Katharine Hepburn
35 titles
Filmography
35 results

Stage Door
(1937)Ginger Rogers & Ann Miller tap in time & rat-a-tat lines. Lucille Ball braves a date with an obnoxious lumber baron.

Long Day's Journey Into Night
(1962)Based on the famed O'Neill play about a dysfunctional family with tense bonds brought on by alcoholism, drug addiction, and a cheapskate of a father.

Bringing Up Baby
(1938)A rare missing fossil, a stuffy paleontologist, an heiress in love and a pet leopard are the makings of a screwball comedy far ahead of its time.

On Golden Pond
(1981)At Golden Pond, a couple agree to care of Billy, the son of their daughter Chelsea's new boyfriend, and a most unexpected relationship blooms.

Holiday
(1938)An iconoclastic young man (Cary Grant), who's engaged to a snooty heiress (Doris Nolan), discovers he's really in love with his fianc�e's down-to-earth sister (Katherine Hepburn), in director George Cukor's stylish comedy, Holiday.

The Glass Menagerie
(1973)In Tennessee Williams' seminal classic, an aging Southern belle's preoccupation with her past and her dreams for her children's futures threaten to smother her painfully shy daughter and her aspiring writer son. A gentleman caller's visit offers false hope and disrupts the family's precarious balance. Starring the legendary Katharine Hepburn as Amanda Wingfield and Sam Waterston as Tom Wingfield.

Summertime
(1955)A single, middle-aged American woman takes a trip to Venice and falls in love with an Italian antiques dealer. They share a romantic summer together until she finds out he is married.

A Delicate Balance
(1973)An invasion of friends and family pushes the repressed problems of a complacent marriage to the fore in this exceptional adaptation of Edward Albee's Pulitzer Prize-winning play. Oscar-winners Katharine Hepburn and Paul Scofield star, and acclaimed British director Tony Richardson allows these thoroughbreds to explore the full range of conflict and confrontation in this explosive WASP gothic.

Morning Glory
(1933)Katharine Hepburn won her first Academy Award as Best Actress in this, just her third film performance. The great Hepburn stars as Eva Lovelace, a girl from a New England country town who has but one burning ambition: to become a successful stage actress. Arriving in New York, she manages to make friends quickly and even lands a small part in a Broadway show. Eva’s big chance comes when the show’s star (Mary Duncan) tries to strong-arm producer Louis Easton (Adolphe Menjou) for more money just before the curtain goes up. Easton resists, fires the star and puts Eva on stage in her place. Naturally, she’s a smash! Success also brings romance, and Eva becomes entangled in a love triangle with Easton and writer Joseph Sheridan (Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.). Morning Glory is a must-see for all Hepburn fans.

Sylvia Scarlett
(1935)Comedy drama starring Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. A widowed, ne'er-do-well father on the run disguises his daughter as a boy to escape the law.

Mary of Scotland
(1936)Based on the historical play by Maxwell Anderson, this screen biopic chronicles Mary Queen of Scots' return to her homeland from France to rule fairly and justly.
The Madwoman of Chaillot
(1969)An eccentric French countess (Katharine Hepburn) and her odd friends thwart a plot to drill for oil in Paris.

Quality Street
(1937)Academy Award winner Katharine Hepburn stars as a woman on the verge of becoming a spinster who becomes trapped by her own elaborate ruse to win the heart of the man she loves in Quality Street. Phoebe Throssel (Hepburn) was heartbroken when Dr. Valentine Brown (Franchot Tone) left her to fight the army of Napoleon, and Phoebe has remained in love and single waiting for him. But when Dr. Brown returns after ten years and inadvertently humiliates her with a comment on her appearance, Phoebe changes her hair and buys a new gown. And when Dr. Brown then mistakes Phoebe for her younger niece, Livvy, she does not correct him and proceeds to woo the man she loves in her new identity. But when Dr. Brown confesses to 'Livvy' that he loves Phoebe, she must find a way to tell the doctor the truth.

Dragon Seed
(1944)The lives of a Chinese village are turned Upside down when the Japanese invade it. A heroic young Chinese woman leads her fellow villagers in an uprising against Japanese Invaders.

One Christmas
(1994)An 8 year old boy visits his estranged father for the holidays in 1930s New Orleans. Stars Katharine Hepburn.

Grace Quigley
(1985)When Grace Quigley meets a neurotic hitman, the two pair up to provide a painless parting for seniors who’ve had enough of life’s slings and arrows.

Call Me Kate
(2023)Through newly uncovered audio and video footage, the inner life of intensely private screen legend Katharine Hepburn emerges in this documentary.

The African Queen
(1952)Adapted from the novel by C.S. Forester, The African Queen (1951) directed by John Huston stars Humphrey Bogart in his Academy Award-winning portrayal of Charlie Allnut, the slovenly, gin-swilling captain of a tramp steamer called the African Queen, which ships supplies to small East African villages during World War I.

The Philadelphia Story
(1940)On the eve of her wedding, a wealthy woman gets caught in a bind when her ex-husband and a handsome reporter make an appearance in her life.

State of the Union
(1948)Academy Award-winning screen icons Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn shine in a classic film about marriage, politics and the pursuit of the American dream.