Marjorie Main: "Good for a Lot of Laughs" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- By Sylvia Henricks In a day when proper little girls were more seen than heard, Mary [Image] Tomlinson mimicked others and recited in front of her family and friends. In an era when young women were likely to be embroidering pillowcases for their hope chests, she gave elocution lessons. When most people believed young women should confine their career choices to teaching or marriage, Tomlinson persuaded her father to let her join the Chautauqua circuit. Independent, ambitious, creative-she made her own decisions and followed her chosen way through life. It was a path that stressed perseverance, hard work, and a simple lifestyle. In Hollywood, where as Marjorie Main she became a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer star, she disdained the glamorous life, living in a rented apartment, doing her own housework, laundry, and cooking, and taking the bus to work at the studio. Although she eventually owned two cars, she frequently rode her bicycle to the store. Later in life she owned houses in Los Angeles, Palm Springs, and Idyllwild, California, but lived simply, with only a gardener for help, often working alongside him. She never drank or smoked. Fans today may remember Tomlinson most for her breezy portrayal in nine movies from 1949 to 1957 of raspy-voiced Ma Kettle, with her tumbledown hairdo, flock of children, and indolent husband. But Marjorie Main (Tomlinson's stage name) had a life before the Ma and Pa Kettle films. From her early twenties she had a career in repertory theater, stock companies, vaudeville, and on Broadway, where she played everything from bit parts to leading lady. Appearing in her first movie in 1931, she went on to star in eighty-five films. Along with supporting roles, she shared top billing with Wallace Beery as a comedy team and with Percy Kilbride in the Ma and Pa Kettle series. A skilled actress who took her work seriously, Main gave every role she played, large or small, her own interpretation. "Character actors are best, I believe," Main said, "when they portray characters that give them a chance to draw on their own experiences, backgrounds and observations. Imagine me trying to play a 'society woman!'" She read the script, discussed her part with the director, and obtained his permission to choose her own wardrobe, often a simple housedress. When queried about her distinctive walk, Main noted: "I got it from aggressive rural type women as a child in the Middle West. My dramatics teacher trained it out of me in college, but I put it right back when I got into pictures." Critics almost always praised her work, and a producer described her as having "saved many a bad picture and made the good ones better." Tomlinson was born in 1890 on the south edge of Acton, Indiana, a small town twelve miles southeast of Indianapolis, the second daughter of Samuel Joseph and Jennie McGaughey Tomlinson, both native Hoosiers. The baby girl was delivered by her maternal grandfather, Acton physician Samuel McGaughey. Legend has it she was born in a house her grandfather owned, a handsome two-story brick house on the east side of town. Tomlinson's birth certificate, however, indicates she was born in her parents' modest frame farmhouse (no longer standing) just over the county line in Clark Township, Johnson County. Her father, a Disciples of Christ minister, founded the Third Christian Church in Indianapolis before serving in a pastorate in Wabash where his health failed. He moved his family to the farm where his daughter was born. When Mary Tomlinson was three, the family moved back to Indianapolis, and her father became pastor of the Hillside Christian Church. Four years later her father was called to Goshen and then to Elkhart. In the early 1900s he took a church in Shelby County, and the family settled near Fairland, where Mary Tomlinson attended school. Her father thoroughly disapproved of the acting profession, but his daughter at a young age displayed dramatic skills in mimicry and recitations. She once told an interviewer she discovered the value of her "odd voice" as a schoolgirl. At her eighth-grade graduation, while reciting "The Light from over the Range"-a "blood and thunder cowboy piece"-her voice, Tomlinson said, "slipped up a couple of gears." The effect on the audience was so satisfactory that she used the voice again to win an oratorical contest at the Shelbyville Opera House. She continued to use the voice in her movie comedy roles. Tomlinson attended Franklin College in Franklin, Indiana, from 1905 to 1906. A charter member of what became Delta Delta Delta sorority, she appeared in at least one dramatic production. After her year at Franklin College, Tomlinson-although her father still firmly opposed a career for her on the stage-was allowed to attend the Hamilton School of Dramatic Expression in Lexington, Kentucky. She completed the three-year course in 1909. The next year she taught drama at Bourbon College in Paris, Kentucky. One account of her life says she was fired at the end of the year after demanding a raise. After leaving Kentucky, Tomlinson studied dramatic art in Chicago and New York. Her first opportunity for professional acting came when she was hired by a Shakespearean repertory company touring the Chautauqua circuit. She made her first appearance in 1913 at Riverside Park in Indianapolis, receiving eighteen dollars a week in pay, plus an extra two dollars for singing. She adopted a stage name about that time to avoid embarrassing her family. She chose Marjorie Main because it was "a name easy to remember." Five months of work for Main with a stock company in Fargo, North Dakota, was followed by a vaudeville circuit tour, a Broadway play starring John Barrymore, another New York play in 1918, in which she had the lead, and in the next few years several engagements at the Palace Theatre with comedian W. C. Fields in a popular skit The Family Ford. Soon after, she met her future