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Margaret Dumont

Margaret Dumont (born Daisy Juliette Baker; October 20, 1882 – March 6, 1965)[1][2][a] was an American stage and film actress. She is best remembered as the comic foil to the Marx Brothers in seven of their films; Groucho Marx called her "practically the fifth Marx brother."[3][b]

Margaret Dumont
Dumont as Mrs. Claypool in A Night at the Opera (1935)
Born
Daisy Juliette Baker

(1882-10-20)October 20, 1882
Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
DiedMarch 6, 1965(1965-03-06) (aged 82)
Hollywood, California, U.S.
OccupationActress
Years active1902–1965
Spouse(s)
John Moller, Jr.
(m. 1910; died 1918)

Early life edit

Dumont was born Daisy Juliette Baker in Brooklyn, New York, the daughter of William and Harriet Anna (née Harvey) Baker.[1] Her mother was a music teacher and encouraged Daisy's singing career from an early age.[4]

Career edit

Dumont trained as an operatic singer and actress in her teens and began performing on stage in the US and Europe, at first under the name Daisy Dumont and later as Margaret (or Marguerite - French for Daisy) Dumont. Her theatrical debut was in Sleeping Beauty and the Beast at the Chestnut Theater in Philadelphia; in August 1902, two months before her 20th birthday, she appeared as a singer/comedian in a vaudeville act in Atlantic City. The dark-haired soubrette, described by a theater reviewer as a "statuesque beauty," attracted notice later that decade for her vocal and comedic talents in The Girl Behind the Counter (1908), The Belle of Brittany (1909), and The Summer Widower (1910).[5]

In 1910, she married millionaire sugar heir and industrialist John Moller Jr and retired from stage work, although she had a small uncredited role as an aristocrat in a 1917 film adaptation of A Tale of Two Cities.[6] The marriage was childless.

After her husband's sudden death during the 1918 influenza pandemic, Dumont reluctantly returned to the Broadway stage, and soon gained a strong reputation in musical comedies.[5] She never remarried. Her Broadway career included roles in the musical comedies and plays The Fan (1921), Go Easy, Mabel (1922), The Rise of Rosie O'Reilly (1923/24), and The Fourflusher (1925);[7] she had an uncredited role in the 1923 film Enemies of Women.

With the Marx Brothers edit

In 1925, Dumont came to the attention of theatrical producer Sam H. Harris who recommended her to the Marx Brothers and writer George S. Kaufman for the role of the stuffy rich widow, Mrs. Potter alongside the Marxes in their Broadway production of The Cocoanuts.[6] In the Marxes' next Broadway show, Animal Crackers, which opened in October 1928, Dumont again was cast as foil and straight woman Mrs. Rittenhouse, another wealthy, high society widow. She appeared with the Marxes in the screen versions of both The Cocoanuts (1929) and Animal Crackers (1930).

In the Marx Brothers films, Dumont invariably portrayed rich widows whom Groucho would alternately insult and romance for their money:

Her role as the excitable, hypochondriacal Mrs. Upjohn in A Day at the Races brought her a Best Supporting Actress Award from the Screen Actors Guild; film critic Cecilia Ager suggested that a monument be erected in honor of Dumont's courage and steadfastness in the face of the Marx Brothers' antics.[8] Groucho once said that because of their frequent movie appearances, many people believed they were married in real life.

An exchange from Duck Soup:

Groucho: I suppose you'll think me a sentimental old fluff, but would you mind giving me a lock of your hair?
Dumont: A lock of my hair? Why, I had no idea you ...
Groucho: I'm letting you off easy. I was gonna ask for the whole wig.

Dumont also endured dialogue about her characters' (and thus her own) stout build, as with these lines also from Duck Soup:

Dumont: I've sponsored your appointment because I feel you are the most able statesman in all Freedonia.
Groucho: Well, that covers a lot of ground. Say, you cover a lot of ground yourself. You'd better beat it; I hear they're going to tear you down and put up an office building where you're standing.

and:

Groucho: Why don't you marry me?
Dumont: Why, marry you?
Groucho: You take me and I'll take a vacation. I'll need a vacation if we're going to get married. Married! I can see you right now in the kitchen, bending over a hot stove. But I can't see the stove.

Or her age (in their last film pairing, The Big Store):

Dumont: ...I'm afraid after we're married awhile, a beautiful, young girl will come along and you'll forget all about me.
Groucho: Don't be silly. I'll write you twice a week.

