Donna Reed

Donna Reed net worth is $10 Million. Also know about Donna Reed bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship and more …

Donna Reed Wiki Biography

Donna Reed was born on the 27th January 1921 in Denison, Iowa USA, and was an actress. Films like “The Picture of Dorian Gray” (1945), “It’s a Wonderful Life” (1946) and “From Here to Eternity” (1953) made her famous. Reed was active in the entertainment industry from 1941 to 1985. She passed away in 1986.

How rich was the actress? It has been estimated by authoritative sources that the overall size of Donna Reed’s net worth was as much as $10 million, converted to the present day. Films and television were the main sources of Reed’s wealth.

To begin with, the girl was raised in Denison, the eldest of five children. Her election as Queen of the Campus at the high school made the headlines of the Los Angeles Times. Her beauty attracted the attention of many agents and studio managers, and soon, the beautiful actress started her career.

The agency Feldman Blum hired the young Donna Reed and signed her to a contract. She made a remarkable debut in cinema in 1941 with supporting roles in the thriller “Shadow of the Thin Man” with William Powell and Myrna Loy, and in the musical “Babes” on Broadway featuring Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland. Shortly after, she landed important roles in mainstream films, such as “Calling Dr. Gillespie” (1942) and “See Here, Private Hargrove” (1944). In 1945, she portrayed Gladys Hallward in the film adaptation of Oscar Wilde’s novel “The Picture of Dorian Gray”, which was a box office success despite mixed reviews. After several years at MGM Studios, Reed starred in Frank Capra’s “It’s a Wonderful Life” (1946), which became one of the favourites on American television at Christmas, and was also a box office hit. The actress kept quiet for several years, however, she made a starring comeback when she was chosen for the important role of Alma, the prostitute in the film “From Here to Eternity” (1953). Featuring talented actors such as Burt Lancaster, Montgomery Clift, Deborah Kerr and Frank Sinatra, the film won 8 Oscars, including for the Best Supporting Actress – Donna Reed. Afterwards, the actress starred with Elizabeth Taylor in the film “The Last Time I Saw Paris” (1954) directed by Richard Brooks, then appeared in the blockbuster “Far Horizons” (1955). From 1958 to 1966, she played the leading role in the popular family series “The Donna Reed Show”, and in 1963 she won the Golden Globe Award as the Best Female TV Star. She was also nominated four times for an Emmy Award, but could never win. In 1984, she took on her last role of Miss Ellie in the popular soap opera “Dallas”, but was replaced by Barbara Bel Geddes the next season, and settled for a payment of $1 million in recompense.

Finally, in the personal life of the actress, Reed married William Tuttle in 1943 and they divorced two years later. In 1945, she married Tony Owen and had four children with him – the oldest two were adopted. After 26 years of marriage, the couple broke up in 1971. Three years later, she married retired US Army Colonel Grover W. Asmus, and they were together until she died of pancreatic cancer on the 14th January 1986, in Beverly Hills, Los Angeles – the cancer was diagnosed three months before her death. Reed is buried in the cemetery of Westwood Village Memorial Park in Los Angeles.

IMDB Wikipedia “Calling Dr. Gillespie” (1942) “Dallas” (1978-1991) “See Here “The Donna Reed Show” (1958-1966) “The Love Boat” (1984) $10 million 1921-01-27 1986-01-14 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress (1953) American Barbara Bel Geddes Burt Lancaster Deborah Kerr Denison Denison (Iowa) High School Donna Reed Net Worth Feldman Blum Frank Capra Frank Sinatra From Here to Eternity (1953) Golden Apple Awards (1964) Golden Globe Award – Best TV Star (1963) Grover Asmus (m. 1974–1986) Grover W. Asmus Hazel Jane (née Shives) her death) Iowa It’s a Wonderful Life (1946) Judy Garland LaDonna Reeder Los Angeles City College Make Up Department Mickey Rooney Montgomery Clift Myrna Loy Oscar Wilde Private Hargrove” (1944) Richard Brooks The Picture of Dorian Gray (1945) Tony Owen Tony Owen (m. 1945–1971) U.S. William J. Tuttle William J. Tuttle (m. 1943–1945) William Powell William Richard Mullenger William Tuttle

