Edith Barrett


Edith Barrett was an American actress.

Biography

Born in Roxbury, Massachusetts, Barrett was the daughter of Marshall S. P. Williams and Edith Barrett Williams and a granddaughter of 19th-century American actor Lawrence Barrett. She entered the entertainment industry at age 16 in a staging of Walter Hampden's production of Cyrano de Bergerac. At age 19, in 1926, she appeared with Hampden in Caponsacchi. During the 1930s, she performed with Orson Welles's Mercury Theatre troupe.
While appearing in the Mercury Theatre 1937 production of The Shoemaker's Holiday, she married leading man Vincent Price in 1938. The marriage ended in 1948. She and Price had one son, author/poet and environmental activist Vincent Barrett Price.
Barrett's Broadway credits include Wuthering Heights, The Shoemakers' Holiday, Wise Tomorrow, Parnell, Symphony, Piper Paid, Allure, Moor Born, Strange Orchestra, The Perfect Marriage, Troilus and Cressida, Mrs. Moonlight, Michael and Mary, Becky Sharp, The Phantom Lover, Caponsacchi, The Immortal Thief, King Henry IV, Part I, The Servant in the House, Cyrano de Bergerac, The Merchant of Venice, Hamlet, and Trelawny of the "Wells".
In her first film, Ladies in Retirement, she played one of the two half-witted half-sisters of Ida Lupino's homicidal character. Her best remembered movie role is possibly Mrs. Holland's mother-in-law in I Walked with a Zombie, a movie sometimes described as "Jane Eyre" in the West Indies. She was almost three years younger than her "son" in that film. She appeared briefly onscreen with Price twice in The Song of Bernadette and again in Keys of the Kingdom. The following year she was seen as Mrs. Fairfax in 20th Century-Fox's adaptation of the real Jane Eyre. She retired from films after essaying a minor role in The Swan.

Filmography