husband, Dr. Stanley L. Krebs, a lecturer and psychologist. A widower with a grown daughter, Krebs had taught at American University in Washington, D.C. from 1907 to 1911. He and Main were married on 2 November 1921; she was thirty-one, he fifty-seven. For several years they traveled the country. As he lectured, Main attended to the details and handled his correspondence. She always considered these the happiest years of her life. At the end of a lecture tour, the couple returned to New York, and Main often found theater work. In the late 1920s the couple abandoned the lecture circuit and moved back to New York, where Main returned to the stage full time. In 1927 she played Mae West's mother in The Wicked Age, and in 1929 she traveled with a road show. Main made her film debut on 5 December 1931 in a movie titled A House Divided, which starred Walter Huston. She played a local townswoman. In her second movie, released a year later, she played a small-town gossip. Although these were small roles, they gave her an introduction to the movie business. Other roles followed, both on Broadway and in several films made in New York. Fox signed Main to re-create her role as a servant for the movie version of the popular play Music in the Air. The film opened at Radio City Music Hall on 13 December 1934. The movie proved to be not as successful as the Broadway play, and most of Main's role was cut. She returned to New York in early 1935 to be with her husband, who was ill with cancer. He died two years later. His death, she said, "was the low point of my life. I was broken-hearted and desperately needed work as much to occupy my mind as to make a living." She auditioned for and was given the role of Mrs. Martin, a gangster's mother, in the Broadway play Dead End. In one scene she curses her hoodlum son and strikes him in the face. "When he [Krebs] died," Main said, "I used to pour my sorrow on the audience night after night as the mother in Dead End." She played the role for 460 performances. A role as a cynical Reno hotel keeper in The Women followed. "She made her brief appearance in one act count," said Frank Parish in his book The Slapstick Queens, "building her characterization with a loping gait, strident voice, and a breezy stage comedy personality." MGM signed Main to appear in the film version of Dead End, re-creating her role as the mother of the gangster, Baby Face Martin, which was played by Humphrey Bogart. Once again her performance, which she acted with "flat-voiced hate," received critical praise. For the next few years Main appeared in numerous films for different studios. Among her roles were frequent appearances as the mother of one or another of the Dead End Kids, a prison matron, a curious landlady, the aunt in Romance of the Limberlost, an acid-voiced secretary, and a rental agent. She played Walter Pidgeon's mother in Dark Command, a film about Civil War bandit William Quantrill. In 1940 she was teamed with Wallace Beery, he as a renegade, she as the town blacksmith. As always she garnered good notices for her work. MGM believed that Main could take the place of Marie Dressler as Beery's costar and signed the Indiana native to a seven-year contract. At age fifty, rescued from freelancing, she felt she had finally arrived. In 1941 she appeared in six major films. With her rising fame as a movie star, Main soon had many fan clubs, with Indianapolis being home to the largest one. One of her fans was Roberta Fraley, who as a student at Franklin Township High School in the late 1930s had started keeping a scrapbook about her community. Fraley, who lived in Acton, also saved everything she saw about Marjorie Main. She, as well as everyone in Acton, was proud of the fact that a hometown girl had made it in Hollywood. Fraley had another reason to be interested in Main: in the early 1900s her father, Ralph Crisler, studied elocution with Miss Tomlinson in Shelbyville. Fraley became alarmed on 28 July 1941 when she read an Indianapolis Star article about the actress, then appearing with Wallace Beery in the film Barnacle Bill. The article carried the headline "Marjorie Main, Fairland's Gift to Movies." Fraley wrote the actress a letter asking, "Dear Miss Main . . . will you please let and [sic] Acton fan know whether you are from Acton or not?" Shortly after came the response, in Main's free-flowing longhand: "Your letter just received. Yes, I was born on a farm near Acton, my grandfather, Dr. Samuel McGauhey [sic] brought me into the world. He was a doctor who lived in Acton." The reassured Fraley continued to fill her scrapbooks with movie ads and with clippings about Main's career and visits back to Indiana to promote her movies, to sell bonds during World War II, and to visit her mother who lived on North College Avenue in Indianapolis. The movie The Egg and I began a new role for Main, one that changed her life and gave her more satisfaction than any other role she played. Her new character also assured her a place in the memories of movie fans of all ages. The 1947 movie was based on a popular novel by Betty MacDonald. Claudette Colbert and Fred MacMurray, playing newlyweds, buy a chicken farm in the Pacific Northwest. The couple's neighbors happen to be the Kettles, a poor family with a dilapidated farm and thirteen children. Main, as Ma Kettle, with her raucous voice, bird's nest hairdo, and aggressive ways, is as good-hearted as Pa Kettle (Percy Kilbride) is lazy. The movie became a big hit, grossing $5.5 million, and Main received an Academy Award nomination-the only one she ever received-for best supporting actress. Main had just begun her second seven-year contract with MGM when the studio loaned her to Universal to make The Egg and I. Realizing the appeal of the Ma and Pa Kettle characters, Universal decided to do a series. At first Main balked at the idea, but MGM, her contract holder, insisted. The success of the Kettle films helped save Universal from bankruptcy. Each film, shot in fewer than thirty days on Universal's