Donna Reed Quick Info

Full Name Donna Reed
Net Worth $10 Million
Date Of Birth January 27, 1921, Denison, Iowa, United States
Died January 14, 1986, (age 64), Beverly Hills, California, United States
Height 1.61 m
Profession Film and television actress, producer
Education Denison (Iowa) High School, Los Angeles City College
Nationality American
Spouse Grover Asmus (m. 1974–1986, her death), Tony Owen (m. 1945–1971), William J. Tuttle (m. 1943–1945)
Children Anthony Owen, Mary Anne Owen, Penny Jane Owen, Timothy Owen
Parents Hazel Jane (née Shives), William Richard Mullenger
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/welovethedonnareedshow/
Twitter https://twitter.com/donnareeddvd
IMDB www.imdb.com/name/nm0001656
Awards Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress (1953), Golden Globe Award – Best TV Star (1963), Golden Apple Awards (1964)
Nominations TV Land Awards, Emmy Awards
Movies “Calling Dr. Gillespie” (1942), “See Here, Private Hargrove” (1944), “The Picture of Dorian Gray” (1945), “It’s a Wonderful Life” (1946), “From Here to Eternity” (1953)
TV Shows “The Donna Reed Show” (1958-1966), “Dallas” (1978-1991), “The Love Boat” (1984)

Donna Reed Trademarks

  1. Toni hairdo

Donna Reed Quotes

  • When you handle yourself, use your head; when you handle others, use your heart.
  • I hope more people decide to become organ donors.
  • What we look for in the school is unrealized potential.
  • If nuclear power plants are safe, let the commercial insurance industry insure them. Until these most expert judges of risk are willing to gamble with their money, I’m not willing to gamble with the health and safety of my family.
  • I’ve been involved with blood donation since the 1980s because there is a critical need.
  • Forty pictures I was in, and all I remember is ‘What kind of bra will you be wearing today, honey?’ That was always the area of big decision – from the neck to the navel.

Donna Reed Important Facts

  • Mentioned in the song “Living Dead Girl” by Rob Zombie.
  • Attended the LACC Theater Academy. Other alumni include Morgan Freeman, Mark Hamill, Cindy Williams, and Rene Michelle Aranda.
  • Is one of 13 actresses who won their Best Supporting Actress Oscars in a movie that also won the Best Picture Oscar (she won for From Here to Eternity (1953)). The others are Hattie McDaniel for Gone with the Wind (1939), Teresa Wright for Mrs. Miniver (1942), Celeste Holm for Gentleman’s Agreement (1947), Mercedes McCambridge for All the King’s Men (1949), Eva Marie Saint for On the Waterfront (1954), Rita Moreno for West Side Story (1961), Meryl Streep for Kramer vs. Kramer (1979), Juliette Binoche for The English Patient (1996), Judi Dench for Shakespeare in Love (1998), Jennifer Connelly for A Beautiful Mind (2001), Catherine Zeta-Jones for Chicago (2002) and Lupita Nyong’o for 12 Years a Slave (2013).
  • Paternal great granddaughter of Richard Bartley Johnston (1833-1913), born in Illinois, and Elizabeth Herner (1841-1917), born in Canada.
  • Paternal granddaughter of William G. Mullenger (1857-1934), born in Wisconsin, and Mary Ann Johnston (1864-1955), born in Illinois.
  • Daughter of William Richard Mullenger (1893-1981) and Hazel Jane Shives (1899-1975). Both were born and raised in Iowa.
  • Maternal granddaughter of Charles (1860-1936) and Mary Etta Petty (1866-1947). Both were born and raised in Illinois.
  • She was of English, as well as some German and Irish, ancestry. Some of her forebears were Canadian-born.
  • Was the 39th actress to receive an Academy Award; she won the Best Supporting Actress Oscar for From Here to Eternity (1953) at The 26th Annual Academy Awards (1954) on March 25, 1954.
  • She was a lifelong Republican.
  • Ex-sister-in-law of Thomas Tuttle.
  • Had a close relationship with her TV daughter, Shelley Fabares. Was considered by Fabares as her second mother until Reed’s death in 1986.
  • Although her image was generally associated that of the the squeaky-clean, conservative 1950s housewife and mother, she won her Oscar for From Here to Eternity (1953) for playing a prostitute.
  • Biography in: “The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives”. Volume Two, 1986-1990, pages 725-727. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1999.
  • In Italy, a great deal of her films were dubbed by Renata Marini and Dhia Cristiani (most notably From Here to Eternity (1953)). Occasionally she was also dubbed by Miranda Bonansea (in Green Dolphin Street (1947)), Rosetta Calavetta and Micaela Giustiniani. The great Lidia Simoneschi also lent her voice to Reed in Frank Capra’s much celebrated It’s a Wonderful Life (1946).
  • The woman on the cover of Rush’s Permanent Waves album is modeled after her.
  • Learned of her firing from Dallas (1978) from a reporter while on a vacation to Paris. She was in the process of suing the show’s producers before her death in January, 1986.
  • Four children by husband/producer Tony Owen : Penny Owen, Tony Owen Jr., Timothy Owen and Mary Owen. Two were adopted. Mary, their last child, was born to them in 1957, a year before the start of Donna’s classic TV show, which Tony executive produced.
  • In the scene from It’s a Wonderful Life (1946) where she and James Stewart throw rocks at the old Granville house, director Frank Capra had originally planned to use a double in Donna’s place to throw the rock. Miss Reed, however, was an accomplished baseball player in high school and threw very well, as evidenced by her toss in the movie.
  • Her last husband Grover Asmus started a program called the Donna Reed Foundation that led to the Donna Reed festival held yearly in Denison, IA. It’s a celebration of Donna, and includes classes, performances. Many stars attend such as Shelley Fabares, Debbie Reynolds, and Loren Janes.
  • Despite her association with the squeaky-clean and conservative 1950s, Reed became an anti-nuclear activist and anti-Vietnam protester. She also founded the group Another Mother for Peace.

