Julie Anne Harris Net Worth
Julie Anne Harris Net Worth is
$1.1 Million
Julie Anne Harris Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018
One of the finest classical and contemporary leading ladies ever to grace the 20th century American stage, five-time Tony Award winner Julie Harris was rather remote and reserved on camera, finding her true glow in front of the theatre lights. The freckled, red-haired actress not only was nominated for a whopping total of ten Tony awards and was a... Full Name | Julie Harris |
Date Of Birth | December 2, 1925 |
Died | 2013-08-24 |
Place Of Birth | Grosse Pointe, Michigan, United States |
Height | 5' 3" (1.6 m) |
Profession | Actress, Soundtrack |
Education | Yale University |
Nationality | American |
Spouse | Walter Carroll |
Children | Peter Gurian |
Parents | William Pickett Harris, Elsie L. Harris |
Awards | Tony Award for Best Lead Actress in a Play, Kennedy Center Honors, Special Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement, Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album, Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Voice-Over Performance, Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Single Performance by an Actress in a Leading Rol... |
Nominations | Academy Award for Best Actress, Tony Award for Best Lead Actress in a Musical, Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or a Movie, Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series, BAFTA Award for Best Foreign Actress, Drama Desk Award for... |
Movies | East of Eden, The Haunting, Reflections in a Golden Eye, Gorillas in the Mist, Requiem for a Heavyweight, Harper, Housesitter, The Hiding Place, The Dark Half, The Member of the Wedding, You're a Big Boy Now, How Awful About Allan, The Truth About Women, I Am a Camera, Not for Ourselves Alone: The S... |
TV Shows | Knots Landing, The Civil War, DuPont Show of the Month, Backstairs at the White House, Hallmark Hall of Fame, Scarlett, Thicker than Water, The Family Holvak |
Star Sign | Sagittarius |
# | Trademark |
---|---|
1 | Deep sultry voice. |
2 | Red hair |
3 | Slim, delicate image |
Title | Salary |
---|---|
Knots Landing (1979) | $20,000 per episode |
# | Quote |
---|---|
1 | If I had a bosom I could rule the world. |
2 | Some people asked me, 'Why do you have to cry so much in [stage play] 'The Last of Mrs. Lincoln?' My answer was that she was always crying. She couldn't speak of her children who died, without crying. And after the assassination, her whole life was gone. She clung to the pain. As actors, that's what we deal with. My mother used to say to me, 'But you're so dramatic.' Yes, I'd say, that's what I'm supposed to be. Life is dramatic, all the time, much more than on stage. |
3 | I love biographies. I get very excited by the truth that comes out of what people have left behind, like letters. I first fell in love with Emily Dickinson when I read her letters. It's like listening to someone's heart. |
4 | Acting is always an adventure, and a struggle, and a quest to find the truth...It's wanting to do it right, that's where the fear comes in, but who can say what's right? We're very delicate creatures, aren't we? |
5 | Pictures make me look like a twelve-year-old boy who flunked his body-building course. |
6 | [In 2006]: 'The Stage!' I knew it was where I wanted to be, I loved it all. It became this great source of nourishment, spiritual nourishment, for me. I want to touch people with the meaning of life. What is thrilling about the theater is that it's a forum where people come and for those two or three hours belong to something, to ideas, to a feeling of being a member of the human race. |
7 | [In 1981]: I think life is translated. We're always in a state of change. Acting is more translated than a lot of things. Theater is about what we are. We need it to express ourselves. |
8 | [on her Nanny character]: I cry all the time, and laugh, too. |
9 | [on the death of Marlon Brando]: He didn't love acting, but his gift was so great he couldn't defile it. |
