Thanks to the strenous efforts of her mother, a former dancer, American child actress Margaret O'Brien won her first film role at age four in the Mickey Rooney-Judy Garland musical Babes on Broadway (1941). MGM was so impressed by the child's expressiveness and emotional range that she was given the title role in the wartime morale-booster Journey For Margaret (1942). She was so camera-savvy by the time she appeared in Dr. Gillespie's Criminal Case (1943) that the film's star Lionel Barrymore declared that had this been the Middle Ages, O'Brien would have been burned at the stake! Some of her coworkers may secretly have wished that fate on O'Brien, since she reportedly flaunted her celebrity on the set, ostensibly at the encouragement of her parents. Famed for her crying scenes, O'Brien really let the faucets flow in her best film, Meet Me in St. Louis (1944), in which her character also predated Wednesday Addams by two decades with a marked fascination for death and funerals. In 1944, O'Brien was given a special Academy Award, principally for work in Meet Me in St. Louis. As she grew, her charm faded; by 1951's Her First Romance, she was just one of a multitude of Hollywood teen ingenues. A comeback attempt in the 1956 film Glory was servicable, but the film was badly handled by its distributor RKO Radio and failed to re-establish the actress. A more fruitful role awaited her in a 1958 TV musical version of Little Women, in which O'Brien played Beth, the same role she'd essayed in the 1949 film version. In 1960, O'Brien had a strong supporting part in the period picture Heller in Pink Tights (1960), ironically playing a onetime child actress whose stage mother is trying to keep her in "kid" roles. In between summer theatre productions, O'Brien would resurface every so often in another TV show, reviewers would welcome her back, and then she'd be forgotten until the next part. The actress gained a great deal of weight in the late 1960s, turning this debility into an asset when she appeared in a "Marcus Welby MD" TV episode (starring her Journey For Margaret costar Robert Young) in which she played a woman susceptible to quack diet doctors. A bit thinner, and with eyes as wide and expressive as ever, O'Brien has recently appeared in a handful of episodes of "Murder She Wrote," that evergreen refuge for MGM luminaries of the past.
| Title | Year | Editors' Rating | User Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Hollywood Mortuary
Actor |
1998 | |||
| 1997 | ||||
|
The Hollywood Collection: The Story of Lassie
Interviewee |
1994 | |||
| 1991 | ||||
|
Amy
Actor |
1981 | |||
|
Testimony of Two Men
Actor |
1977 | |||
|
Death in Space
Actor |
1974 | |||
|
Annabelle Lee
Actor |
1972 | |||
|
Diabolic Wedding
Actor |
1972 | |||
| 1970 | ||||
| 1968 | ||||
| 1968 | ||||
|
Combat!: Entombed
Actor |
1966 | |||
| 1963 | ||||
|
Heller in Pink Tights
Actor |
1960 | |||
|
Little Women
Performance |
1958 | |||
|
Glory
Actor |
1956 | |||
| 1955 | ||||
|
Her First Romance
Actor |
1951 | |||
|
Little Women
Actor |
1949 | |||
|
The Secret Garden
Actor |
1949 | |||
|
Tenth Avenue Angel
Actor |
1948 | |||
|
The Big City
Actor |
1948 | |||
|
The Unfinished Dance
Actor |
1947 | |||
|
Bad Bascomb
Actor |
1946 | |||
|
Three Wise Fools
Actor |
1946 | |||
| 1945 | ||||
|
Jane Eyre
Actor |
1944 | |||
|
Lost Angel
Actor |
1944 | |||
|
Meet Me in St. Louis
Actor |
1944 | |||
|
Music for Millions
Actor |
1944 | |||
|
The Canterville Ghost
Actor |
1944 | |||
| 1943 | ||||
|
Madame Curie
Actor |
1943 | |||
|
Thousands Cheer
Actor |
1943 | |||
|
You, John Jones
Actor |
1943 | |||
|
Journey for Margaret
Actor |
1942 | |||
|
Babes on Broadway
Actor |
1941 |
/_derived_jpg_q90_250x250_m0/00431010.jpg?partner=allrovi.com)


/_derived_jpg_q90_250x250_m0/Big%20City.jpg?partner=allrovi.com)



/_derived_jpg_q90_100x100_m0/Big%20City.jpg?partner=allrovi.com)








