
What a Way to Go!
What a Way to Go!

Margaret Dumont would probably consider it a tragedy that she is best-known for her performances as the ultimate straight woman in seven of the Marx Brothers' films (including most of their best). By all accounts she never understood their jokes (offscreen and on), which is of course a major reason why she's so funny. Apart from a small role in a 1917 Dickens adaptation, she spent her early career on the stage, ending up with the Marxes in the late 1920s in the stage versions of The Cocoanuts (1929) and Animal Crackers (1930), and was given a Paramount contract at the same time they were. She played similar roles alongside other great comedians, including W.C. Fields, Laurel & Hardy and Jack Benny and also played straight dramatic parts (her chief love), but few of them made much impact - it is as Groucho Marx's foil that she ranks among the immortals, and she died shortly after being reunited with him on "The Hollywood Palace" (1964).
Born: 1882-10-19 in Brooklyn, New York, USA
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What a Way to Go!

Auntie Mame

Duck Soup

A Night at the Opera

Bathing Beauty

The Big Store

Tales of Manhattan

A Day at the Races

Reckless

Hollywood: The Dream Factory

Rendezvous

Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?

That's Entertainment, Part II

Zotz!

Animal Crackers

Up in Arms

Dramatic School

The Horn Blows at Midnight

Little Giant

Stop, You're Killing Me
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