Isabel Randolph


Isabel Randolph was an American character actress in radio and film from the 1940s through the 1960s and in television from the early 1950s to the middle 1960s.

Early life

She was born in 1889 in Chicago, the daughter of Alexander and May Randolph.

Career

Theater

Randolph acted in regional theater all over the American Midwest, from the pre-World War I era up to the start of her radio career in the mid-1930s. She became leading lady at the Princess Theater in Des Moines, Iowa in 1917 and was still acting there in 1918, and, in 1931, at the Loyola Community Theater in Chicago. On Broadway, Randolph portrayed Mrs. Pembrook in If I Was Rich and Henrietta Scott in Ink.

Radio

Isabel Randolph gained nationwide popularity on the radio show Fibber McGee and Molly, where she began in various "snooty" roles January 13, 1936, eventually becoming a long-running series character, the pompous Mrs. Abigail Uppington, a snooty society matron whom Fibber addressed as "Uppy," and whose pretensions Fibber delighted in deflating. She stayed with the comedy series for seven years until the show began its eighth season in the fall of 1943.
She also starred as the wife in NBC's soap opera Dan Harding's Wife, and was in the cast of two other serials, One Man's Family and The Story of Mary Marlin.

Film

Even while young, Randolph specialized in middle-aged "grand dame" roles on stage and radio, continuing in these roles when she entered films in 1940. She re-created her character of Mrs. Uppington in RKO's Look Who's Laughing in 1941 and Here We Go Again in 1942, both spin-offs of the Fibber McGee and Molly radio series. In 1943, she co-starred in the Republic musical O, My Darling Clementine.
She worked in more than a few 1940s films with Lucille Ball. Randolph also was prominently featured in Hoosier Holiday, a 1945 movie from Republic Pictures. She played many small roles in major pictures, and starred in major roles in B-pictures — though, in at least one Republic Studios western of the early 1950s, she was cast against type as an evil criminal mastermind.

Television

In her television career from 1951 to 1966, Isabel appeared most often on comedies, with an occasional drama. She was a member of the cast of The Jerry Colonna Show on ABC in 1951. Her first role on television was a protagonist on the 1951 version of Dick Tracy She played the recurring character of neighbor Mrs. Boone in Meet Millie, one of the first of the sitcom hits for CBS in 1954. She was seen as private-school proprietress Mrs. Nestor during the final season of Our Miss Brooks. She was also a regular comedic actor in 1952 on The Abbott and Costello Show, and from 1957-1962 on The Red Skelton Show.
In 1958, Randolph appeared as Grandma Wilkins on the episode "Wyatt Earp Rides Shotgun" of the ABC/Desilu western series, The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp. In the story line, deputy Wyatt Earp is trying to stop the Dan Purvis gang from attacking Wells Fargo and encounters unexpected help from Grandma Wilkins in his task. Mason Alan Dinehart appears in this episode a young Bat Masterson.
Randolph appeared in The Andy Griffith Show episodes "A Plaque for Mayberry" and "Rafe Hollister Sings". One of her last appearances on television was in 1966 in her recurring role as Clara Petrie, the mother of Rob on The Dick Van Dyke Show. Later that year she concluded her television career when she played the role of Madam Rosa Bruening in the Perry Mason episode, "The Case of the Misguided Model."

Personal life

Randolph died January 11, 1973, in Burbank, California, survived by two daughters.

Selected filmography

Randolph worked on over seventy films from 1939 to 1959. Among them were: