and
Marlon Brando) portrayed
Blanche in the original 1947 Broadway production of
A Streetcar Named Desire, a role that earned her the 1948
Tony Award for Best Actress. Tandy was 18 years old when she made her professional debut on the London stage in 1927. During the 1930s, she acted in many plays in London's
West End, playing
Ophelia (opposite
John Gielgud's legendary
Hamlet) and
Katherine (opposite
Laurence Olivier's
Henry V). She entered films in Britain, but after her marriage to
Jack Hawkins failed, she moved to the United States hoping to find better roles. During her time as a leading actress on the stage in London, she often had to fight over roles with her two rivals,
Peggy Ashcroft and
Celia Johnson. In the following years, she played supporting roles in several Hollywood films. Like many stage actors, Tandy also worked in radio. Among other programs, she was a regular on
Mandrake the Magician (as Princess Narda), and then with her second husband
Hume Cronyn in
The Marriage which ran on radio from 1953 to 1954, and then segued onto television. She made her American film debut in
The Seventh Cross (1944; appearing alongside Cronyn). She had supporting appearances in
The Valley of Decision (1945),
The Green Years (1946, as Cronyn's daughter),
Dragonwyck (1946) starring
Gene Tierney and
Vincent Price and
Forever Amber (1947). She appeared as the insomniac murderess in ''
A Woman's Vengeance'' (1948), a
film noir adapted by
Aldous Huxley from his short story "
The Gioconda Smile". Over the next three decades, her film career continued sporadically while she found better roles on the stage. Her roles during this time included
The Desert Fox: The Story of Rommel (1951) opposite
James Mason,
The Light in the Forest (1958), and a role as a domineering mother in
Alfred Hitchcock's film
The Birds (1963). '' "The Glass Eye" (1957). with Paul Playdon On Broadway, she won a
Tony Award for her performance as
Blanche Dubois in the original
Broadway production of
A Streetcar Named Desire in 1948. After this (she lost the film role to actress
Vivien Leigh), she concentrated on the stage. In 1976, she and Cronyn joined the acting company of the
Stratford Festival, and returned in 1980 to debut Cronyn's play
Foxfire. In 1977, she earned her second Tony Award, for her performance (with Cronyn) in
The Gin Game. The following year the production transferred to London's
Lyric Theatre, where Tandy was nominated for the
Laurence Olivier Award for Actress of the Year in a New Play. Her third Tony came in 1982 for her performance, again with Cronyn, in
Foxfire. The beginning of the 1980s saw a resurgence in her film career, with character roles in
The World According to Garp (with Cronyn),
Best Friends,
Still of the Night (all 1982) and
The Bostonians (1984). She and Cronyn were now working together more regularly on stage and television, including the films
Honky Tonk Freeway (1981),
Cocoon (1985),
*batteries not included (1987),
Cocoon: The Return (1988), and the
Emmy Award winning television film
Foxfire (1987, recreating her Tony winning Broadway role). However, it was her colourful performance in
Driving Miss Daisy (1989), as an aging, stubborn
Southern Jewish matron, that earned her an
Oscar. She received a Best Supporting Actress nomination for her work in the grassroots hit
Fried Green Tomatoes (1991) and co-starred in
The Story Lady (1991 TV film, with her daughter Tandy Cronyn),
Used People (1992, as
Shirley MacLaine's mother), television film
To Dance with the White Dog (1993, with Cronyn), and
Camilla (1994, with Cronyn). ''
Nobody's Fool'' (1994) proved to be her last performance, at the age of 84. ==Personal life and death==