Catherine McLeod

About Catherine McLeod

Who is it?: Actress
Birth Day: July 02, 1921
Birth Place:  Santa Monica, California, United States
Died On: May 11, 1997(1997-05-11) (aged 75)\nLos Angeles, California
Birth Sign: Leo
Occupation: Actress
Spouse(s): Bill Gerds (1947–1949) (divorced) Don Keefer (1950–1997, her death)
Children: 3

Catherine McLeod Net Worth

Catherine McLeod was born on July 02, 1921 in  Santa Monica, California, United States, is Actress. Of Scottish descent, Catherine McLeod was a self-confessed movie fan as a child of the Depression. Born in Santa Monica, she became a theater cashier in Dallas for a time before returning to Los Angeles and studying at an acting school. A talent scout discovered her in a play and signed her to an MGM contract in 1944. She was cultivated in small bit roles which culminated in the finest showcase of her career. In the sudsy romancer, I've Always Loved You (1946), which was set to classical music, Catherine has to grow from a naive 18-year-old girl to an embittered 45-year-old woman. In comparison, most of her co-starring roles were not only loanouts but far less demanding in scope. Finding her film career non-fulfilling, she settled into plays and television work in the 1950s, and ultimately turned to marriage and family. She wed fellow actor Don Keefer in 1950 and bore three sons, Don (born 1953), John (born 1955) and Tom (born 1962). Catherine gravitated toward soap operas in the 1960s (Search for Tomorrow (1951), General Hospital (1963), Days of Our Lives (1965)) and phased out her career in the next decade.
Catherine McLeod is a member of Actress

💰 Net worth: Under Review

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Biography/Timeline

1946

Her films included Frank Borzage's I've Always Loved You (1946), Courage of Lassie (1946), The Fabulous Texan (1947), Borzage's That's My Man (1947), Old Los Angeles (1948), My Wife's Best Friend (1952), A Blueprint for Murder (1953), william Witney's The Outcast (1954), Ride the Wild Surf (1964), and Lipstick (1976).

1947

McLeod married Bill Gerds (30 January 1947 - 1949) (divorced), who was then a dental student in San Francisco. They eloped to Reno on January 3, 1947. McLeod's second husband was actor Don Keefer, 7 May 1950 until her death on 11 March 1997 having 3 children together.

1957

McLeod made two guest appearances on Perry Mason: Lorraine Ferrell in "The Case of the Vagabond Vixen," (1957), and Nora Huxley in "The Case of the Glittering Goldfish." (1959) In both roles she played the wife of the murder victim, but was neither the defendant nor actual murderer.

1961

McLeod appeared in dozens of other series including The Millionaire, Meet McGraw, Richard Diamond, Private Detective, 77 Sunset Strip, Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer, Bronco, Colt .45, Lawman (in the 1961 episode "The Prodigal Mother", with child actor Billy Booth), Bonanza, Hazel, Hawaiian Eye, Have Gun - Will Travel, The Outer Limits, The Virginian, "Letty, Gunsmoke" and the Ten Thousand Horses Singing episode of Studio One opposite James Dean and John Forsythe.

1963

McLeod's greatest impact upon American consciousness by far, however, was as purveyor of one of the most ubiquitous catchphrases of its era when she portrayed the woman in the 1963 headache remedy Anacin television commercial who plaintively but irritably said, "Mother, please! I'd rather do it myself!" The announcer's voiceover would then intone, "Sure you have a headache... tense, irritable.... but don't take it out on her."