Known for Acting

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Maude Eburne (born Maud Eburne Riggs, 10 November 1875 – 15 October 1960) was a Canadian character actress of stage and screen, known for playing eccentric roles. Eburne began her career in stock theater in Buffalo, New York. Her early theater work was in Ontario and New York City, debuting on Broadway to great acclaim as "Coddles" in the 1914 farce A Pair of Sixes. "When I first came to New York... I said I didn't want to be beautiful young girls or stately leading women, but wanted parts that had something queer in them, especially if there were dialect." She continued to play mainly humorous domestic roles on stage, appearing in productions such as The Half Moon (1920), Lady Butterfly (1923), Three Cheers (1928) and Many a Slip (1930), before her first significant film role — and first sound film role — in The Bat Whispers (1930), director Roland West's sound remake of his 1926 silent feature The Bat.
1942
as Anna
1931
as Mrs. Snyder
1933
as Aunt Maggie
1938
as Wife of Man Shaving on Train (uncredited)
1941
as Mrs. Mulcahey's Friend (uncredited)
1935
as 'Ma' Pettingill
1933
as Aunt Gussie Schnappmann
1944
as Landlady of the 'Boar's Head Inn'
1945
as Mrs. Packer
1941
as Borax Betty
1939
as Mrs. Hopkins
1932
as Aunt Charlotte
1941
as Ella
1930
as Lizzie Allen
1936
as Sarah Tucker
1944
as Granma Quill
1941
as Mrs. Pickens
1932
as Mrs. McCarthy
1932
as Passenger at Information Desk (uncredited)
1937
as Mrs. Basscombe