Net Worth and Salary

Net Worth and Salary

Actress radio personality singer

Hattie McDaniel

Hattie McDaniel

Who is Hattie McDaniel?

Hattie McDaniel was an actress, singer, and radio personality. Hattie McDaniel was the first African American performer to win an Academy Award for her supporting role as “Mammy” in the film “Gone with the Wind” in 1940.

Hattie McDaniel- Birth, Parents, Siblings & Education

Hattie McDaniel was born on June 10, 1895, in Wichita, Kansas, to Henry McDaniel and Susan Holbert.

Her parents were both formerly enslaved. Her father was a Civil War veteran. Hattie was the family’s youngest child, with twelve siblings.

McDaniel’s brother Sam McDaniel played a butler in the 1948 short film “Heavenly Daze,” and actress Etta McDaniel was also a McDaniel.

Net Worth of Hattie McDaniel?

Hattie McDaniel’s net worth is estimated to be around $1.5 million.

Relationship, Married Life, Boyfriend/Girlfriend

Hattie McDaniel married several times throughout her life. In 1922, she married George Langford.

Hattie married Howard Hickman in 1938, but the couple divorced the next year.

In 1941, the actress married her third husband, real estate broker James Lloyd Crawford. Following a false pregnancy and depression, she divorced Crawford in 1945.

In 1949, Hattie Williams married Larry Williams, an interior decorator. However, the couple divorced after only five months.

Body Measurement- Height, Weight, Hair Color

Hattie McDaniel’s body dimensions are unavailable.

Hattie McDaniel-Professional Career

McDaniel began her professional career while still in high school, dancing, singing, and performing skits in a variety of performances.

Hattie eventually dropped out of school in order to devote her full attention to her career while performing with her brother’s troupe in 1909.

Throughout the 1920s, Hattie worked with Professor George Morrison’s orchestra and toured with his troops for five years. By the middle of the decade, she had received offers to perform on Denver’s KOA radio station.

Hattie McDaniel
Hattie McDaniel First Black Woman To Win An Oscar Speech. Source: blackdoctor

During this time, she was well-known as a blues musician on the vaudeville circuit. Despite her abilities, she struggled to find work and was forced to do odd jobs to support herself.

Hattie was invited to Hollywood by her siblings, who were already in town and playing minor roles. Hattie was asked to do a segment on her brother’s radio show, ‘The Optimistic Do-Nuts,’ by her brother.

In 1931, as an extra, she landed her first brief role in a Hollywood musical. She played a housekeeper in the film ‘The Golden West’ in 1932.

Following a string of minor roles, Hattie landed a prominent role in 1934‘s ‘Judge Priest,’ in which she performed a duet with actor Will Rogers.

She was in high demand after landing the role of Mom Beck in ‘The Little Colonel,’ alongside Lionel Barrymore and Shirley Temple.

The film with Lionel and Shirley was a watershed moment in her career, as numerous directors began approaching her with good film offers. Among the films was ‘ShowBoat,’ in which Hattie played Queenie.

Hattie’s acting career culminated with her performance as Scarlett O’Hara’s house servant ‘Mammy’ in the acclaimed film ‘One with the Wind’ in 1939, which earned her an Oscar in 1940.

The irony is that Hattie and the other film’s colored cast members were not permitted to attend the premiere.

Hattie starred in roles that drew widespread condemnation from the post-Civil War African-American community, who characterized the roles as retrograde and outmoded.

Furthermore, they believed that catering to positions such as Mama Beck and Mammy demonstrated to the world that African-Americans were content with being stereotyped as slaves and servants.

Hattie quickly refuted these claims, stating that roles like Mammy entailed much more than being a servant. She took on similar tasks to bolster her claim.

However, as the Civil Rights Movement progressed, Hattie was offered fewer and fewer roles and returned to radio.

Hattie began her career in 1947 with ‘The Beulah Show.’ Despite her maid job, Hattie was able to overcome racial prejudices with the help of the NAACP.

Hattie had just begun the broadcast version of ‘The Beulah Show’ in 1951 when she suffered a heart attack. She was diagnosed with breast cancer a year later.

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Social Media

Her social media handles are unknown.

Quick Facts of Hattie McDaniel

  • Hattie expressed a desire to be buried in the Hollywood Cemetery in her will, but her wish went unfulfilled.
  • The Santa Monica Boulevard Cemetery is the final resting place of several Hollywood movie stars, including Rudolph Valentino and Douglas Fairbanks.
  • Hollywood Cemetery officials refused to bury her there, citing their racial segregation policy.
  • She was eventually buried in Angelus-Rosedale Cemetery, her second choice.
  • Her net worth is estimated to be around $1.5 million.