Dumont's character would usually give a short, startled or confused reaction to these insults, but always appeared to forget them quickly.

In his one-man show at New York's Carnegie Hall in 1972, Groucho mentioned Dumont's name and got a burst of applause. He falsely informed the audience that she rarely understood the humor of their scenes and would ask him, "Why are they laughing, Julie?" ("Julie" being her nickname for Julius, Groucho's birth name). Dumont was so important to the success of the Marx Brothers films, she was one of the few people Groucho mentioned in his short acceptance speech for an honorary Oscar in 1974. (The others were Harpo and Chico, their mother Minnie, and Groucho's companion Erin Fleming. Zeppo and Gummo Marx, who were both alive at the time, were not mentioned, though Jack Lemmon, who introduced Groucho, mentioned all four brothers who appeared with Dumont on film.)

In most of her interviews and press profiles, Dumont preserved the myth of her on-screen character: the wealthy, regal woman who never quite understood the jokes. However, in a 1942 interview with the World Wide Features press syndicate, Dumont said, "Scriptwriters build up to a laugh but they don't allow any pause for it. That's where I come in. I ad lib—it doesn't matter what I say—just to kill a few seconds so you can enjoy the gag. I have to sense when the big laughs will come and fill in, or the audience will drown out the next gag with its own laughter. ... I'm not a stooge, I'm a straight lady. There's an art to playing straight. You must build up your man, but never top him, never steal the laughs from him."[9]

For decades, film critics and historians have theorized that because Dumont never broke character or smiled at Groucho's jokes, she did not "get" the Marxes' humor. On the contrary, Dumont, a seasoned stage professional, maintained her "straight" appearance to enhance the Marxes' comedy.[5] In 1965, shortly before Dumont's death, The Hollywood Palace featured a recreation of "Hooray for Captain Spaulding" (from the Marxes' 1930 film Animal Crackers) in which Dumont can be seen laughing at Groucho's ad-libs—proving that she got the jokes.[10]

Writing about Dumont's importance as a comic foil in 1998, film critic Andrew Sarris wrote "Groucho's confrontations with Miss Dumont seem much more the heart of the Marxian matter today than the rather loose rapport among the three brothers themselves."[11]

Dumont's acting style, especially in her early films, reflected the classic theatrical tradition of projecting to the back row (for example, trilling the "r" for emphasis). She had a classical operatic singing voice that screenwriters eagerly used to their advantage.[citation needed]

Other roles edit

Dumont appeared in 57 films, including some minor silent work beginning with A Tale of Two Cities (1917). Her first feature was the Marx Brothers' The Cocoanuts (1929), in which she played Mrs. Potter, the role she played in the stage version from which the film was adapted. She also made some television appearances, including a guest-starring role with Estelle Winwood on The Donna Reed Show in the episode "Miss Lovelace Comes to Tea" (1959).

Dumont, usually playing her dignified dowager character, appeared with other film comedians and actors, including Wheeler and Woolsey and George "Spanky" McFarland (Kentucky Kernels, 1934); Joe Penner (Here, Prince 1932, and The Life of the Party 1937); Lupe Vélez (High Flyers, 1937); W.C. Fields (Never Give a Sucker an Even Break, 1941, and Tales of Manhattan 1942); Laurel and Hardy (The Dancing Masters, 1943); Red Skelton (Bathing Beauty, 1944); Danny Kaye (Up in Arms, 1944); Jack Benny (The Horn Blows at Midnight, 1945); George "Gabby" Hayes (Sunset in El Dorado, 1945); Abbott and Costello (Little Giant, 1946); and Tom Poston (Zotz!, 1962).

Turner Classic Movies’ website says of High Flyers: "The surprise... is seeing [Dumont] play a somewhat daffy matron, more Billie Burke than typical Margaret Dumont. As the lady who's into crystal gazing and dotes on her kleptomaniac bull terrier, she brings a discreetly screwball touch to the proceedings."[12]

She also appeared on television with Martin and Lewis in The Colgate Comedy Hour (December 1951).

Dumont played dramatic parts in films including Youth on Parole (1937), Dramatic School (1938), Stop, You're Killing Me (1952), Three for Bedroom C (1952), and Shake, Rattle & Rock! (1956).

