Elizabeth Harrower(1918-2003)
- Writer
- Actress
Betty Louise Foss was born during the final days of World War I in
Alameda, California as the country plagued by a flu epidemic. Within
six weeks, her mother died, her father had a nervous breakdown, and
relatives passed her care around. As babies were thought to draw the
deadly flu, Betty was eventually placed in a San Francisco orphanage
where she was later adopted by Scottish immigrants William and Jessie
Harrower and raised in Berkeley and Los Angeles. During the Great
Depression her adoptive father's salary was cut in half and her
adoptive mother decided to take Betty out of school and off to
Hollywood to begin an acting career. After trying out several alter
egos in the hopes of making an impression on someone in the industry,
Betty Foss eventually settled on the identity of Elizabeth Harrower.
Elizabeth Harrower appeared in
Becky Sharp (1935), the first
feature-length color film in 1935. She would continue to appear in
hundreds of radio, television, film and stage productions over the next
decades, most notably True Grit (1969).
In 1942, Harrower married Harry Seabold, an Air Force cadet she had met
in fifth grade. Their daughter, actress
Susan Seaforth Hayes, was born in
1943. Her husband was called into war even before that and the marriage
subsequently did not last. By the 1970s Elizabeth Harrower had met soap
opera scribe William J. Bell and she
would eventually start her writing career and became head writer of
Days of Our Lives (1965)
from 1979-1980. She went on to write for Bell's
The Young and the Restless (1973)
in the 1980s. Her last writing stint was on the short-lived soap opera
Generations (1989) in 1991. In
2003, already while taking chemotherapy she had a prominent limited run
as Charlotte Ramsey on
The Young and the Restless (1973).
She died shortly thereafter at age 85.