Laura Hope Crews


Laura Hope Crews was a leading actress of the American stage in the first decades of the 20th century who is best remembered today for her later work as a character actress in motion pictures of the 1930s. Her best-known film role was Aunt Pittypat in Gone with the Wind.

Early life

Laura Hope Crews was the daughter of stage actress Angelena Lockwood and backstage carpenter John Thomas Crews. She had three older siblings. Crews started acting at age four. Her first stage appearance was at Woodward's Gardens. She stopped acting to finish school and then returned to acting in 1898. As she was a native San Franciscan, the records pertaining to her early life were destroyed in the earthquake and fire of 1906.
Most of Crews' formal education came in San Jose, as the family had moved there following the remarriage of Crews' mother.

Career

In 1898, Crews performed in San Francisco as an ingenue with the Alcazar Stock Company. Two years later, she and her mother moved to New York City, where Crews began to act with the Henry V. Donnelly Stock Company.
Crews appeared in plays written by A.A. Milne, who was particularly impressed by her work in his Mr. Pim Passes By. The play was a big success and ran for 232 performances on Broadway.
Crews also starred as Judith Bliss in the original Broadway production of Noël Coward's Hay Fever, which she co-directed with Coward. She also appeared in The Silver Cord, written by Sidney Howard, which was produced by the New York Theater Guild in 1926 and ran for 212 performances. When The Silver Cord was not being presented, there were matinee performances of Right You Are If You Think You Are by Luigi Pirandello.
The Silver Cord was later made into a 1933 RKO movie with Crews reprising her onstage role of the mother. The film co-starred Joel McCrea, Frances Dee, and Irene Dunne. In the late 1920s, Crews had been hired by Gloria Swanson to help with her transition to talking pictures.
George Cukor, who had directed her in Camille, recommended her for the role of Aunt Pittypat in Gone With the Wind after Billie Burke declined it. Cukor wanted Crews to play the role "in a Billie Burke-ish manner" with "the same zany feeling".
Her final stage appearance came in 1942, in the original Broadway run of Arsenic and Old Lace in which she replaced one of the original cast members. She stayed with the production for more than a year and a half on Broadway and in a touring company before she was forced to leave because of illness.

Death

Crews died in the LeRoy Sanitarium in New York City in 1942, following an illness of four months. She was laid to rest at Cypress Lawn Memorial Park in Colma, California.
Crews has a star at 6251 Hollywood Boulevard on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1915The Fighting HopeAnna GrangerFamous Players-Lasky / Paramount, Extant; incomplete, BFI London
1915BlackbirdsLeonie SobatskyFamous Players-Lasky / Paramount, Extant; Library of Congress

YearTitleRoleNotes
1929Charming SinnersMrs. Carr
1932New Morals for OldMrs. Thomas
1933Out All NightMrs. Jane Colgate
1933The Silver CordMrs. Phelps
1933I Loved You WednesdayDoc Mary Hanson
1933Blind AdventureLady Rockingham
1933Rafter RomanceElise
1933Ever in My HeartGrandma Caroline Archer
1933If I Were FreeDame Evers
1934The Age of InnocenceMrs. Welland
1934Lightning Strikes TwiceAunt Jane Madison
1934Behold My WifeMrs. Hubert Carter
1935EscapadeCountess
1935The Melody Lingers OnMother Superior
1936Her Master's VoiceAunt Minnie Stickney
1936CamillePrudence Duvernoy
1937The Road BackErnst's Aunt
1937ConfessionStella
1937AngelGrand Duchess Anna Dmitrievna
1938Dr. RhythmMrs. Minerva Twombling
1938The SistersFlora's Mother
1938Thanks for the MemoryMrs. Kent
1939Idiot's DelightMadame Zuleika
1939The Star MakerCarlotta Salvini
1939The Rains CameLily Hoggett-Egburry
1939RenoMrs. Gardner
1939Remember?Lettie Carruthers
1939Gone with the WindAunt Pittypat Hamilton
1939The Hunchback of Notre DameMinor Role
1940The Blue BirdMrs. Luxury
1940Girl from Avenue AMrs. Forrester
1940I'm Nobody's Sweetheart NowMrs. Lowell
1940Lady with Red HairMrs. Dudley
1941The Flame of New OrleansAuntie
1941One Foot in HeavenMrs. Preston Thurston
1941New York TownApple Annie final film role