Edith Fellows(1923-2011)
- Actress
- Soundtrack
Edith Fellows was born on May 20, 1923, in Boston, Massachusetts. When
she was a year old, she and her father and grandmother moved to
Charlotte, North Carolina. As a toddler, Edith was pigeon-toed and had
trouble walking, and one doctor suggested that dance lessons might cure
this condition. At age four, Edith entered Henderson's School of Dance,
where she was spotted by a man claiming to be a talent scout, who told
her grandmother that he could get Edith into show business for a
fifty-dollar fee. The dance school raised the money, but when Edith and
her grandmother arrived in Hollywood, they discovered that the address
the man had given them did not exist, and they realized he was a fraud.
Stranded in Hollywood with no means to return to North Carolina,
Edith's grandmother began doing housework to earn a living. While she
worked, she left Edith with a neighbor and her young son. One day Edith
was taken along when the neighbor's son had an audition for the film
Movie Night (1929), and she ended up
getting the part. Although she never become a child star, Edith
appeared in many popular films of the 1930s, most notably
Pennies from Heaven (1936).
She also proved herself to be a very versatile actress, playing roles
ranging from a spoiled rich girl, as in
Heart of the Rio Grande (1942),
to a poor orphan girl, as in Pennies from Heaven. Edith was even given
her own series, The Five Little Peppers, while under contract to
Columbia, and she made four of the Pepper films (the first was
Five Little Peppers and How They Grew (1939))
in two years. Between 1929 and 1954, Edith appeared in some fifty
films, mostly in juvenile roles due to her short 4' 10" stature. But her
career suddenly slowed down in the mid-1950s. Between 1955 and 1980,
she appeared in only one film,
Lilith (1964), in which she had a bit
part. During this time, Edith chose to focus on her family life; she
had married producer Freddie Fields in
1946, and their only child, daughter Kathy, was born in 1947. But Edith
and Fields divorced in 1955, and the end of her marriage, coupled with
other factors, caused Edith to have a nervous breakdown. She recovered,
and in 1981, she returned to acting in numerous supporting roles on
television. In 1985, fellow former child actor
Jackie Cooper announced plans to
make a TV movie based on Edith's life, but this project never happened.