Donna Reed Filmography

Title Year Status Character Role
Dallas 1984-1985 TV Series Miss Ellie Ewing Actress
The Love Boat 1984 TV Series Polly Sullivan Actress
Deadly Lessons 1983 TV Movie Miss Wade Actress
The Best Place to Be 1979 TV Movie Sheila Callahan Actress
The Donna Reed Show 1958-1966 TV Series Donna Stone Actress
Pepe 1960 Donna Reed Actress
The Whole Truth 1958 Carol Poulton Actress
Suspicion 1957 TV Series Letty Jason Actress
General Electric Theater 1957 TV Series Rayna Actress
Beyond Mombasa 1956 Ann Wilson Actress
Backlash 1956 Karyl Orton Actress
Ransom! 1956 Edith Stannard Actress
The Benny Goodman Story 1956 Alice Hammond Actress
Tales of Hans Anderson 1955 TV Series Actress
The Far Horizons 1955 Sacajawea Actress
The Ford Television Theatre 1954 TV Series Lydia Campbell Actress
The Last Time I Saw Paris 1954 Marion Ellswirth Actress
Three Hours to Kill 1954 Laurie Mastin Actress
They Rode West 1954 Laurie MacKaye Actress
Gun Fury 1953 Jennifer Ballard Actress
The Caddy 1953 Kathy Taylor Actress
From Here to Eternity 1953 Alma aka Lorene Actress
Raiders of the Seven Seas 1953 Alida Actress
Trouble Along the Way 1953 Alice Singleton Actress
Hangman’s Knot 1952 Molly Hull Actress
Castle in the Air 1952 Donna Reed (uncredited) Actress
Scandal Sheet 1952 Julie Allison Actress
Saturday’s Hero 1951 Melissa Actress
Chicago Deadline 1949 Rosita Jean d’Ur Actress
Beyond Glory 1948 Ann Daniels Actress
Green Dolphin Street 1947 Marguerite Patourel Actress
It’s a Wonderful Life 1946 Mary Hatch Actress
Faithful in My Fashion 1946 Jean ‘Chunky’ Kendrick Actress
They Were Expendable 1945 Lt. Sandy Davyss Actress
The Picture of Dorian Gray 1945 Gladys Hallward Actress
Gentle Annie 1944 Mary Lingen Actress
See Here, Private Hargrove 1944 Carol Holliday Actress
Thousands Cheer 1943 Customer in Red Skelton Skit Actress
The Man from Down Under 1943 Mary Wilson Actress
Dr. Gillespie’s Criminal Case 1943 Marcia Bradburn Actress
The Human Comedy 1943 Bess Macauley Actress
Personalities 1942 Short uncredited Actress
Eyes in the Night 1942 Barbara Lawry Actress
Apache Trail 1942 Rosalia Martinez Actress
Calling Dr. Gillespie 1942 Marcia Bradburn Actress
Mokey 1942 Anthea Delano Actress
The Courtship of Andy Hardy 1942 Melodie Nesbit Actress
The Bugle Sounds 1942 Sally Hanson Actress
Babes on Broadway 1941 Jonesy’s Secretary (uncredited) Actress
Shadow of the Thin Man 1941 Molly Ford Actress
The Getaway 1941 Maria Theresa O’Reilly Actress
Father Dowling Mysteries 1990 TV Series performer – 1 episode Soundtrack
The Picture of Dorian Gray 1945 “Good-Bye, Little Yellow Bird”, uncredited Soundtrack
The Human Comedy 1943 performer: “All the World Will Be Jealous of Me” 1917, “A Dream” 1902 – uncredited Soundtrack
Mokey 1942 “The Prisoner’s Song If I Had the Wings of an Angel” 1924, uncredited Soundtrack
The Moviemakers 1983 TV Series Self
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Frank Capra 1982 TV Special documentary Herself Self
The 50th Annual Academy Awards 1978 TV Special Herself – Audience Member and Past Winner Self
ABC’s Silver Anniversary Celebration 1978 TV Special Herself Self
ABC Late Night 1974 TV Series Herself Self
The 36th Annual Academy Awards 1964 TV Special Herself – Presenter: Best Costume Design Self
The 35th Annual Academy Awards 1963 TV Special Herself – Presenter: Best Cinematography Self
The 13th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards 1961 TV Special Herself – Nominee: Outstanding Performance by an Lead Actress in a Series and Presenter Self
