Katharine Cornell (born Feb. 16, 1893, Berlin, Ger.—died June 9, 1974, Vineyard Haven, Martha’s Vineyard, Mass., U.S.) was one of the most celebrated American stage actresses from the 1920s to the 1950s.
Cornell was the daughter of American parents who were in Berlin at the time of her birth. Later that year the family returned to Buffalo, New York. Her interest in the theatre came naturally—her father was an amateur actor and an associate in theatrical management of Jessie Bonstelle. Cornell wrote, directed, and appeared in several plays in school and then joined the Washington Square Players (1916–18) in New York City. She later worked with a touring stock company and in October 1919 received favourable attention for her portrayal of Jo in the first London production of Little Women. In March 1921 she made her Broadway debut in Rachel Crothers’s Nice People, and later in the year she won her first lead in Clemence Dane’s A Bill of Divorcement, vaulting into stardom with the role. Subsequently she appeared in Will Shakespeare (1923), George Bernard Shaw’s Candida (1924), and Michael Arlen’s The Green Hat (1925), among others. The Green Hat was directed by Guthrie McClintic, who was her husband from 1921 and thereafter the director of nearly all her plays.
After performances in Somerset Maugham’s The Letter (1927), The Age of Innocence (1928; an adaptation from Edith Wharton), and Dishonored Lady (1930), Cornell began managing her own productions and immediately scored a triumph in Rudolf Besier’s The Barretts of Wimpole Street (1931), in which she played Elizabeth Barrett Browning. After a long Broadway run she broke with theatrical practice by taking the production’s first-string cast on an extended and highly successful road tour (1933–34).
Celebrated for their excellence, her later productions included Thornton Wilder’s Lucrece (1932), Sidney Howard’s Alien Corn (1933), William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet (1934), Maxwell Anderson’s The Wingless Victory (1936), and Anton Chekhov’s The Three Sisters (1942). During World War II she entertained troops in Europe with The Barretts of Wimpole Street and in 1943 appeared in a movie, Stage Door Canteen. She returned to Broadway in 1946 with Antigone and a revival of Candida and followed with such others as Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra (1947), Maugham’s The Constant Wife (1951), and Jerome Kilty’s Dear Liar (1960). She also appeared on television in productions of The Barretts of Wimpole Street (1956) and There Shall Be No Night (1957).
During her 30 years of stardom Cornell was often called the first lady of the American theatre. Following the death of her husband in 1961 she retired from the stage. Her autobiography, I Wanted To Be an Actress, was published in 1939.