“Miss” has long been used as an honorific for a mature woman who may or may not be married (and/or doesn’t want her marital status to be made public). Jane Wyatt (Mr Spock’s mother) was billed that way. The matriarch of the Ewing clan was respectfully addressed as “Miz Ellie” (hey, it was Texas). I’m sure there are other examples, but I can’t think of them right offhand.
This practice is of course somewhat dated and is seldom used today. But in other places, something of the sort is still used. In Germany, f’rinstance, a woman of a certain age would be addressed as “Frau” or (even more respectfully) “gnädige Frau.” (At least this is what I was once taught. It may have changed in the interim.)
Possibly just a theatrical affectation. It was standard for actors to be billed with their titles (Mr, Mrs, Miss) in the theatre up until the early 20th Century. I seem to recall it was also standard in the early days of film as well, until Hollywood and the gossip rags started to make proper stars that we were all meant to see as people we knew. Use of formal titles was of course a lot more prevalent in general.
I don’t know anything about Barbara Stanwyck - is it possible she was recently divorced or had some other reason to specify she was not married?
Talk about “(very sexist/ageist) assumptions”… we still laugh about the night we saw the legendary Hank Snow on TV, receiving a country music award. *(Now, keep in mind this was the late 70s, when we thought we’d fought and won the gender equity wars…) *
Well, Ol’ Hank shambled up to the microphone, mentioned his band and the fans, and then drawled: “An’ ah would lahk to thank muh wife, Missus Hank Snow.”
Is is possible that “Barbara Stanwyck” was under contract to a different studio, and she had to use a different name to work for ABC? I have heard that musicians often have to use pseudonyms when they change record labels.
Have male actors/performers been billed as “Mister”? I recall it being used only as an introduction… on old talk shows, back in the Jack Paar/Arthur Godfrey days. Hmm, I think Johnny Carson used it as well: “Ladies and gentlemen, the always entertaining… Misssster… Don Rickles.”
But actually billed that way? I can’t think of any. Well, other than the obvious one. The greatest thespian this generation has ever seen, who, like Cher and Madonna, needed no last name…
Not speaking for Oswald of course, but when I was growing up, The Big Valley was regularly rerun on TV (strangely Bonanza wasn’t rerun in the area nearly as much), so my first exposure to Barbara Stanwyck was as the older, white-haired matriarch on that show.
I used to watch The Big Valley when I was in sixth or seventh grade. When I finally saw Barbara in some of her earlier movie roles, I found it hard to believe she was the same woman who played Victoria Barkley.
Keep in mind that “Ms” didn’t appear until the late '60s or early '70s. Before that, you had the choice of “Miss,” “Mrs,” or nothing at all. (In the US, anyway.)
I’ve known some mature women who insisted on being addressed as “Miss.” If the intent was to make them seem younger, they weren’t fooling anybody.