10 | [In 1974 about her religion]: I was sent to Sunday School in the Episcopal Church and I was confirmed in the Episcopal Church, and never went back. If it tells the truth about life and the human heart, if it speaks of men's failings and also their grandeur and hope, then it is religious. |
11 | [In 1976 when she remembered the Emily Dickinson poetry]: Seventeen years ago I did a recording of her poetry, and then I started to read. |
12 | I always thought it would be wonderful to wake up in the morning and look like Brigitte Bardot. |
13 | [About living in a hotel]: It's very pleasant, there is no housework. I remain unmarried, although I don't always live alone. |
14 | [on the list of awards she has won over the years]: It's wonderful. I have worked on that stage a lot of times, on that wonderful stage in the Kennedy theater there. |
15 | [on her professional friendship with Ruby Dee]: Ruby just lost her husband, well, it's a mystery of life. But Ruby is just so beautiful. She's just wonderful. We had a good time doing the movie. |
16 | If Sally Bowles had ever been Liza Minnelli, she would have set Berlin on its ear. |
17 | [About her friendship with James Dean in 1991]: I wasn't attracted to him, I loved Jimmy's spirit, but I didn't want to 'make' him. We were comrades. |
18 | [About actresses successfully blending their career and their family]: It mixes very well if you have a balance about it. It was just at the time when I had a family, I wasn't balanced about it. I was rigid about how it should be and you can't be rigid about anything. I was brought up to think there was a proper place for everything. I thought then that you shouldn't nurse a baby in the theater. Well, now I think, why not? Everything is proper as long as it's congenial. Nowadays, the young women are much more relaxed about that. Look at Sissy Spacek and Meryl Streep. |
19 | [on the late James Dean]: And he took me for a ride that I thought would be my last, up in the Hollywood hills and so fast that my heart was in my throat, but instead of saying to him, 'Slow down, Jimmy,' I didn't say anything. I was, like, 'Whe-e-e-e-e.' As long as I didn't say, 'Hey, don't go so fast,' I was a comrade. And after that we just always got on. He knew I was in his corner. |
# | Fact |
---|---|
1 | She was awarded the 1980 Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award for Distinguished Performance in a Play for "On Golden Pond" at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles, California. |
2 | Had never retired from acting. |
3 | She was known to be a very private person. |
4 | Studied for a year at the New York Drama School before becoming one of the first members of Lee Strasberg's Actor's Studio. |
5 | The daughter of investment broker William Pickett Harris. |
6 | Her parents sent her to a finishing school in Providence, Rhode Island, before she persuaded them to let her transfer to a girl's prep school in Manhattan then known as Miss Hewitt's Classes, which offered drama. Harris also attended a summer acting camp in Steamboat Springs, Colorado, where she was mentored by Charlotte Perry, who encouraged her to attend the Yale School of Drama, which she did for a year. |
7 | As a young girl, Harris says she saw Gone with the Wind (1939) 13 times and also read biographies of great actresses. |
8 | In 1950, she made her mark on the stage at age 24 playing 12-year-old Frankie Addams in Carson McCullers's adaptation of her own novel 'The Member of the Wedding'. She then reprised the role in the 1952 screen version with the same title. |
9 | 'Acting is my life', she announced early on to her high school drama teacher, and later in her career, director and critic Harold Clurman seemed to confirm this when he described Harris as 'totally designed to be a good instrument on the stage'. |