back lot, cost less than $500,000. The series earned for the studio more than $35 million. Although the films made substantial profits, Main's MGM salary remained the same. At first she resented that she was not sharing in the huge earnings, but she began to enjoy doing the series, noting that Ma Kettle was her favorite character, "good for a lot of laughs, and I would rather make people laugh than anything else." Main continued to make other films, along with one yearly Ma and Pa Kettle film (Universal believed that one a year was all the market would bear). She and Percy Kilbride had great respect for one another. "Marjorie's too busy for temperament, her gusto and versatility are fascinating," Kilbride said of his costar. Main responded in kind, noting that Kilbride was "the best deadpan actor in the business, and a complete gentleman." One film historian, however, noted that behind the scenes each actor envied the other: "Marjorie was hurt that Kilbride's Universal contract gave him modest luxuries denied her; and Kilbride wished he had not become so type-cast and could get non-Kettle roles as Marjorie did," said Parish. Kilbride grew tired of his role, and after the seventh film in the series, Ma and Pa Kettle at Waikiki (1955), he retired. Not even an offer to star in a television version of the Kettles could sway him from his decision. Main enjoyed making the movies and continued her Ma Kettle role in the series's last two films The Kettles in the Ozarks (1956), filmed without a Pa Kettle, and The Kettles on Old McDonald's Farm (1957), with Parker Fennelly in the Pa Kettle role. By then the studio felt the series had run its course. Retired from moviemaking, Main lived in relative seclusion. She always dressed well, belonged to a lecture and luncheon club in Los Angeles, became interested in spiritualism, and believed that the Moral Re-Armament Movement was "the one hope for the world." Although she never returned to the Hoosier State after her mother's death in 1943, Main retained her affection for Indiana. Carlos Gray, a Shelby County businessman and farmer, visited her in California in 1967, calling by phone to make an appointment. "I got in, not because I was Carlos Gray, but because I was Mary Gray's grandson," he said. His grandmother and Main had been close friends in high school. The retired actress asked Gray many questions about the people she had known back in Acton, Fairland, and Boggstown. Main died at age eighty-five on 10 April 1975 and was buried at Forest Lawn Cemetery in Hollywood Hills beside her husband. He had originally been buried in Pennsylvania, but Main had his body moved to California so they could at last be together. Through the years Main's movies have retained their appeal for movie fans. Some of the earlier ones in which she appeared have become classics: Dead End (1937), Dark Command (1940), Shepherd of the Hills (1941), and Meet Me in St. Louis (1944). These and Friendly Persuasion (1956), the story of a family of Quakers in Indiana in 1862 starring Gary Cooper and Dorothy McGuire, often appear on television or are available on video. Her role as Ma Kettle, however, is far and away the favorite of film fans. In trying to explain the continued appeal of the Ma and Pa Kettle movies, one academic noted that the Kettle series provided more than just entertainment. In response to current discourse on "family values," Don B. Morlan, a University of Dayton professor of communications, used the series in a study, "Family Values and a Bridge to the Past: Ma and Pa Kettle Revisited," which he presented at a Popular Culture Association meeting in San Antonio, Texas, in March 1997. An admitted fan of the Ma and Pa Kettle movies, which he describes as "the most successful comedy film series in cinema history," Morlan showed how the Kettles met the criteria of a ten-point "Good Family" scale devised by journalist Jane Howard in her 1978 book Families. The values included having a "chief or heroine," and a "switchboard operator" (who keeps track of what is going on in the family). These good families "prize their rituals," "have a sense of place," and "find some way to connect with posterity." Good families also "are much to all their members, but everything to none." They are "hospitable," "affectionate," "honor their elders," and "deal squarely with direness." Anyone who has seen the Ma and Pa Kettle movies knows that Ma is the "heroine" and "switchboard operator." Mealtime is a Kettle "ritual" with no one eating before Pa's brief blessing is finished by a tip of his hat heavenward. The Kettle family has its "sense of place" in their ramshackle old homestead, although Pa did win his brood a new modern home in one film. The couple has an indisputable link to "posterity" with their (depending on the movie) thirteen to sixteen children. Ma and Pa Kettle or the older children can leave the family circle, return, and fit right in again. They are hospitable and affectionate, and they respect one another. Problems-at least those appropriate for a comedy series-are dealt with in a direct manner. According to Morlan, the Kettles score high on all criteria of Howard's "Good Family" scale. In her later years Main regretted that she never had any children. But, she added, "I had plenty of kids as Ma Kettle." Reminiscing about her role in the films, Main said that to her the character was real, "the kind of woman you feel you could go and visit in the country. And no hayseed. They tried to get that in, but I'd always say no." She attributed the success of her Ma Kettle character to the lessons learned from her Hoosier childhood: "I don't think I could have ever played the part . . . if I hadn't lived on a farm in Indiana." Sylvia C. Henricks is a freelance writer living in Indianapolis. She is interested in local history, antiques, and collectibles. Her article on Cobb Shinn appeared in the winter 1997 issue of Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History. [Image] [Image] Return to IHS Home Page or Traces