Judy Holliday (born June 21, 1921, New York, New York, U.S.—died June 7, 1965, New York City) was an American actress noted for her distinctive voice and her warm, intelligent portrayal of funny and endearing “dumb blondes” onstage and in film.
Holliday’s father was a respected New York civic leader; her mother was a music teacher; and her uncle, Joseph Gollomb, was a writer. She took her stage name from the English translation of her family name, Tuvim, the Hebrew word for holiday. After working briefly as a switchboard operator for Orson Welles’s Mercury Theatre ensemble, she joined with several friends to form a comedy sketch troupe in 1939. Called the Revuers, the troupe (which included Betty Comden and Adolph Green) began performing at cafés and cabarets in New York City and later in Los Angeles and on radio. As a result of the Revuers’ success, Holliday signed a contract with Twentieth Century Fox and played bit parts in three feature films in the mid-1940s.
Obtaining a release from her movie contract, Holliday made her Broadway debut in Kiss Them for Me (1945), receiving praise for her supporting performance as a wistful prostitute. She was then cast as a last-minute replacement for ailing star Jean Arthur in Garson Kanin’s Born Yesterday and memorized the difficult role of dim-witted ex-chorine Billy Dawn in three days. The play was a hit, running on Broadway from February 1946 to December 1949, and Holliday’s portrayal of the New York chorus girl who outsmarts a crooked tycoon as easily as she beats him at gin rummy earned particular praise. Nevertheless, Harry Cohn, the head of Columbia Pictures, was reluctant to star the actress in his film version of the play. Kanin, Katharine Hepburn, and George Cukor rallied round, however, and showcased Holliday’s comic talent in a scene-stealing supporting part in their hit film Adam’s Rib (1949). Holliday’s hilarious performance as a wide-eyed bumbler on trial for shooting her unfaithful husband helped convince Cohn to sign her for Born Yesterday (1950). Recreating her stage role, she charmed audiences and won the Academy Award for best actress.
Holliday’s screen persona of a squeaky-voiced birdbrain proved beneficial when she was ordered to testify before the U.S. Senate subcommittee on internal security in 1952. Refusing to identify her friends and coworkers as communist sympathizers, Holliday—who reportedly had an IQ of 172—beguiled the committee by “playing dumb” and survived the ordeal with her career and integrity intact.
Holliday went on to make a handful of delightful film comedies, including The Marrying Kind (1952), The Solid Gold Cadillac (1956), and Full of Life (1956). She and Jack Lemmon formed a memorable comic partnership in Lemmon’s first two films, It Should Happen to You (1954) and Phffft! (1954). She returned to Broadway in November 1956, where her old colleagues Comden and Green had tailored for her the female lead in the musical Bells Are Ringing, for which she won the Tony Award for best actress in a musical. In her last film (1960), Holliday re-created her stage role in Bells Are Ringing. She starred in two more Broadway shows, Laurette (1960) and Hot Spot (1963)—both unsuccessful—before succumbing to cancer in 1965.