10 | Friends with: Angela Lansbury, Norman Lloyd, Shirley MacLaine, Jo Anne Worley, Barbara Bel Geddes, Larry Hagman, Michele Lee, Charles Nelson Reilly, Charles Durning, June Havoc, Patricia Neal, Christopher Plummer, Derek Jacobi, Arthur Miller, Adam Arkin, Lee Grant, Joyce Van Patten, Joel Grey, Liza Minnelli, Steven Hill, Shelley Winters, Philip Bosco, Jason Robards, Anne Jeffreys, Piper Laurie, Ruby Dee, Nanette Fabray, Barbara Barrie, Marlon Brando, Gena Rowlands , James Dean, Jack Lemmon, Ken Burns, Stephen Root, Irene Worth, Cherry Jones, Calista Flockhart, Eli Wallach, Tony Randall, Kevin Spacey, Robert Brustein, Robert Redford, Tyne Daly, Mary-Louise Parker, Alec Baldwin, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Mickey Rooney, Lauren Bacall, Rex Harrison, James Mason, Carson McCullers, Ethel Waters, Clint Eastwood, William Shatner, Sally Field, Celeste Holm, Dana Ivey, Hal Holbrook, Barbara Barrie, Cicely Tyson, Nora Ephron, Joan Van Ark, Zoe Caldwell, Roberta Maxwell, David Merrick, Rosemary Harris, Roddy McDowall and Leonard Nimoy. |
11 | Her future Knots Landing (1979), co-star, Joan Van Ark, had interviewed as a student reporter, when she was fifteen years old. Harris later recommended Van Ark to attend the Yale School of Drama. Harris is the youngest student ever to attend the college on a scholarship. |
12 | Won a 2002 Special Tony Award (New York City) lifetime achievement award. |
13 | First directed by Tony Abatemarco in Lucifer's Child (1995) on Broadway, for which she received a Tony nomination. |
14 | Son, Peter Alston Gurian (born 1955), with her second husband, Manning Gurian. |
15 | Daughter of investment banker William Pickett Harris and nurse Elsie Stivers Smith. |
16 | She was awarded the American National Medal of the Arts in 1994 by the National Endowment of the Arts in Washington D.C. |
17 | Recipient of the 2005 Kennedy Center Honors. Other recipients were Robert Redford, Tina Turner, Tony Bennett, and Suzanne Farrell. |
18 | Julie Harris is the most honored performer in Tony history with ten nominations and five victories. She won the award as Best Actress (Dramatic) for "I Am A Camera" (1952), "The Lark" (1956), "Forty Carats" (1969), and "The Last of Mrs. Lincoln" (1973); and as Best Actress (Play) for "The Belle of Amherst" (1977). Her five additional nominations were: for Best Actress (dramatic), "Marathon '33" (1964) and "The Au Pair Man" (1974); for Best Actress (musical), "Skyscraper" (1966); and for Best Actress (play), "Lucifer's Child" (1991), and "The Gin Game" (1997). |
19 | Elia Kazan, in his autobiography "A Life," said that he was grateful to have Harris on the set of East of Eden (1955) because she had a calming influence on James Dean. Kazan praised Harris as both an actress and as a human being. |
20 | In May 2002, she and producer Robert Whitehead were both named recipients of Special Tony awards for Lifetime Achievement in the Theater. It was Harris's sixth Tony award. |
21 | Suffered a stroke. [May 2001] |
22 | Fell backstage in Stamford, Connecticut, USA, requiring surgery to drain fluid from her head. [April 1999] |
Actress
Title | Year | Status | Character |
---|---|---|---|
The Lightkeepers | 2009 | Mrs. Deacon | |
The Golden Boys | 2008 | Melodeon Player | |
The Way Back Home | 2006 | Jo McMillen | |
The First of May | 1999 | Carlotta | |
Love Is Strange | 1999 | TV Movie | Sylvia McClain |
The Outer Limits | 1998 | TV Series | Hera |
Passage to Paradise | 1998 | Martha McGraw | |
Ellen Foster | 1997 | TV Movie | Leonora Nelson |
Bad Manners | 1997 | Professor Harper | |
The Christmas Tree | 1996 | TV Movie | Sister Anthony |
Little Surprises | 1996 | TV Short | Ethel |
Carried Away | 1996 | Joseph's Mother | |
Lucifer's Child | 1995 | TV Movie | Isak Dinesen |
Secrets | 1995 | TV Movie | Caroline Phelan |
One Christmas | 1994 | TV Movie | Sook |
Scarlett | 1994 | TV Mini-Series | Eleanor Butler |
When Love Kills: The Seduction of John Hearn | 1993 | TV Movie | Alice Hearn |
The Dark Half | 1993 | Reggie Delesseps | |
They've Taken Our Children: The Chowchilla Kidnapping | 1993 | TV Movie | Odessa Ray |
HouseSitter | 1992 | Edna Davis | |
The Civil War | 1990 | TV Mini-Series documentary | Mary Chestnut |
Single Women Married Men | 1989 | TV Movie | Lucille Frankyl |
