Neither one was dumb.
The actor Judy Holliday and her character in Born Yesterday, Billie Dawn, shared something the world kept mistaking for simplicity. Both carried an interior logic that defied the cynicism and corruption of the day — a way of seeing clearly while everyone else assumed they see nothing at all. This collage celebrates the life and times of the amazing Judy Holliday:
1921 — Born Judith Tuvim in New York City.
1927 — Her parents separate when she is six. She is raised by her mother.
1943 — Judith Tuvim changes her stage name to Judy Holliday, adopting it when her comedy troupe, The Revuers, travels to Hollywood and she signs with Twentieth Century Fox. She chooses “Holliday” as the English translation of her Hebrew surname, Tuvim.
1948 — Marries David Oppenheim.
1950 — Born Yesterday is released. The world reads her as a blonde who barely follows the conversation, and she finds the opportunity in that — being underestimated can be its own kind of superpower. Her performance is instant stardom.
1951 — Wins the Academy Award for Best Actress and the Golden Globe for Best Actress, Comedy or Musical, for Born Yesterday — beating out Bette Davis and Gloria Swanson in what is considered one of the biggest upsets in Academy history.
1952 — Called before the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee during the Red Scare, the same era the Lavender Scare runs alongside. It is alleged she also carried an affair with a woman from her early Greenwich Village years. The fear in that hearing room is not only political. It is also a fear of rejection at its most fundamental level, an accusation of being less than human based on what you believe or who you love. She gets out of it by trusting the same interior logic that got Billie Dawn out of every scene where the men underestimate her.
1954 — Her marriage to David Oppenheim is failing, and she falls into a severe depression. Around this time, Betty Comden and Adolph Green begin writing Bells Are Ringing, meant as a lifeline for Judy. Though there is no guarantee she has the stamina left for it.
1956 — Bells Are Ringing opens on Broadway. She goes on.
1957 — Wins the Tony for Bells Are Ringing. Divorces David Oppenheim the same year.
1960 — Films the movie version of Bells Are Ringing with Dean Martin and Vincent Minnelli. Her body is already sick with undiagnosed breast cancer. Cast and crew know her history with depression and anxiety, so they read her exhaustion and pain as more of the same story they already have about her. Even while dealing with a debilitating illness, she receives a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress, Comedy or Musical. The film receives a nomination for Best Music, Scoring of a Musical Picture. This is her final film performance.
1960–1964 — She continues performing. She undergoes a mastectomy and returns to work, starring in the Broadway musical Hot Spot in 1963. She also collaborates with jazz musician Gerry Mulligan, writing lyrics to his music.
1965 — Judy Holliday succumbs to her illness on June 7, at the age of forty-three. She is remembered as a queer icon and as a prototype for feminism — her characters embodying a working-girl alternative to suburban domesticity years before Betty Friedan gave that critique a name.
Rock Hudson, Cesar Romero, Tab Hunter — the Closet Saints have been a men’s gallery so far. Judy Holliday belongs beside them, and belongs there specifically as a woman, because the closet was never only a men’s condition.
Sources: Advocate.com, The New Yorker, Turner Classic Movies, Playbill, Encyclopedia.com, Jewish Women’s Archive, Love Letters to Old Hollywood, Wikipedia, AllMusic, University of Massachusetts Boston American Studies