Madge (given name)
Madge is a female given name, a short form of Margaret, Marjorie, and Maggie.[1] Madge may refer to:
Actresses:
- Madge Bellamy (1899–1990), American movie actress born Margaret Derden Philpott
 - Madge Blake (1899–1969), American character actress most famous for her role as Aunt Harriet Cooper on the TV series Batman
 - Madge Brindley (1901–1968), British actress
 - Madge Elliott (1896–1955), Australian dancer and actress
 - Madge Evans (born Margherita Evans; 1909–1981), American film actress who began her career as a child actress and model
 - Madge Hindle (born 1938), English actress
 - Dame Madge Kendal (1848–1935), English actress and theatre manager
 - Madge Kennedy (1891–1987), American actress
 - Madge Kirby (1884–1956), English-born American actress
 - Madge Lessing (1873–1966), English singer and actress
 - Madge Meredith (1921–2017), American actress
 - Madge Ryan (1919–1994), Australian actress
 - Madge Sinclair (1938–1995), Jamaican-born American actress
 - Madge Skelly, American actress and audiologist
 - Madge Stuart (1895–1958), British silent film actress
 - Madge Titheradge (1887–1961), Australian actress
 - Madge Tree (1875–1947), British actress
 - Madge Tyrone, American actress, film editor and screenwriter
 
Politics:
- Madge Biggs (1902–1985), Falkland Islands librarian and politician
 - Madge Bradley (1904–2000), American judge
 - Madge Enterline, American politician
 
Singers:
- Madonna, American singer and actress, known as "Madge" in the British press.
 
Sports:
- Madge Allan, English lawn bowler
 - Madge Moulton (1917–?), British diver
 - Madge Rainey, Irish camogie player
 - Madge Stewart, Jamaican cricketer
 - Madge Syers (born Florence Madeline Syers; 1881–1917), British figure skater, first woman to compete at the World Figure Skating Championships
 
Writers:
- Madge Jenison (1874–1960), American novelist
 - Madge Morris Wagner (1862–1924), American poet and journalist
 
In other fields:
- Madge Adam (1912–2001), English astronomer
 - Madeleine Albright (1937–2022), first female Secretary of State in the United States
 - Madge Easton Anderson (1896–1992), Scottish lawyer
 - Madge Bester (1963–2018), formerly the world's shortest living woman
 - Madeline McDowell Breckinridge (1872–1920), women's suffragette leader and reformer
 - Madge Connor (1874–1952), female police officer
 - Madge Dawson, American educator, social worker, researcher and pioneering feminist
 - Madge Dresser, English historian
 - Madge Elder, Scottish gardener, writer and feminist
 - Madge Gill (1882–1961), English outsider and visionary artist
 - Madge Miller Green (1900–1989), American politician and educator
 - Madge Knight (1895–1974), English artist
 - Madge Macklin (1893–1962), American physician
 - Madge Moore (1922–2016), American aviator
 - Madge Oberholtzer (1896–1925), American woman raped and murdered by the Grand Dragon of the Indiana Klan
 - Madge Oliver (1875–1924), British artist
 - Margaret and Mary Shelton (1510/15–1570/71), once thought to be sisters, but now believed to be the same person; may have been a mistress of King Henry VIII of England
 - Madge Smith (1898–1974), Canadian photographer
 - Madge Tennent (1889–1972), British-American painter considered the greatest individual contributor to 20th-century Hawaiian art [2]
 
Fictional characters:
- Madge, a long-running advertising character for Palmolive dishwashing detergent portrayed by Jan Miner
 - Madge Allsop, long-suffering bridesmaid and longtime companion of Dame Edna Everage (played by actress Emily Perry)
 - Madge Bishop, one of the matriarchs of the Australian soap opera Neighbours
 - Madge Harvey, on the ITV programme Benidorm
 - Madge, a character in the children's television show It's a Big Big World
 - Madge Madsen, a character in the TV show The Office.
 - Madge Owens, in the play Picnic and the 1955 film Picnic
 - Madge Undersee, a character in the Hunger Games trilogy
 - Madge Weinstein, fictional Internet personality, creation and alter ego of underground filmmaker Richard Bluestein
 - Madge Wildfire, in Sir Walter Scott's novel The Heart of Midlothian
 
References
- ^ Behind the Name
 - ^ "The History of Today: 150 Years". Honolulu Advertiser. February 5, 2006.