Known for Acting

Maidie Norman was born Maidie Ruth Gamble on October 16, 1912, in Villa Rica, Georgia, to Louis and Lila Gamble. She received a B.A. from Bennett College in 1934 and a master's degree from Columbia University three years later. She also attended the Actors Lab in Hollywood from 1946 to 1949. Norman first appeared on film in The Peanut Man in 1947. Throughout the fifties-not a good time for film roles for black women-she appeared in a number of films, such as Bright Road with Dorothy Dandridge and Sidney Poitier and Torch Song, both in 1953; About Mrs. Leslie and Susan Slept Here in 1954; and 1956's Written on the Wind. These were often servant roles, with a special fifties blandness. Still, Norman was skillful and professional in her execution of them. In 1962, she got a chance to chew up the scenery with Bette Davis and Joan Crawford in What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? In 1968-69, Norman was an artist-in-residence at Stanford University and, throughout the seventies, she was lecturer, director, and acting teacher at UCLA. At the same time, Norman was highly visible on television, appearing in Mannix, Adam 12, Streets of San Francisco, Kung Fu, The Jeffersons, and others. She was also part of the cast of Roots: The Next Generation in 1979. Norman was a founding member of the American Negro Theater West; in 1977, she was inducted into the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame; and an award in her name is presented each year for outstanding research by an undergraduate in Black Theater at UCLA. She died on May 6, 1998.
1982
as Nurse Agnes
1962
as Elvira Stitt
1977
as Dorothy
1976
as Justice of the Peace (uncredited)
1955
as Suma
1978
as Gussie ("Baxter's Beauties of 1933")
1954
as Georgette
1956
as Bertha
1963
as Burden's Maid
1955
as Sarah (uncredited)
1956
as Violet (uncredited)
1954
as Housekeeper (uncredited)
1981
as Ruth Thornwell
1955
as Miss Lovett
1972
as Aunt Ada
1949
as Christine, Bennet's Maid (uncredited)
1988
as Edna
1972
as Nurse Ferguson
1960
as Queto's Mother
1953
as Emma (uncredited)