Elaine Anderson Steinbeck

Actress

Birthday August 14, 1914

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Austin, Texas, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2003-4-27, New York City, U.S. (88 years old)

Nationality United States

#62714 Most Popular

1914

Elaine Anderson Steinbeck (born Mary Elaine Anderson; August 14, 1914 – April 27, 2003) was an American actress and stage manager.

She was the widow of author John Steinbeck.

Anderson was born on August 14, 1914, in Austin, Texas, to Libbie Adeline (née Roberts) and Waverly F. Anderson.

Her maternal great-grandfather was Judge John Bryant Dupuy of Erath County, Texas.

1934

On February 21, 1934, Anderson married actor Zachary Scott, whom she met while they both studied in the University of Texas at Austin theatre program.

Anderson studied drama at the University of Texas, Austin.

She worked with Scott at the Austin Little Theatre for several years, and in the process they met several people with connections in the New York theatre.

1940

Around 1940, the Scotts moved to New York City to seek success there.

Though both wished to be successful actors, Zachary had more success in that area, so Elaine began working for The Theatre Guild in New York and learned the technical aspects of theatre production.

1944

In late 1944, Elaine gave up her career to relocate to Hollywood with Zachary, who had signed a seven-year contract with Warner Brothers.

The Scotts had a daughter, Waverly.

Anderson is said to have made uncredited appearances in two 1944 B-movies: A Night of Adventure, and Seven Days Ashore ("girl in band").

1949

They divorced in 1949.

1950

Within a week of her divorce from Scott, Elaine married writer John Steinbeck on December 28, 1950.

1968

They had no children together and remained married until his death in December 1968.

2003

Anderson died of natural causes on April 27, 2003, in Manhattan at the age of 88.

She was buried near Steinbeck in the Garden of Memories Memorial Park in Salinas, California.

When Elaine Steinbeck died in 2003, she left her daughter as executor of the estate.

2017

In 2017, a federal jury in Los Angeles awarded Waverly Scott Kaffaga more than $13 million in a lawsuit claiming the author's son and daughter-in-law impeded film adaptations of his classic works.

The lawsuit followed a decades-long dispute between Thomas Steinbeck and Elaine over control of the author's works.