Catherine Doucet(1875-1958)
- Actress
American character actress from the theatre, former school teacher. On
the New York stage since 1906 with
'Brown of Harvard', co-starring
Laura Hope Crews.
She acted under her maiden name Catherine Calhoun until 1920, then
adopted the surname of her husband, the actor
Paul Doucet, appearing almost
exclusively in comedy. Her major successes included 'Miss Lulu Bett'
(1920-21) and
'The Potters' (1923-24) as Ma
Potter. Catherine Doucet made just a handful of films before the
mid-1930's, only coming to the fore as Martha Dobie's (played by Miriam Hopkins)
selfish aunt Lily Mortar in
These Three (1936), based on
Lillian Hellman's play
'The Children's Hour'. Film critic Frank S. Nugent
described her performance as 'flawless'. For the rest of her career,
Catherine portrayed a variety of indomitable matrons and society
ladies. She gave excellent comic support in both stage and screen
versions of
'As Husbands Go' and made a memorable foil to W.C. Fields
in Poppy (1936).