Her last film role was that of Shirley MacLaine's mother, Mrs. Foster, in What a Way to Go! (1964).

On February 26, 1965, eight days before her death, Dumont made her final acting appearance on the television program The Hollywood Palace, where she was reunited with Groucho, the week's guest host. They performed material from Captain Spaulding's introductory scene in Animal Crackers, including the song "Hooray for Captain Spaulding." The taped show was broadcast on April 17, 1965.[13]

Death edit

Dumont died from a heart attack on March 6, 1965. She was cremated and her ashes were interred at the Chapel of the Pines Crematory in Los Angeles.[14] She was 82, although many obituaries erroneously gave her age as 75.[15]

In 2023, her remains were removed from non-public vaultage in the basement to a publicly accessible niche in the chapel columbarium. [16]

Partial filmography edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Many sources, including obituaries, give an incorrect birth year of 1889.
  2. ^ There were five Marx brothers - and a sixth, who died as a child - but only four of them performed together on film.

References edit

  1. ^ a b International Genealogical Index records, derived from Brooklyn birth certificates, 1866-1909 Department of Health
  2. ^ "Chronology - The Marx Brothers". marx-brothers.org.
  3. ^ Mitchell, Glenn (2003). The Marx Brothers Encyclopedia. Surrey, U.K.: Reynolds and Hearn. p. 105. ISBN 978-1903111499. Retrieved August 7, 2016.
  4. ^ Basinger, Jeanine. "'Straight Lady' Review: Margaret Dumont, the 'Fifth Marx Brother'". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved November 26, 2022.
  5. ^ a b c Louvish, Simon (June 8, 2000). Monkey Business: The Lives and Legends of The Marx Brothers: Simon Louvish: 9780312252922: Amazon.com: Books. ISBN 0312252927.
  6. ^ a b . Classic Movie Blog. Archived from the original on January 18, 2010.
  7. ^ The Broadway League. "Margaret Dumont - IBDB: The official source for Broadway Information IBDB: The official source for Broadway Information". ibdb.com.
  8. ^ Hal Erickson. "Margaret Dumont - Biography, Movie Highlights and Photos - AllMovie". AllMovie.
  9. ^ [McMurtry, Charles,] World Wide Features (March 1, 1942). "Straight Lady Explains Art of Timed Ad Libs. Margaret Dumont (Don't Call Her a Stooge) Can Sense Laughs, Save Them." New York Herald Tribune,E-4
  10. ^ "- YouTube". YouTube.
  11. ^ Sarris, Andrew, You Ain't Heard Nothing Yet, Oxford University Press, 1998, pg. 445
  12. ^ "High Flyers". Turner Classic Movies.
  13. ^ Thomas, Bob (March 11, 1965). "Passing of Hollywood Grande Dame". The (Mount Vernon, Illinois) Register News: 5.
  14. ^ Wilson, Scott (2016). Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons. McFarland. p. 211. ISBN 9781476625997. Retrieved July 30, 2023.
  15. ^ "Margaret Dumont Dies At 75; Acted in Marx Brothers Films". The New York Times. United Press International. March 7, 1965. p. 83. Retrieved August 7, 2016.
  16. ^ "OPENING THE VAULT: The Story of Chapel of the Pines". You Tube.

Further reading edit

  • Chris Enss and Howard Kazanjian: Straight lady : the life and times of Margaret Dumont, "the fifth Marx Brother"; foreword by Vicki Lawrence, Guilford, Connecticut : Lyons Press, 2022, ISBN 978-1-4930-6040-5

