Kathryn Adams Doty
Kathryn Elizabeth Doty (née Hohn; July 15, 1920 – October 14, 2016), also known by her stage name Kathryn Adams or as Kathryn Adams Doty, was an American actress, novelist and psychologist. Early yearsThe daughter of a Methodist minister, Dr. Chris G. Hohn,[3] Doty was born in New Ulm, Minnesota. When she was six,[4] the family moved to Warrenton, Missouri,[3] where her father was chaplain and executive secretary at an orphans' home.[4] After she developed lung problems, she spent two years at a camp in Minnesota. As early as age 13, she took her father's place in the pulpit when he was sick. In a 1939 newspaper article, she recalled: "It was quite a radical thing, in that small town, for a little girl to conduct the church services and preach the sermon, but the congregation understood and were very kind to me."[4] Doty was a student at Hamline University in Saint Paul, Minnesota, (where she sang in the a cappella choir)[4] and worked as a catalog clerk at the headquarters of Montgomery Ward[5] when an opportunity for an acting career arose. She competed in 1939 in the national finals of the Jesse L. Lasky radio contest Gateway to Hollywood, received a contract,[4] and remained in California to begin a film career under the name of Kathryn Adams. FilmDoty debuted on film in Fifth Avenue Girl (1939).[4] One of her more notable roles was as Mrs. Brown, the young mother in Alfred Hitchcock's Saboteur (1942).[6] She co-starred in Sky Raiders (1941), a film serial from Universal Pictures, and had the leading lady role in three Western films in which Johnny Mack Brown starred.[7] Personal lifeShe married fellow actor Hugh Beaumont in an Easter wedding on April 13, 1941, at Hollywood Congregational Church.[8] She earned a master's degree in educational psychology and had a career as a psychologist, working at the Footlight's Child Guidance Clinic at Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center and later in Minnesota after she moved back to her home state.[7] WritingWriting as Kathryn Doty, she published short stories in Pocket, The Friend and various children's magazines.[7] DeathAdams died on October 14, 2016, aged 96, in an assisted living facility in Mankato, Minnesota.[9][10] Partial filmography
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