
Margaret O'Brien
Acting
🎂 1937-01-15
Margaret O'Brien (born January 15, 1937) is an American film and stage actress. Although her film career as a leading character was brief, she was one of the most popular child actors in cinema history. In her later career, she appeared on stage and in supporting film roles. She was born Angela Maxine O'Brien; (she later changed her name to Margaret following the success of the film Journey for Margaret, in which she played the title role). Her father Lawrence O'Brien, a circus performer, died before she was born.[1]; Margaret's mother, Gladys Flores, was a well-known flamenco dancer who often performed with her sister Marissa, also a dancer. Margaret is of half-Irish and half-Spanish ancestry. She made her first film appearance in Babes on Broadway (1941) at the age of four, but it was the following year that her first major role brought her widespread attention. As a five-year-old in Journey for Margaret (1942), O'Brien won wide praise for her convincing acting style. By 1943, she was considered a big enough star to have a cameo appearance in the all-star military show finale of Thousands Cheer. She played a young French girl, and spoke and sang all her dialogue with a French accent, in Jane Eyre (1944). Arguably her most memorable role was as "Tootie" in Meet Me in St. Louis (1944), opposite Judy Garland. O'Brien had by this time added singing and dancing to her achievements and was rewarded with an Academy Juvenile Award the following year as the "outstanding child actress of 1944." Her other successes included The Canterville Ghost (1944), Our Vines Have Tender Grapes (1945), and the first sound version of The Secret Garden (1949), but she was unable to make the transition to adult roles. A 1946 Looney Tunes short, Book Revue, placed a caricature of O'Brien in the role of Little Red Riding Hood. Margaret later shed her child star image in 1958 by appearing on the cover of Life Magazine with the caption "The Girl's Grown", and was a mystery guest on the TV panel show What's My Line?. O'Brien's acting roles as an adult have been few and far between, mostly in small independent films. However, she does do occasional interviews, mostly for the Turner Classic Movies cable network. She played the role of Betsy Stauffer, a small town nurse, in "The Incident of the Town in Terror" on television's Rawhide. Another rare television outing was as a guest star on the popular Marcus Welby, M.D. in the early 1970s, reuniting Margaret with her Journey For Margaret and The Canterville Ghost co-star Robert Young. Description above from the Wikipedia article Margaret O'Brien, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Cast credits(93)

Self
1962

Ginny
1950

Julie Revere
1957

Self
1961

1955

Self
1967

Self
1948

Martha Connelly
1982

Nurse Lori Palmer
1961

Self
1950

Virginia Trent
1957

Jane
1984

Phyllis Willoughby
1959

Mildred Webster
1984

1948

Julie Denton
1948

Jenny Walker
1948

1969

Self - Singer
1956

Marianne Fraisnet
1962

1947

Neva Phillips
1969

Kathy Fathian
1954

Chip
1954

Angie Hawley
1954

Betsy Stauffer
1959
Anne Lipscott
1963

Louise Prescott
1967

Jean
1959

Self
1953

Mrs. Pendleton
1968

Ellen Marstand
1960

1989
Margaret
1950
Laura
1950
Elaine
1950
Self - Intermission Guest
1950

1996

Sarah Trask
1953
Self
1955

'Tootie' Smith
1944

Beth
1949

Irene Curie - Age 5
1943

Flora Bumpstead Eaton
1977

Adele Varens
1943

(archive footage)
1944

Mary Lennox
1949

(archive footage)
1974

Hazel Johnson
1981

Lady Jessica de Canterville
1944

Maxine (uncredited)
1941

Della Southby
1960

Margaret
1943

Self
2004

Self
2023

Catherine McDermott
1952

Self
1998

Selma Jacobson
1945

Emmy
1946

Flavia Mills
1948

(archive footage)
1982

Ms. Stevenson
2017

Midge
1948

Self
2015

Self (archive footage)
1982

Customer in Red Skelton Skit
1943

Louise Prescott
1968

Alpha
1943

Mike
1944

Clarabel Tilbee
1956

Amanda
2018

Mrs. Foxworth
2018

Bridgette's Grandmother
2017

Self
1994
Betty Corman
1996

Fan
2002

Self - Actress
2002

Vivienne

'Meg' Merlin
1947

Sheila O'Monahan
1946

Self (archive footage)
1973

Margaret
1942

Herself
1998

2010

Betty Foster
1951

Self - Interviewee
2011

Herself
1998

1971
Gigi
2018

Pam Rhodes
1974

Self
1994

Daughter
1943

Narrator
1971