The 11th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards 1959 TV Special Herself – Presenter Self
I’ve Got a Secret 1958 TV Series Herself – Guest Panelist Self
This Is Your Life 1958 TV Series Self
MGM Parade 1956 TV Series Herself – Guest Self
The 27th Annual Academy Awards 1955 TV Special Herself – Presenter: Best Supporting Actor Self
The 26th Annual Academy Awards 1954 TV Special Herself – Winner: Best Actress in a Supporting Role Self
Screen Snapshots: Hollywood Laugh Parade 1953 Short Herself Self
Screen Snapshots: Hollywood’s Famous Feet 1950 Documentary short Herself (uncredited) Self
Screen Actors 1950 Documentary short Herself (uncredited) Self
Sucker Bait 1943 Documentary short Geraldine – Waitress Self
Sinatra: All or Nothing at All 2015 TV Mini-Series documentary Herself Archive Footage
The Sixties 2014 TV Mini-Series documentary Donna Stone – Donna Reed Show Archive Footage
A Night at the Movies: Merry Christmas! 2011 TV Movie documentary Mary Bailey (uncredited) Archive Footage
Stars of the Silver Screen 2011 TV Series Mary Hatch Archive Footage
I Am 2010/III Documentary Mary Hatch (uncredited) Archive Footage
Costas Now 2006 TV Series Donna Stone Archive Footage
Polònia 2006 TV Series Mary Hatch Bailey Archive Footage
Love Find Andy Hardy Intro 2004 Video documentary short Herself Archive Footage
The 71st Annual Academy Awards 1999 TV Special Mary Hatch Bailey (uncredited) Archive Footage
Intimate Portrait 1999 TV Series documentary Herself Archive Footage
Television: The First Fifty Years 1999 Video documentary Donna Stone Archive Footage
Christmas Unwrapped: The History of Christmas 1997 TV Movie documentary Mary Bailey Archive Footage
Escape from It’s a Wonderful Life 1996 TV Movie Mary Hatch (uncredited) Archive Footage
Éste es mi barrio 1996 TV Series Mary Hatch Bailey Archive Footage
The Our Gang Story 1994 Video documentary Mary Hatch Archive Footage
Funny Women of Television 1991 TV Movie documentary Herself Archive Footage
Father Dowling Mysteries 1990 TV Series Mary Hatch Archive Footage
Free Spirit 1989 TV Series Herself Archive Footage
Cinema Paradiso 1988 Mary Hatch (uncredited) Archive Footage
Cheers 1987 TV Series Mary Hatch Archive Footage
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to James Stewart 1980 TV Special documentary Actress ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’ (uncredited) Archive Footage
America at the Movies 1976 Documentary Mary Hatch Bailey Archive Footage
Hollywood Without Make-Up 1963 Documentary Herself Archive Footage

Donna Reed Awards

Year Award Ceremony Nomination Movie Category
2006 OFTA TV Hall of Fame Online Film & Television Association Actors and Actresses Won
1964 Golden Apple Golden Apple Awards Most Cooperative Actress Won
1963 Golden Globe Golden Globes, USA Best TV Star – Female The Donna Reed Show (1958) Won
1960 Star on the Walk of Fame Walk of Fame Motion Picture On 8 February 1960. At 1612 Vine Street. Won
1954 Oscar Academy Awards, USA Best Actress in a Supporting Role From Here to Eternity (1953) Won
2006 OFTA TV Hall of Fame Online Film & Television Association Actors and Actresses Nominated
1964 Golden Apple Golden Apple Awards Most Cooperative Actress Nominated
1963 Golden Globe Golden Globes, USA Best TV Star – Female The Donna Reed Show (1958) Nominated
1960 Star on the Walk of Fame Walk of Fame Motion Picture On 8 February 1960. At 1612 Vine Street. Nominated
1954 Oscar Academy Awards, USA Best Actress in a Supporting Role From Here to Eternity (1953) Nominated