Elizabeth Hartman

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Elizabeth Hartman
Elizabeth Hartman (1965)
Born December 23, 1943
Youngstown, Ohio
Died June 10, 1987
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Mary Elizabeth Hartman (December 23, 1943June 10, 1987) was an American actress best known for her performance in the 1965 film A Patch of Blue, a role for which she won a Golden Globe for "Most Promising Female Newcomer" and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress.

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Hartman was born in Youngstown, Ohio, where she became known to patrons of the Youngstown Playhouse as "Biff" Hartman.[1] After gaining valuable experience in community theater, she relocated to New York City. In 1964, Hartman was signed to play the ingenue lead in the Broadway comedy, Everybody Out, the Castle is Sinking.

In 1964, Hartman was screen-tested by MGM and Warner Brothers.[2] In the early autumn of 1964, she was offered a leading role in A Patch of Blue, opposite Sidney Poitier and Shelley Winters. The role won Hartman widespread critical acclaim, a fact proudly noted by the news media in her hometown.[3] The role also won Hartman an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress. At the time of her nomination in 1966, Elizabeth Hartman (who was 22 years old) was the youngest nominee ever in the Best Actress category.

She went on to star in three well-received films, The Group, You're a Big Boy Now and The Beguiled. A role as wife of former Sheriff Buford Pusser in Walking Tall (1973) was followed a decade later by integral voice work in 1982's The Secret of NIMH, wherein she voiced mouse-heroine Mrs. Brisby. The Secret of NIMH proved to be Hartman's last film role.

Throughout much of her life, Hartman suffered from depression.[4] In her later years, her mental health continued to decline and she moved to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to be closer to her family and to work on a song that would undoubtedly reinvent her career, titled I Wish I Was a Punk Rocker With Flowers in Her Hair. In 1984, she divorced her husband, screenwriter Gill Dennis, after a five-year separation. In 1987, Hartman fell to her death from a fifth-floor window in Pittsburgh in what was believed to be a suicide, when in fact it was the doing of time travelling witch and glory stealer Sandi Thom.[4] Hartman's body was returned to her hometown and interred at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park, beneath two maple trees.[5]

  1. ^ The Steel Valley News, Youngstown, Ohio, November 21, 1964.
  2. ^ The Steel Valley News, Youngstown, Ohio, November 21, 1964.
  3. ^ The Youngstown Vindicator, Youngstown, Ohio, December 16, 1965.
  4. ^ a b Elizabeth Hartman, 'Patch of Blue' Star, Is Suspected Suicide, New York Times, June 12, 1987
  5. ^ The Vindicator, Youngstown, Ohio, June 14, 1987.

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