
Historical Figures: Archbishop Lamy, Charles Bent, Billy the Kid, Kit Carson, Willa Cather, Flying Priest, Pat Garrett,
Greer Garson, Geronimo, Conrad
Hilton, Mable Dodge Lujan, Fred
Lambert, John Gaw Meems, Robert
Ollinger, Millicent
Rogers, Will
Schuster, Carrie
Tingley, Lew
Wallace
Museums:
American
International Rattlesnake Museum,
City
of Las Cruces Log Cabin Museum,
Cleveland
Roller Mill Museum,
E.L. Blumenschein
Home & Museum,
Kit
Carson Home & Museum,
Farmington
Museum, El
Malpais National Monument,
Fort
Selden State Monument,
Fort Union
National Monument,
Harvey
House Museum,
Historical
Center For Southeast New Mexico,
Lincoln
State Monument,
Las
Vegas City Museum & Rough Rider Memorial,
Miles
Mineral Museum,
New
Mexico Farm & Ranch
Heritage Museum,
Old
Mill Museum,
Palace of the Governors,
Pecos
National Historical Park,
Raton
Museum,
Roosevelt
County Museum,
Silver
City Museum,
Tucumcari
Historical Museum
Greer Garson
Born in Manor Park, Essex, England in 1904, she was the only child of George Garson and his Irish wife, Nancy. She was educated at the University of London, where she earned degrees in French and 18th-century literature. She intended to become a teacher, but instead began working with an advertising agency, and appeared in local theatrical productions.
She appeared on television during its earliest years, in the 1930s, most notably in a thirty-minute production of an excerpt of Twelfth Night in May 1937, alongside Peggy Ashcroft. This is the first known instance of a Shakespeare play performed on television.
Greer Garson was discovered by Louis B. Mayer while he was in London looking for new talent. Garson was signed to a contract with MGM in 1936 but did not appear in her first American film, Goodbye, Mr. Chips, until 1939. She received her first Oscar nomination for the role, but lost to Vivien Leigh for Gone with the Wind. She did receive critical acclaim the next year for her role as Elizabeth Bennet in the 1940 film, Pride and Prejudice.
She also starred opposite Joan Crawford in When Ladies Meet in 1941
and that same year, became a major box office star with the sentimental
Technicolor drama Blossoms in the Dust which brought her the first of
five consecutive Best Actress Oscar nominations, tying Bette Davis' 1938-1942
record, a record that still stands. Garson won the Academy Award for
Best Actress in 1942 for her role as a strong British wife and mother
in the middle of World War II, in Mrs. Miniver. (Guinness Book of World
Records credits her with the longest Oscar acceptance speech, at five
minutes and 30 seconds,[2] after which the Academy Awards instituted
a time limit.[citation needed]) She was also nominated for Madame Curie
(1943), Mrs. Parkington (1944), and The Valley of Decision (1945).
In 1951, she became a naturalized citizen of the United States. After her MGM contract expired in 1954, she made only a few films. In 1958, she received a warm reception on Broadway in Auntie Mame, replacing Rosalind Russell, who had gone to Hollywood to make the film version. In 1960, Garson received her seventh and final Oscar nomination for Sunrise at Campobello, in which she played Eleanor Roosevelt, this time losing to Elizabeth Taylor for BUtterfield 8.
The actress was married three times. Her first marriage, on September 28, 1933, was to Edward Alec Abbot Snelson (1904-1992), later Sir Edward, a British civil servant who became a noted judge and expert in Indian and Pakistani affairs. The actual marriage reportedly lasted only a few weeks, but was not formally dissolved until 1943.
Her second husband, whom she married in 1943, was Richard Ney (1915-2004), the young actor who played her son in Mrs. Miniver. They divorced in 1949, with Garson claiming that Ney had called her a "has-been" and belittled her age. Ney eventually became a respected stock-market analyst and financial consultant.
That same year, she married a millionaire Texas oilman and horse breeder, E. E. "Buddy" Fogelson (1900-1987), and in 1967, the couple retired to their "Forked Lightning Ranch" in New Mexico. In 1971 they purchased the U.S. Hall of Fame champion Thoroughbred Ack Ack from the estate of Harry F. Guggenheim and were highly successful as breeders.
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