Katharine Irving(1907-1994)
- Actress
Katharine Irving was born into a theatre family in New York City, New
York. Her mother, Mary Katharine Gilman, left Stanford University in
1903 to begin her professional acting career, perhaps most notably as
the female lead in George Ade's "Just Out of College," which ran for
three years, on through her 1906 performances at New York's Lyceum
Theatre. While touring with Ade's production, Gilman met Irving's
father, who would become the distinguished character actor George Henry
Irving. After high school graduation, Irving followed her family to Los
Angeles, where they now worked in the the motion picture industry. In
Hollywood, Irving signed a 1929 contract with MGM, where she worked
steadily with her sister, Dorothy, and often crossed paths with her
father, as in such movies as the Academy Award-winning "The Divoree."
She also had a small part in one of Garbo's silent films, "The Single
Standard." Katharine Irving ended her contract with MGM to marry and
move to Minneapolis, Minnesota with Stanford Business School graduate Clifford
H. Anderson, to whom she was happily married until her death in 1994,
and with whom she raised three sons.