External links edit

margaret, dumont, born, daisy, juliette, baker, october, 1882, march, 1965, american, stage, film, actress, best, remembered, comic, foil, marx, brothers, seven, their, films, groucho, marx, called, practically, fifth, marx, brother, dumont, claypool, night, o. Margaret Dumont born Daisy Juliette Baker October 20 1882 March 6 1965 1 2 a was an American stage and film actress She is best remembered as the comic foil to the Marx Brothers in seven of their films Groucho Marx called her practically the fifth Marx brother 3 b Margaret DumontDumont as Mrs Claypool in A Night at the Opera 1935 BornDaisy Juliette Baker 1882 10 20 October 20 1882Brooklyn New York U S DiedMarch 6 1965 1965 03 06 aged 82 Hollywood California U S OccupationActressYears active1902 1965Spouse s John Moller Jr m 1910 died 1918 wbr Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 With the Marx Brothers 2 2 Other roles 3 Death 4 Partial filmography 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life editDumont was born Daisy Juliette Baker in Brooklyn New York the daughter of William and Harriet Anna nee Harvey Baker 1 Her mother was a music teacher and encouraged Daisy s singing career from an early age 4 Career editDumont trained as an operatic singer and actress in her teens and began performing on stage in the US and Europe at first under the name Daisy Dumont and later as Margaret or Marguerite French for Daisy Dumont Her theatrical debut was in Sleeping Beauty and the Beast at the Chestnut Theater in Philadelphia in August 1902 two months before her 20th birthday she appeared as a singer comedian in a vaudeville act in Atlantic City The dark haired soubrette described by a theater reviewer as a statuesque beauty attracted notice later that decade for her vocal and comedic talents in The Girl Behind the Counter 1908 The Belle of Brittany 1909 and The Summer Widower 1910 5 In 1910 she married millionaire sugar heir and industrialist John Moller Jr and retired from stage work although she had a small uncredited role as an aristocrat in a 1917 film adaptation of A Tale of Two Cities 6 The marriage was childless After her husband s sudden death during the 1918 influenza pandemic Dumont reluctantly returned to the Broadway stage and soon gained a strong reputation in musical comedies 5 She never remarried Her Broadway career included roles in the musical comedies and plays The Fan 1921 Go Easy Mabel 1922 The Rise of Rosie O Reilly 1923 24 and The Fourflusher 1925 7 she had an uncredited role in the 1923 film Enemies of Women With the Marx Brothers edit In 1925 Dumont came to the attention of theatrical producer Sam H Harris who recommended her to the Marx Brothers and writer George S Kaufman for the role of the stuffy rich widow Mrs Potter alongside the Marxes in their Broadway production of The Cocoanuts 6 In the Marxes next Broadway show Animal Crackers which opened in October 1928 Dumont again was cast as foil and straight woman Mrs Rittenhouse another wealthy high society widow She appeared with the Marxes in the screen versions of both The Cocoanuts 1929 and Animal Crackers 1930 In the Marx Brothers films Dumont invariably portrayed rich widows whom Groucho would alternately insult and romance for their money The Cocoanuts 1929 as Mrs Potter Animal Crackers 1930 as Mrs Rittenhouse Duck Soup 1933 as Mrs Gloria Teasdale A Night at the Opera 1935 as Mrs Claypool A Day at the Races 1937 as Mrs Emily Upjohn At the Circus 1939 as Mrs Susanna Dukesbury The Big Store 1941 as Martha PhelpsHer role as the excitable hypochondriacal Mrs Upjohn in A Day at the Races brought her a Best Supporting Actress Award from the Screen Actors Guild film critic Cecilia Ager suggested that a monument be erected in honor of Dumont s courage and steadfastness in the face of the Marx Brothers antics 8 Groucho once said that because of their frequent movie appearances many people believed they were married in real life An exchange from Duck Soup Groucho I suppose you ll think me a sentimental old fluff but would you mind giving me a lock of your hair Dumont A lock of my hair Why I had no idea you Groucho I m letting you off easy I was gonna ask for the whole wig Dumont also endured dialogue about her characters and thus her own stout build as with these lines also from Duck Soup Dumont I ve sponsored your appointment because I feel you are the most able statesman in all Freedonia Groucho Well that covers a lot of ground Say you cover a lot of ground yourself You d better beat it I hear they re going to tear you down and put up an office building where you re standing and Groucho Why don t you marry me Dumont Why marry you Groucho You take me and I ll take a vacation I ll need a vacation