The Christmas Wife | 1988 | TV Movie | Iris |
Too Good to Be True | 1988 | TV Movie | Margaret Berent |
Gorillas in the Mist | 1988 | Roz Carr | |
The Woman He Loved | 1988 | TV Movie | Alice |
Knots Landing | 1980-1987 | TV Series | Lilimae Clements Lilliemae Clements |
The Love Boat | 1987 | TV Series | Irene Culver |
Nutcracker | 1986 | Clara's Voice (voice) | |
Family Ties | 1986 | TV Series | Margaret |
Annihilator | 1986 | TV Movie | Girl |
Crimewave | 1985 | uncredited | |
Gifts of Greatness | 1985 | Video | |
Brontë | 1983 | Charlotte Bronte | |
The Gift | 1979 | TV Movie | Anne Devlin |
Tales of the Unexpected | 1979 | TV Series | Mrs. Foster / Mrs. Bixby |
The Bell Jar | 1979 | Mrs. Greenwood | |
Backstairs at the White House | 1979 | TV Mini-Series | Mrs. Helen 'Nellie' Taft |
Stubby Pringle's Christmas | 1978 | TV Movie | Georgia Henderson |
The Belle of Amherst | 1976 | TV Movie | Emily Dickinson |
Voyage of the Damned | 1976 | Alice Fienchild | |
The Last of Mrs. Lincoln | 1976 | TV Movie | Mary Todd Lincoln |
The Family Holvak | 1975 | TV Series | Elizabeth Holvak |
The Hiding Place | 1975 | Betsie ten Boom | |
The Greatest Gift | 1974 | TV Movie | Elizabeth Holvak |
The Evil Touch | 1973 | TV Series | Jenny / Aunt Carrie |
Hawkins | 1973 | TV Series | Janet Hubbard |
Columbo | 1973 | TV Series | Karen Fielding |
Medical Center | 1973 | TV Series | Helen |
Thicker Than Water | 1973 | TV Series | Nellie Paine |
Home for the Holidays | 1972 | TV Movie | Elizabeth Hall Morgan |
The Virginian | 1971 | TV Series | Jenny |
How Awful About Allan | 1970 | TV Movie | Katherine |
The Name of the Game | 1969-1970 | TV Series | Ruth 'Doc' Harmon / Verna Ward |
The People Next Door | 1970 | Gerrie Mason | |
House on Greenapple Road | 1970 | TV Movie | Leona Miller |
Journey to Midnight | 1968 | Leona Gillings (episode "The Indian Spirit Guide") | |
The Big Valley | 1968 | TV Series | Jennie Hall |
Journey to the Unknown | 1968 | TV Series | Leona Gillings |
The Split | 1968 | Gladys | |
Bonanza | 1968 | TV Series | Sarah Carter |
Daniel Boone | 1968 | TV Series | Faith |
Tarzan | 1967-1968 | TV Series | Charity Jones |
Run for Your Life | 1968 | TV Series | Lucrece Lawrence |
Garrison's Gorillas | 1968 | TV Series | Therese Donet |
Reflections in a Golden Eye | 1967 | Alison Langdon | |
Anastasia | 1967/II | TV Movie | Anastasia |
You're a Big Boy Now | 1966 | Miss Thing | |
Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre | 1966 | TV Series | Isobel Cain / Vicky Cain |
Harper | 1966 | Betty Fraley | |
Laredo | 1965 | TV Series | Annamay |
Rawhide | 1965 | TV Series | Emma Teall |
The Holy Terror | 1965 | TV Movie | Florence Nightingale |
Hamlet | 1964/II | Ophelia | |
Kraft Suspense Theatre | 1964 | TV Series | Lucy Bram |
Little Moon of Alban | 1964 | TV Movie | Brigid Mary |
The Haunting | 1963 | Eleanor Lance | |
Pygmalion | 1963 | TV Movie | Eliza Doolittle |
Requiem for a Heavyweight | 1962 | Grace Miller | |
Victoria Regina | 1961 | TV Movie | Queen Victoria |
The Power and the Glory | 1961 | TV Movie | Maria (Priest's Mistress) |
The DuPont Show of the Month | 1960-1961 | TV Series | Julia / Mattie Silver |
The Heiress | 1961 | TV Movie | Catherine Sloper |
Play of the Week | 1961 | TV Series | |
Sunday Showcase | 1960 | TV Series | Francesca |
A Doll's House | 1959 | TV Movie | Nora Helmer |
The Poacher's Daughter | 1958 | Sally Hamil | |
Johnny Belinda | 1958 | TV Movie | Belinda |
Little Moon of Alban | 1958 | TV Movie | Brigid Mary |
The Truth About Women | 1957 | Helen Cooper | |
The Lark | 1957 | TV Movie | Joan of Arc |
The Good Fairy | 1956 | TV Movie | Lu |
The United States Steel Hour | 1955 | TV Series | Shevawn |
I Am a Camera | 1955 | Sally Bowles | |
East of Eden | 1955 | Abra | |
Goodyear Playhouse | 1951-1953 | TV Series | |
The Member of the Wedding | 1952 | Frankie Addams | |
Starlight Theatre | 1951 | TV Series | Bernice |
Actor's Studio | 1948-1949 | TV Series |
Soundtrack
Title | Year | Status | Character |
---|---|---|---|
Harper | 1966 | performer: "Livin' Alone" | |
