Mary Jackson
One of those strikingly familiar matrons you just can't place, character actress Mary Jackson is probably best known for her recurring role as one of the delightfully eccentric bootlegging sisters, "Miss Emily" Baldwin, on the series The Waltons (1971) that ran for nine seasons. She was born November 22, 1910 in rural Milford, Michigan, and earned a bachelor's degree from West Michigan University in 1932. A Depression-era school teacher for one year before pursuing her interest in theater, she returned to college (this time Michigan State University) in a fine arts program. She started out on the Chicago stage and in summer stock before migrating to the larger stages in New York and Los Angeles.
Film and TV roles did not come her way until well into middle age. Guesting on such TV shows as "The Andy Griffith Show," "The Twilight Zone," "My Three Sons," "Hazel," "The Mary Tyler Moore Show," "Barnaby Jones" and "Highway to Heaven," she usually appeared as ladylike small-town citizens. She was also part of the ensemble in Peter Bogdanovich's first low-budget film thriller Targets (1968), which was Boris Karloff's last feature. In the 70s she started gathering up character bits here and there, such as her nuns in the all-star epic Airport (1970) and the horror Audrey Rose (1977). A variety of pleasant, maternal parts came her way, including Lynn Carlin's mother in the Blake Edwards' western Wild Rovers (1971) and Jane Fonda's in the comedy caper Fun with Dick and Jane (1977). She supported Fonda again in the Vietnam-era drama Coming Home (1978), was among the cast in the cultish Big Top Pee-wee (1988) and had a noticeable role in Steve Martin's Leap of Faith (1992).
As for "The Waltons" success, character actress Dorothy Stickney played the part of Emily in the initial TV pilot along with Josephine Hutchinson as older sister Mamie. When the series came to fruition, Mary and actress Helen Kleeb, another one of those "I've seen her before" character faces, took over the spinster roles. Both she and Kleeb continued their sister act periodically in several Walton "reunion" TV-movies, which included assorted weddings and holiday gatherings. Both ladies made their final TV appearances in A Walton Easter (1997). Kleeb died of natural causes in 2003 at age 96. Mary passed away two years later at age 95 of complications from Parkinson's disease. - IMDb Mini Biography

Big Top Pee-wee

A Death in Canaan

The Exorcist III

Skinned Alive

Some Kind of Hero

A Small Killing

Audrey Rose

Targets

A Day for Thanks on Waltons Mountain

Leap of Faith

Our Time

My Town

Meet the Munceys

The Failing of Raymond

A Wedding on Waltons Mountain

Fun with Dick and Jane

Airport

The Two Lives of Carol Letner

Between Two Brothers

Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night

Friendly Persuasion

A Walton Thanksgiving Reunion

Terror at Red Wolf Inn

Ozone

Wild Rovers

Coming Home

A Family Thing

Blume in Love

The Case of the Hillside Stranglers

Letters from Frank

Kid Blue

The Andy Griffith Show

Magnum, P.I.

Family Ties

The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis

The Rookies

L.A. Law

The F.B.I.

The Bionic Woman

Quincy, M.E.

The Jeffersons

Route 66

Highway to Heaven

The Streets of San Francisco

Hill Street Blues

Scarecrow and Mrs. King

The Mary Tyler Moore Show

Hart to Hart

Cagney & Lacey

General Electric Theater

The Twilight Zone

Cannon

Christy

Hunter

The Waltons

Alfred Hitchcock Presents

The Fugitive

The Fugitive

Lancer

Hazel

The Philco Television Playhouse

The Manhunter
CBS Playhouse

Robert Montgomery Presents

Stoney Burke

Open All Night

Parenthood

When the Whistle Blows

The Runaways

The Fugitive

The Barbara Stanwyck Show

The F.B.I.

The F.B.I.

The F.B.I.

The F.B.I.

The Andy Griffith Show

The Outer Limits

Hardcastle and McCormick

Faerie Tale Theatre

The Invaders

The Invaders
