Hollywood A-listers, including Edward G Robinson and Cary Grant.

“I did my first movie with Cary Grant, and it was extraordin­ary,” he wrote in 2016. “It was perhaps the greatest personal and profession­al experience of my life… I loved him!” A few years later, Grant attended the boy’s high-school graduation ceremony.

The film they made together was Once Upon a Time (1944); its distinctly odd plot revolved around Arthur “Pinkie” Thompson (11-year-old Ted) and his dancing caterpilla­r “Curly”, which Grant’s conniving showman tries to get his hands on. Variety adjudged it “one of the more novel scripts of the year. Once Upon a Time is certainly bizarre – and yet charming. It’s unfathomab­le – and yet intriguing. It is certainly absurd – and yet box office.”

Ted Donaldson was born in Brooklyn on August 20 1933; his father was the songwriter and composer Will Donaldson. His mother Jo died when he was a few months old, and Will married the composer and organist Muriel Pollock.

Young Ted showed a knack for performing early on, entertaini­ng his schoolmate­s with his magic tricks at the Profession­al Children’s School in Manhattan, founded in 1914 for aspiring actors and dancers.

Aged eight, he arrived on Broadway in the comedy

Life With Father, following it with Sons and Soldiers (1943), which featured Gregory Peck. Ted’s performanc­e alerted Hollywood, and in 1944 he was signed by Columbia for

Once Upon a Time. He reprised his role on radio for

The Screen Guild Theater in 1945, with Robert Montgomery as the impresario.

Audiences fell for the boy’s charms and he was given a prominent role as an orphan, opposite Edward G Robinson and Ruth Warwick, in the comedy Mr Winkle Goes to War, aka

Arms and the Woman (1944).

The following year he was loaned to 20th Century-fox for A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, Elia Kazan’s debut feature about an impoverish­ed Irish-american family starring Dorothy Mcguire and Joan Blondell. The Hollywood columnist Hedda Hopper predicted: “This boy Teddy is going places!”

Attempting to capitalise on the success of the Lassie films over at MGM, the head of Columbia, Harry Cohn, assigned Donaldson to play Danny Mitchell in the “Rusty” film series about a young boy and his German shepherd dog.

Eight B-movies were shot between 1945 and 1949, during which time he also had parts in non-canine films such as Personalit­y Kid, in which he played a boy who runs away with his pet donkey after his older brother strikes him (1946);

The Decision of Christophe­r Blake (1948), about a boy who is forced to choose between his divorcing parents; and the ahead-ofits-time eco-farming drama

The Green Promise (1949).

That year, Donaldson returned to radio, as Bud (the son of Robert Young’s character) in the radio run of

Father Knows Best, a sitcom about a Midwestern family. That lasted until 1954; by then he had made his last credited appearance on the big screen, still in his teens, in the noir drama Phone Call From a Stranger (1952), starring Bette Davis. “From my very early 20s I wanted to be the first male child actor to become a leading man,” he said in 2016, “but it just wasn’t to be.”

There were a few TV credits, but by the end of the decade he had disappeare­d from view. He went on to work in the books trade and as a supply teacher.

In recent years, he had been a popular guest at film convention­s, including the 2016 TCM Film Festival, when he was asked to introduce a restored version of A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. He was due to attend this year’s Festival in April.

Ted Donaldson never married and leaves no survivors.

 ?? ?? Donaldson aged 11: he made his last film when he was 19
Donaldson aged 11: he made his last film when he was 19

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