if we re going to get married Married I can see you right now in the kitchen bending over a hot stove But I can t see the stove Or her age in their last film pairing The Big Store Dumont I m afraid after we re married awhile a beautiful young girl will come along and you ll forget all about me Groucho Don t be silly I ll write you twice a week Dumont s character would usually give a short startled or confused reaction to these insults but always appeared to forget them quickly In his one man show at New York s Carnegie Hall in 1972 Groucho mentioned Dumont s name and got a burst of applause He falsely informed the audience that she rarely understood the humor of their scenes and would ask him Why are they laughing Julie Julie being her nickname for Julius Groucho s birth name Dumont was so important to the success of the Marx Brothers films she was one of the few people Groucho mentioned in his short acceptance speech for an honorary Oscar in 1974 The others were Harpo and Chico their mother Minnie and Groucho s companion Erin Fleming Zeppo and Gummo Marx who were both alive at the time were not mentioned though Jack Lemmon who introduced Groucho mentioned all four brothers who appeared with Dumont on film In most of her interviews and press profiles Dumont preserved the myth of her on screen character the wealthy regal woman who never quite understood the jokes However in a 1942 interview with the World Wide Features press syndicate Dumont said Scriptwriters build up to a laugh but they don t allow any pause for it That s where I come in I ad lib it doesn t matter what I say just to kill a few seconds so you can enjoy the gag I have to sense when the big laughs will come and fill in or the audience will drown out the next gag with its own laughter I m not a stooge I m a straight lady There s an art to playing straight You must build up your man but never top him never steal the laughs from him 9 For decades film critics and historians have theorized that because Dumont never broke character or smiled at Groucho s jokes she did not get the Marxes humor On the contrary Dumont a seasoned stage professional maintained her straight appearance to enhance the Marxes comedy 5 In 1965 shortly before Dumont s death The Hollywood Palace featured a recreation of Hooray for Captain Spaulding from the Marxes 1930 film Animal Crackers in which Dumont can be seen laughing at Groucho s ad libs proving that she got the jokes 10 Writing about Dumont s importance as a comic foil in 1998 film critic Andrew Sarris wrote Groucho s confrontations with Miss Dumont seem much more the heart of the Marxian matter today than the rather loose rapport among the three brothers themselves 11 Dumont s acting style especially in her early films reflected the classic theatrical tradition of projecting to the back row for example trilling the r for emphasis She had a classical operatic singing voice that screenwriters eagerly used to their advantage citation needed Other roles edit Dumont appeared in 57 films including some minor silent work beginning with A Tale of Two Cities 1917 Her first feature was the Marx Brothers The Cocoanuts 1929 in which she played Mrs Potter the role she played in the stage version from which the film was adapted She also made some television appearances including a guest starring role with Estelle Winwood on The Donna Reed Show in the episode Miss Lovelace Comes to Tea 1959 Dumont usually playing her dignified dowager character appeared with other film comedians and actors including Wheeler and Woolsey and George Spanky McFarland Kentucky Kernels 1934 Joe Penner Here Prince 1932 and The Life of the Party 1937 Lupe Velez High Flyers 1937 W C Fields Never Give a Sucker an Even Break 1941 and Tales of Manhattan 1942 Laurel and Hardy The Dancing Masters 1943 Red Skelton Bathing Beauty 1944 Danny Kaye Up in Arms 1944 Jack Benny The Horn Blows at Midnight 1945 George Gabby Hayes Sunset in El Dorado 1945 Abbott and Costello Little Giant 1946 and Tom Poston Zotz 1962 Turner Classic Movies website says of High Flyers The surprise is seeing Dumont play a somewhat daffy matron more Billie Burke than typical Margaret Dumont As the lady who s into crystal gazing and dotes on her kleptomaniac bull terrier she brings a discreetly screwball touch to the proceedings 12 She also appeared on television with Martin and Lewis in The Colgate Comedy Hour December 1951 Dumont played dramatic parts in films including Youth on Parole 1937 Dramatic School 1938 Stop You re Killing Me 1952 Three for Bedroom C 1952 and Shake Rattle amp Rock 1956 Her last film role was that of Shirley MacLaine s mother Mrs Foster in What a Way to Go 1964 On February 26 1965 eight days before her death Dumont