02.26.10 | Gary Cahall | Scene StealersPrint this Post
Tags: Character Actors, Una O Connor
She was Maid Marian's devoted lady-in-waiting. She survived encounters with the Invisible Man and the Frankenstein Monster. And she worked for the likes of Alfred Hitchcock, John Ford and Billy Wilder. She was rubber-faced character actress Una O'Connor, once dubbed the movies' "quintessential town biddy."
Born Agnes Teresa McGlade in Belfast, Ireland in 1880, she began her acting career at Dublin's Abbey Theatre, changing her name at the same time. O'Connor's diminutive frame, birdlike features and mannerisms, and cackling delivery served her well on the London stage, where Hitchcock would find her for his 1930 thriller, Murder! After appearing as the servant Mrs. Bridges on Broadway in Noel Coward's Cavalcade, she re-created the role for her Hollywood debut, in the film version that would go on to win 1933's Best Picture Academy Award.
O'Connor's comedic knack lightened up Universal's horror universe, where she played the landlady in The Invisible Man and a housekeeper in Bride of Frankenstein, while her performance as Wallace Ford's mother in The Informer, directed by John Ford, showed her dramatic range. Perhaps her best-known screen turn, though, was as Bess, the faithful servant of Olivia DeHavilland ("You're not going to harm my lamb, my honeysuckle") in The Adventures of Robin Hood, standing up defiantly to Errol Flynn's outlaw hero and getting some on-screen canoodling with Much the Miller's Son, played by her Cavalcade co-star Herbert Mundin.
A slew of roles as maids, washerwomen, landladies, and various viragos over the next 15 years followed, with O'Connor giving as good as she got opposite James Cagney in The Strawberry Blonde, Bing Crosby in The Bells of St. Mary's, Barbara Stanwyck in Christmas in Connecticut, and Flynn again in The Sea Hawk and The Adventures of Don Juan. Even though she was Irish, most of these films found her playing an Englishwoman, usually with a Cockney accent.
The 1950s saw O'Connor working mostly in TV dramas and the stage, with a key role as nearly deaf maid Janet McKenzie in the Broadway production of Agatha Christie's Witness for the Prosecution. She would return to Hollywood to reprise the part for Wilder in his 1957 filming of the whodunit, starring Charles Laughton and Marlene Dietrich. Sadly, it would prove to be O'Connor's final screen performance, as she died from a heart condition in New York in February, 1959.

IT IS SUCH A TREAT TO FIND OUT MORE INFORMATION ON THOSE WONDERFUL CHARACTER ACTORS OF AN EARLIER TIME. WE KNOW A GREAT DEAL ABOUT THE BIG STARS, BUT VERY RARELY DO WE LEARN ANYTHING ABOUT ACTORS LIKE O'CONNOR. THEY ALWAYS PROVIDED THE SPICE THAT ENHANCED OLDER MOVIES. THANK YOU.
Love her in THE INVISIBLE MAN and WITNESS FOR THE PROSECUTION, but, frankly, there's just a bit too much of her in BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN.
Adventues Of Robin Hood
Bells Of St Marys
i luv Una my dad dated her for a period of time...
she was a sweet thing
I first saw Una in "Cavalcade" when I was seven years old and have a DVD of this film which I compared my first veeiwng at the Picture house in Ipswich with the DVD and still the magic was there. The most dramatic moment still remain where the couple walk away from the lifebelt stating "Titanic". The wholle cinema audience gasped at this scene, as they would in those days.
Oh, she was great! In "Christmas in Connecticut," she chewed up some scenery! My favorite line of hers ("I've never flipped in me life, and I'm not about to start flippin' now for nobody!") kills me every time!! She was 3 hankie-worthy in "The Informer." A treat in every film she was in, as far as I'm concerned.
I loved Una O'Connor's maid in "The Barretts Of Wimpole Street"!
I love when she says in that high-pitched voice, "We're all gonna die in our beds!" Cracks
me up every time.
I second the comments of Frank DeCavalcante. I love the character actors, who made most of the films they appeared in even more memorable. Una O'Connor certainly was one of the best of them.
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