Born Margaret Virginia Jones in
Livingston, Texas, Jones worked in community and professional theaters in
California,
Houston, and New York City. "Since 1936, Margo Jones had served as assistant director of the Federal Theatre in Houston, traveled to Soviet Russia for a festival at the Moscow Art Theatre, and founded and directed the Houston Community Theatre. She had recently joined the faculty of the University of Texas's drama department in Austin (around 1942)." She traveled internationally, experiencing theater abroad, and eventually gained commercial success on Broadway as co-director of the original production of
The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams. She directed Williams'
Summer and Smoke, a flop in its first production, but highly regarded years later. After she directed
Maxwell Anderson's successful
Joan of Lorraine, starring
Ingrid Bergman as
Joan of Arc, she was fired during the
Washington, DC, tryout. However, her name remained on the marquee and playbills, and no other director was ever credited for the production. All three plays were filmed. Bergman repeated her Joan of Lorraine role in
Joan of Arc (1948), for which she was Oscar-nominated.
Geraldine Page was Oscar-nominated for her performance in
Summer and Smoke (1961). Since 1950, at least five different film/TV productions of
The Glass Menagerie have been made. == Theater '47 ==