made her final acting appearance on the television program The Hollywood Palace where she was reunited with Groucho the week s guest host They performed material from Captain Spaulding s introductory scene in Animal Crackers including the song Hooray for Captain Spaulding The taped show was broadcast on April 17 1965 13 Death editDumont died from a heart attack on March 6 1965 She was cremated and her ashes were interred at the Chapel of the Pines Crematory in Los Angeles 14 She was 82 although many obituaries erroneously gave her age as 75 15 In 2023 her remains were removed from non public vaultage in the basement to a publicly accessible niche in the chapel columbarium 16 Partial filmography editEnemies of Women 1923 The Cocoanuts 1929 as Mrs Potter Animal Crackers 1930 as Mrs Rittenhouse The Girl Habit 1931 as Blanche Ledyard Duck Soup 1933 as Mrs Gloria Teasdale Fifteen Wives 1934 as Sybilla Crum Gridiron Flash 1934 as Mrs Fields Kentucky Kernels 1934 as Mrs Baxter A Night at the Opera 1935 as Mrs Claypool Anything Goes 1936 as Mrs Wentworth Song and Dance Man 1936 as Mrs Whitney A Day at the Races 1937 as Mrs Emily Upjohn The Life of the Party 1937 as Mrs Penner Youth on Parole 1937 as Mrs Abernathy High Flyers 1937 as Martha Arlington Wise Girl 1938 as Mrs Bell Rivington Dramatic School 1937 as Pantomime teacher At the Circus 1939 as Mrs Suzanna Dukesbury The Big Store 1941 as Martha Phelps For Beauty s Sake 1941 as Mrs Franklin Evans Never Give a Sucker an Even Break 1941 as Mrs Hemogloben Sing Your Worries Away 1942 as Landlady Flo Faulkner Born to Sing 1942 as Mrs E V Lawson Rhythm Parade 1942 as Ophelia MacDougal The Dancing Masters 1943 as Louise Harlan Up in Arms 1944 as Mrs Willoughby Seven Days Ashore 1944 as Mrs Croxton Lynch Bathing Beauty 1944 as Mrs Allenwood The Horn Blows at Midnight 1945 as Mme Traviata Miss Rodholder Diamond Horseshoe 1945 as Mrs Standish Sunset in El Dorado 1945 as Aunt Dolly Aunt Arabella Little Giant 1946 as Mrs Henrickson Susie Steps Out 1946 as Mrs Starr Three for Bedroom C 1952 as Mrs Agnes Hawthorne Stop You re Killing Me 1952 as Mrs Harriet Whitelaw Shake Rattle amp Rock 1956 as Georgianna Fitzdingle Auntie Mame 1958 Uncredited role Zotz 1962 as Persephone Updike What a Way to Go 1964 as Mrs FosterNotes edit Many sources including obituaries give an incorrect birth year of 1889 There were five Marx brothers and a sixth who died as a child but only four of them performed together on film References edit a b International Genealogical Index records derived from Brooklyn birth certificates 1866 1909 Department of Health Chronology The Marx Brothers marx brothers org Mitchell Glenn 2003 The Marx Brothers Encyclopedia Surrey U K Reynolds and Hearn p 105 ISBN 978 1903111499 Retrieved August 7 2016 Basinger Jeanine Straight Lady Review Margaret Dumont the Fifth Marx Brother Wall Street Journal Retrieved November 26 2022 a b c Louvish Simon June 8 2000 Monkey Business The Lives and Legends of The Marx Brothers Simon Louvish 9780312252922 Amazon com Books ISBN 0312252927 a b Scene Stealers Margaret Dumont Classic Movie Blog Archived from the original on January 18 2010 The Broadway League Margaret Dumont IBDB The official source for Broadway Information IBDB The official source for Broadway Information ibdb com Hal Erickson Margaret Dumont Biography Movie Highlights and Photos AllMovie AllMovie McMurtry Charles World Wide Features March 1 1942 Straight Lady Explains Art of Timed Ad Libs Margaret Dumont Don t Call Her a Stooge Can Sense Laughs Save Them New York Herald Tribune E 4 YouTube YouTube Sarris Andrew You Ain t Heard Nothing Yet Oxford University Press 1998 pg 445 High Flyers Turner Classic Movies Thomas Bob March 11 1965 Passing of Hollywood Grande Dame The Mount Vernon Illinois Register News 5 Wilson Scott 2016 Resting Places The Burial Sites of More Than 14 000 Famous Persons McFarland p 211 ISBN 9781476625997 Retrieved July 30 2023 Margaret Dumont Dies At 75 Acted in Marx Brothers Films The New York Times United Press International March 7 1965 p 83 Retrieved August 7 2016 OPENING THE VAULT The Story of Chapel of the Pines You Tube nbsp Biography portalFurther reading editChris Enss and Howard Kazanjian Straight lady the life and times of Margaret Dumont the fifth Marx Brother foreword by Vicki Lawrence Guilford Connecticut Lyons Press 2022 ISBN 978 1 4930 6040 5External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Margaret Dumont Margaret Dumont at IMDb Margaret Dumont at the Internet Broadway Database nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Margaret Dumont amp oldid 1186799663, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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