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Life & Style

Ann Blyth, film star of 1940s-50s famed for 'Mildred Pierce', dies at 98

  • Blyth, who trained as ‌an opera singer and was comfortable in film musicals, dramas and even a farce in which she played a mermaid, died of natural causes, according to the reports
Published June 26, 2026 Updated June 26, 2026 03:05pm
Photo: Reuters
Photo: Reuters
By

Ann Blyth, who earned an Oscar nomination playing Joan Crawford’s malicious and deceitful teenage daughter in the classic 1945 melodrama “Mildred Pierce” and thrived in light and heavy ​roles during Hollywood’s Golden Age, died on Wednesday at age of 98, according to media reports

Blyth, who trained as ‌an opera singer and was comfortable in film musicals, dramas and even a farce in which she played a mermaid, died of natural causes, according to the reports.

She made more than 30 movies during a film career lasting from 1944 to 1957. Blyth was just 16 when she gave a tour de ​force performance in the film for which she is best remembered - “Mildred Pierce.” The movie also gave temperamental cinema legend Crawford ​her only career Academy Award.

Blyth more than held her own on screen as Crawford’s status-seeking, hateful and ⁠murderous daughter Veda, who competes with her mother for the same man, her stepfather, played by Zachary Scott. In one scene, Blyth ​slaps Crawford across the face, knocking her down.

“Get out before I kill you,” an angry Crawford tells Blyth.

“He had a great confidence in me, which in turn helped me,” Blyth told the Los Angeles Times in 2013 of Curtiz.

“She just blew everybody away,” film historian Alan Rode told the Times, referring to Blyth. “It’s certainly Joan ​Crawford’s movie, but she is really the spine of the movie. She is the epitome of the film noir daughter from hell. ​It’s just an amazing performance that stands the test of time.”

“Mildred Pierce” was a hit with the public and critics, earning an Oscar nomination as ‌best picture. ⁠Crawford won the Oscar as best actress, while both Blyth and co-star Eve Arden were nominated as best supporting actress but did not win.

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Blyth’s career momentum was stymied after “Mildred Pierce” when she suffered a broken back in a toboggan accident.

Her versatility enabled her to shine in musicals like “Kismet” (1955) and “The Student Prince” (1954), spectacles like “The Golden Horde” (1951), comedies including “Mr. Peabody and the Mermaid” (1948) co-starring William Powell, and dramas like “One Minute ​to Zero” (1952) with Robert Mitchum.

The petite, ​brunette actress appeared alongside other ⁠top male stars including Burt Lancaster in “Brute Force” (1947), Mickey Rooney in “Killer McCoy” (1947), Bing Crosby in “Top o’ the Morning” (1949), Mario Lanza in “The Great Caruso” (1951), Gregory Peck in “The World in His Arms” (1952) and Paul Newman in “The ​Helen Morgan Story” (1957), her last movie.

She had a lovely soprano voice and performed early in her ​career on the ⁠operatic stage. Blyth was a natural for film musicals, although for the songs in “The Helen Morgan Story” the studio insisted on dubbing her vocals with another singer.

She occasionally appeared in TV roles after his last film including “The Twilight Zone” in 1964 and ending with “Murder, She Wrote” in 1985.

Ann ⁠Marie Blyth ​was born on Aug. 16, 1928, in Mount Kisco, New York. She trained ​as a singer and actress as a child. While touring as a teenager with a Broadway play in Los Angeles, she was given a screen test that led ​to her Hollywood career.

Blyth had five children with her husband James McNulty, who died in 2007.



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