The Member of the Wedding | 1952 | performer: "His Eye Is on the Sparrow" - uncredited |
Self
Title | Year | Status | Character |
---|---|---|---|
Broadway: Beyond the Golden Age | 2017 | Documentary post-production | Herself |
Greenwich Village: The Times They Are a-Changin' | 2016 | Short | Herself |
The Kennedy Center Honors: A Celebration of the Performing Arts | 2005 | TV Special | Herself - Honoree |
Knots Landing Reunion: Together Again | 2005 | TV Movie documentary | Herself / Lilimae Clements |
East of Eden: Art in Search of Life | 2005 | Video documentary short | Herself / Abra |
Character Studies | 2005 | TV Series | Herself |
Independent Lens | 2003 | TV Series documentary | Herself |
Broadway: The Golden Age, by the Legends Who Were There | 2003 | Documentary | Herself |
Loaded Gun: Life and Death and Dickinson | 2002 | Documentary | Herself |
Working in the Theatre | 2002 | TV Series documentary | Herself |
The 56th Annual Tony Awards | 2002 | TV Special | Herself - Winner: Lifetime Achievement Award |
Broadway Legends | 2002 | TV Movie documentary | Herself |
Grow Old Along with Me | 1999 | TV Movie documentary | Herself - Host |
Not for Ourselves Alone: The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. Anthony | 1999 | TV Series documentary | Susan B. Anthony |
Frank Lloyd Wright | 1998 | Documentary voice | |
Walter Matthau: Diamond in the Rough | 1997 | TV Movie documentary | Herself |
The Rosie O'Donnell Show | 1997 | TV Series | Herself - Guest |
James Dean: A Portrait | 1996 | TV Movie documentary | Herself |
Ruth Orkin: Frames of Life | 1996 | Documentary short | Narrator |
The West | 1996 | TV Series documentary | |
Baseball | 1994 | TV Mini-Series documentary | Various |
The 47th Annual Tony Awards | 1993 | TV Special | Herself - Presenter: Best Revival |
The Knots Landing Block Party | 1993 | TV Special documentary | Herself / Lilimae Clements |
Natives of the Narrowland | 1992 | Video documentary short | Herself |
The 45th Annual Tony Awards | 1991 | TV Special | Herself - Nominee: Best Leading Actress in a Play |
Anthony Quinn: An Original | 1990 | TV Movie documentary | Herself |
Madeleine L'Engle: Star Gazer | 1990 | Documentary short | Narrator |
Isadora Duncan: Movement from the Soul | 1989 | Documentary | Isadora Duncan (voice) |
The Congress | 1988 | TV Movie documentary voice | |
Forever James Dean | 1988 | Documentary | Herself |
The Annual ACLU Honors: A Salute to Michael Douglas | 1987 | TV Movie | Herself |
NBC 60th Anniversary Celebration | 1986 | TV Special documentary | Herself |
The 39th Annual Tony Awards | 1985 | TV Special | Herself - Presenter: Best Play |
Night of 100 Stars II | 1985 | TV Movie | Herself |
The 34th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards | 1982 | TV Special | Herself - Nominated: Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series and Presenter |
Night of 100 Stars | 1982 | TV Special | Herself |
Brooklyn Bridge | 1981 | Documentary | Emily Roebling (voice) |
The 35th Annual Tony Awards | 1981 | TV Special | Herself - Presenter: Best Actress in a Musical |
Today | 1965-1981 | TV Series | Herself - Guest |
The 32nd Annual Tony Awards | 1978 | TV Special | Herself - Presenter: Best Actress in a Play |
The Annual Theatre World Awards | 1976 | TV Special | Herself - Presenter |
Match Game 73 | 1975 | TV Series | Herself - Panelist |
Match Game PM | 1975 | TV Series | Herself - Panelist |
The 28th Annual Tony Awards | 1974 | TV Special | Herself |
Broadway | 1973 | TV Movie | Herself |
The 27th Annual Tony Awards | 1973 | TV Special | Herself - Winner |
The Mike Douglas Show | 1972 | TV Series | Herself - Actress |
The David Frost Show | 1969 | TV Series | Herself - Guest |
The Joan Rivers Show | 1969 | TV Series | Herself - Guest |
The Dick Cavett Show | 1969 | TV Series | Herself |
The 23rd Annual Tony Awards | 1969 | TV Special | Herself - Winner: Best Actress in a Play |
The Joey Bishop Show | 1968 | TV Series | Herself - Guest |
Call My Bluff | 1968 | TV Series | Herself |
Girl Talk | 1966-1967 | TV Series | Herself |
