Katharine Hepburn

Trade:
Actress
Field:
Arts and Humanities
Born:
1907
Died:
2003
From:
Old Saybrook
../portraits/Hepburn_Kate.jpg
For More information please visit:


Audio Archives:

One of America's most accomplished actresses; winner of four Academy Awards.

Katharine Hepburn was born and raised in Hartford and West Hartford . She was the daughter of Katharine Martha Houghton, a member of the rich and socially prominent family that founded the Corning Glass Works and an active supporter of women's rights, and Dr. Thomas Hepburn, a prominent surgeon.

The second of five children, Katharine was bright and independent and excelled in athletics. She became interested in the theater at an early age, and at 8, she dramatized Uncle Tom's Cabin, cast it with neighborhood children and presented it in the tiny theater that her father had built for her in the back yard. In 1918, Katharine enrolled at Oxford School and in 1924, at Bryn Mawr College, where she was known as a strange, aloof young woman with few friends. During her first two years at Bryn Mawr, she did not do well scholastically, nor did she participate in any college activities, but sometime during this period she decided that she would become an actress.

Two days after her graduation from college, and over the strenuous objections of her father, she began work in a stock company in Baltimore. It was here that she began her long and illustrious acting career. She has received four Oscars and twelve Academy Award nominations; she was named best actress for Morning Glory (1933), Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967), The Lion in Winter (1968) and On Golden Pond (1981). Among her other honors are a gold medal as the “world's best motion picture actress” from The Venice International Motion Picture Exposition (1934) and being named “Woman of the Year” by Harvard's Hasty Pudding Club (1958).

She has also co-authored and narrated a documentary entitled Katharine Hepburn: All About Me (1991) as well as a book on The Making of "The African Queen" (1987).