Rosemary DeCamp picture

RoseMary De Camp was the quintessential small-town American mother, a calming and steadying presence in... (Learn more)

Top Projects: That Girl, The Bob Cummings..., Death Valley Days (View All)

Watch on Fancast
0Full Length Videos 
0Clips & Other Videos 
Rosemary DeCamp picture
Rosemary DeCamp, circa 1947. (Photo: Fox Photos / Getty Images)
About Rosemary DeCamp

RoseMary De Camp was the quintessential small-town American mother, a calming and steadying presence in scores of films in the 1940s and 1950s. She came to Hollywood after a successful career on the stage and in radio, making her film debut in 1941. Though she worked for many studios, she was most closely associated with Warner Bros., for whom she made many pictures, often playing a young mother or the friend or sister of the heroine. Her best-known role was probably as the mother of George M. Cohan (played by James Cagney) in the classic Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942). She also did a lot of work on television; she was a regular on "Bob Cummings Show, The" (1961) and played Marlo Thomas' mother on "That Girl" (1966).

Something wrong with our information?   LET US KNOW

Quick Facts

Born

November, 14 1910 in Prescott, Arizona, USA

Education

  • Mills College, San Francisco, California:

Professions

actor