The Bell Telephone Hour | 1966 | TV Series | Herself - Hostess |
The Ed Sullivan Show | 1950-1964 | TV Series | Herself - Guest |
Here's Hollywood | 1962 | TV Series | Herself |
The 14th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards | 1962 | TV Special | Herself - Winner: Outstanding Single Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role |
The 10th Annual Tony Awards | 1956 | TV Special | Himself - Winner: Best Performance by Leading Actress in a Play |
Person to Person | 1955 | TV Series documentary | Herself |
Archive Footage
Title | Year | Status | Character |
---|---|---|---|
The 86th Annual Academy Awards | 2014 | TV Special | Herself - Actress (In Memoriam) |
20th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards | 2014 | TV Special | Herself - In Memoriam |
The 65th Primetime Emmy Awards | 2013 | TV Special | Herself - Actor (In Memoriam) |
A History of Horror with Mark Gatiss | 2010 | TV Mini-Series documentary | Eleanor 'Nell' Lance |
James Dean: Forever Young | 2005 | Documentary | Herself |
Biography | 2002 | TV Series documentary | Abra in 'East of Eden' |
Hollywood Screen Tests: Take 1 | 1999 | TV Movie documentary | Herself (uncredited) |
Backstairs at the White House | 1979 | TV Mini-Series | Mrs. Helen 'Nellie' Taft |
America at the Movies | 1976 | Documentary | Herself |
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson | 1973 | TV Series | Woman with Columbo |
Tarzan and the Perils of Charity Jones | 1971 | Charity Jones | |
Tarzan and the Four O'Clock Army | 1968 | Charity Jones | |
The Ed Sullivan Show | 1958 | TV Series | Herself |
Won Awards
Year | Award | Ceremony | Nomination | Movie |
---|---|---|---|---|
2006 | Lifetime Achievement Award | Method Fest | ||
2000 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Voice-Over Performance | Not for Ourselves Alone: The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. Anthony (1999) |
1962 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Single Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role | Victoria Regina (1961) |
1959 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Best Single Performance by an Actress | Little Moon of Alban (1958) |
Nominated Awards
Year | Award | Ceremony | Nomination | Movie |
---|---|---|---|---|
1998 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie | Ellen Foster (1997) |
1994 | Saturn Award | Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, USA | Best Supporting Actress | The Dark Half (1993) |
1993 | Chainsaw Award | Fangoria Chainsaw Awards | Best Supporting Actress | The Dark Half (1993) |
1990 | CableACE | CableACE Awards | Actress in a Movie or Miniseries | The Christmas Wife (1988) |
1988 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or a Special | The Woman He Loved (1988) |
1988 | Soap Opera Digest Award | Soap Opera Digest Awards | Outstanding Actress in a Supporting Role: Prime Time | Knots Landing (1979) |
1986 | Soap Opera Digest Award | Soap Opera Digest Awards | Outstanding Actress in a Supporting Role on a Prime Time Serial | Knots Landing (1979) |
1982 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series | Knots Landing (1979) |
1977 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama or Comedy Special | The Last of Mrs. Lincoln (1976) |
1967 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Single Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role in a Drama | Anastasia (1967) |
1965 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Individual Achievements in Entertainment - Actors and Performers | The Holy Terror (1965) |
1960 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Outstanding Single Performance by an Actress (Lead or Support) | The DuPont Show of the Month (1957) |
1956 | Primetime Emmy | Primetime Emmy Awards | Best Actress - Single Performance | The United States Steel Hour (1953) |
1956 | BAFTA Film Award | BAFTA Awards | Best Foreign Actress | I Am a Camera (1955) |
1953 | Oscar | Academy Awards, USA | Best Actress in a Leading Role | The Member of the Wedding (1952) |