Best known for her portrayal
of Ma Kettle in the Ma & Pa Kettle
series of movies, Marjorie Main was born in Acton, Indiana, on February 24,
1890. Her father was a minister who did not approve of dramatics as a form of
entertainment. She briefly attended college in Indiana but left to attend drama
school. Upon graduation, she taught dramatics for a year but eventually went
into vaudeville in the 1910s. She married Dr. Stanley Krebs in 1921 and more or
less gave up performing for several years. When Krebs, who was about 25 years
older than Main, retired to New York later in the 1920s, she then resumed
acting, this time on Broadway. Her film career began with small roles in the
early 1930s. But with the death of her husband in 1935, Main threw herself into
her work. She never remarried and had no children.
From 1936 through 1957, Main
acted in more than 100 pictures, tackling comedy and drama with ease. She took
on a variety of supporting roles in big-budget films, and she was often a star
attraction in many of the B movies she made, such as the Ma and Pa Kettle series
produced by Universal. She appeared in Dead End in 1937 with Humphrey Bogart, The Women in 1939 with Joan Crawford, and The Harvey Girls in 1945 with Judy Garland. Her most famous role is
that of Ma Kettle, which she first played in 1947’s The Egg and I starring Fred MacMurray and Claudette Colbert. She
was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for
the part and went on to play the character in 9 more Ma and Pa Kettle films for Universal.
By the early 1950s she had
appeared in a majority of the MGM musicals including Meet Me in St. Louis, The Belle of New York, and It’s a Big Country. With the release of
The Kettles on Old MacDonald’s Farm
in 1957, Marjorie Main retired from films but continued to make a few
television appearances in the late 1950s. In 1958 she made two appearances on Wagon Train and in 1964 she appeared on
an episode of Perry Mason.
In 1974, a year before her
death, Marjorie Main attended the Los Angeles premiere of the MGM compilation
film That’s Entertainment. It was her
first public appearance since she retired from films in 1958. At the
post-premiere party, she was greeted with cheers of enthusiasm from the crowd
of spectators. Marjorie Main passed away from lung cancer on April 10, 1975, in
Los Angeles, California at the age of 85. She is buried at Forest Lawn Memorial
Park in Hollywood Hills, California.