Shirley Booth (born August 30, 1898, New York, N.Y., U.S.—died October 16, 1992, North Chatham, Mass.) was an American actress who was equally deft in both dramatic and comedic roles and who was the recipient of three Tony Awards, two Emmy Awards, and an Oscar.
An amateur actress at age 12, Booth made her professional debut in a regional theater production of The Cat and the Canary (1923) and her Broadway debut two years later in Hell’s Bells (1925), a production that also featured the young Humphrey Bogart. She appeared in small roles on Broadway and in stock companies before scoring her first Broadway success with Three Men on a Horse (1935). Booth gradually developed a reputation as one of Broadway’s finest actresses and appeared in more than 40 plays during the following two decades, including Excursion (1937), The Philadelphia Story (1939), My Sister Eileen (1940), Tomorrow the World (1943), and Hollywood Pinafore (1945). She received her first Tony Award for Goodbye, My Fancy in 1949 and a second Tony the following year for one of her hallmark roles, that of the slovenly housewife Lola in William Inge’s Come Back, Little Sheba. She next delivered a highly praised performance in the musical version of A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1951) and won her final Tony Award two seasons later for Time of the Cuckoo (1953).
Booth’s motion picture career was limited to five films made between 1952 and 1958; two of them are notable. For her screen debut, she reprised the role of Lola in the screen adaptation of Come Back, Little Sheba (1952) and was awarded an Oscar for best actress. Her other memorable screen performance was as Dolly Levi in the film version of Thornton Wilder’s stage play The Matchmaker (1958), the play upon which the musical Hello, Dolly! was based. Though the film and Booth’s performance were well received, it was to be her final appearance on the big screen.
Booth achieved the height of her fame during the 1960s with her portrayal of the domineering but lovable housemaid Hazel Burke on the television situation comedy Hazel (1961–66). Critics complained that an actress of her skills had no business in such a lowly vehicle, yet the role succeeded in making Booth a household name and won for her two Emmy Awards. Upon cancellation of the series, she appeared in the role of Amanda Wingfield for a televised production of Tennessee Williams’s The Glass Menagerie (1966). She starred in another short-lived sitcom (A Touch of Grace, 1973) and, in her final performance before her retirement, provided the voice for Mrs. Santa Claus in the animated television special The Year Without a Santa Claus (1974).