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Friday, February 4, 2011

Betty Grable


Betty Grable (December 18, 1916 – July 2, 1973) was an American actressdancer andsinger.
Her iconic bathing suit photo made her the number-one pin-up girl of the World War II era. It was later included in the LIFE magazine project "100 Photos that Changed the World". Grable was particularly noted for having the most beautiful legs in Hollywood and studio publicity widely dispersed photos featuring them. Hosiery specialists of the era often noted the ideal proportions of her legs as: thigh (18.5") calf (12"), and ankle (7.5"). Grable's legs were famously insured by her studio for $1,000,000 with Lloyds of London.

Early life

She was born Elizabeth Ruth Grable in St. Louis, Missouri to John Conn Grable (1883–1954) and Lillian Rose Hofmann (1889–1964). She was the youngest of three children.
Most of Grable's immediate ancestors were American, but her distant heritage was of Dutch,IrishGerman and English stock. She was propelled into the acting profession by her mother. For her first role, as a chorus girl in the film Happy Days (1929), Grable was only 12 years old (legally underage for acting), but, because the chorus line performed in blackface, it was difficult to tell how old she was. Her mother soon gave her a make-over which included dyeing her hair platinum blonde.


Career

For her next film, her mother got her a contract using a false identification. When this deception was discovered, however, Grable was fired. Grable finally obtained a role as a 'Goldwyn Girl' in Whoopee! (1930), starring Eddie Cantor. Though Grable received no billing, she led the opening number, "Cowboys." Grable then worked in small roles at different studios for the rest of the decade, including the Academy Award-winning The Gay Divorcee (1934), starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, where she was prominently featured in the number "Let's K-nock K-nees".
In the late 1930s, Grable signed a contract with Paramount Pictures, starring in several B movies, mostly portraying co-eds. Despite playing leads, the typecasting proved to hurt her career more than it was helpful.In 1939, Grable appeared with her then husband, Jackie Coogan(married in 1937), in Million Dollar Legs, from which her nickname is taken. They divorced later that same year (October 1939). After small parts in over 50 Hollywood movies through the 1930s, Grable finally gained national attention for her stage role in the Cole Porter Broadway hitDu Barry Was a Lady (1939). When her contract at Paramount expired, Grable decided to quit acting, being fed up with appearing in college films.
In a 1940 interview, she said that she was "sick and tired" of show business and had decided to retire, but changed her mind - she received an unsolicited offer to go on a personal appearance tour, which she accepted and which led to Darryl F. Zanuck offering her a bigger contract, which she accepted, and which was followed by a part in Buddy DeSylva's Broadway show Du Barry Was a Lady and a part replacing the suddenly ill Alice Faye in Down Argentine Way. "If that's not luck I don't know what you'd call it" Grable said. "I've had contracts with four studios in 10 years and each time I left one or was dropped, I stepped into something better."
Grable's famous pin-up.
Grable became 20th Century Fox's top star during the decade. She appeared in Technicolor movies such as Down Argentine Way (1940), Moon Over Miami (1941) (both with Don Ameche), Springtime in The Rockies (1942), Coney Island (1943) with George MontgomerySweet Rosie O'Grady (1943) withRobert YoungPin Up Girl (1944), Diamond Horseshoe (1945) with Dick HaymesThe Dolly Sisters(1945) with John Payne and June HaverMother Wore Tights (1947), her most popular film, was with her favorite costar, Dan Dailey.
It was during her reign as box office queen in 1943 that Grable posed for her famous pinup photo, which (along with her movies) soon became escapist fare among GIs fighting in World War II. The image was taken by studio photographer Frank Powolny.[6] It was rumored that the particular pose and angle were chosen to hide the fact that Grable was pregnant at the time of the photo. In the stage play (1951) and motion picture (1953), of Stalag 17, Stanislas "Animal" Kasava, (Robert Strauss) is infatuated with her, spending his day staring at her photographs. "I seen all your pictures six times" he says "I would not even open the popcorn.
Starting in 1942, Grable was named in the top 10 box office draws for 10 consecutive years. For eight of those ten years, she was the top female-box office star. In 1943, she was named the #1 movie box office attraction. By the end of the 1940s Grable was the highest-paid female star in Hollywood, receiving $300,000 a year. During the 1940s and early 1950s, thirty Fox films were among the top ten highest grossing films of the year. Of those, ten were movies featuring Grable; eight of those movies were Fox's highest grossing pictures for their repesctive years.
Grable was even the heroine of a novel, Betty Grable and the House with the Iron Shutters, written by Kathryn Heisenfelt, published by Whitman Publishing Company in 1943. While the heroine is identified as the famous actress, the stories are entirely fictitious. The story was probably written for a young teenage audience and is reminiscent of the adventures of Nancy Drew. It is part of a series known as "Whitman Authorized Editions", 16 books published between 1941-1947 that featured a film actress as heroine.
Her postwar musicals included: That Lady in Ermine (1948) with Douglas Fairbanks Jr.When My Baby Smiles at Me (1948) again with Dailey, Wabash Avenue (1950) (a remake of Grable's own Coney Island) with Victor MatureMy Blue Heaven (1950), and Meet Me After the Show (1951). Studio chief Darryl F. Zanuck lavished his star with expensive Technicolor films, but also kept her busy — Grable made nearly 25 musicals and comedies in 13 years. Her last big hit for Fox was How to Marry a Millionaire (1953) with Lauren Bacall and Marilyn Monroe. Grable next starred in Three for the Show (1955) with Jack Lemmon; this film was one of her last musicals.
Grable's later career was marked by feuds with studio heads. At one point, in the middle of a fight with Zanuck, she tore up her contract and stormed out of his office. By 1953, Zanuck was grooming Marilyn Monroe to replace Grable as the Fox's resident sex symbol. Far from feeling threatened, on the set of How to Marry a Millionaire Grable famously said to Monroe, "go and get yours, honey! I've had mine". It was at this point that Grable lost her father 'Conn' Grable in 1954, at age 71.
Grable returned to the studio for one last film, How to Be Very, Very Popular (1955) with Sheree North. Following this, Grable hoped to secure the role of Miss Adelaide in the film version of the musical Guys and Dolls. However, when producer Samuel Goldwyn learned that Grable skipped a meeting with him because one of her dogs had taken ill, he became incensed and removed her from consideration. Vivian Blaine, who had originated the role on Broadway, was ultimately cast.
Having left movies entirely, she made the transition to television and starred in Las Vegas. It was in these transition years to stage, when Betty lost her mother Lillian in 1964, at age 75. By 1967, she took over the lead in the touring company of Hello, Dolly!. She starred in a 1969 musical called Belle Starr in London, but it was savaged by critics and soon folded.
Grable's last role was Billie Dawn in Born Yesterday, at the Alhambra Dinner Theatre in Jacksonville, Florida in February 1973.


Personal life

In 1937, Grable married another famous former child actor, Jackie Coogan. He was under considerable stress from a lawsuit against his parents over his childhood earnings and the couple divorced in 1939.
In 1943, she married trumpeter Harry James. The couple had two daughters, Victoria and Jessica. They endured a tumultuous 22-year marriage that was plagued by alcoholism and infidelity. The couple divorced in 1965. Grable entered into a relationship with a dancer, Bob Remick, several years her junior. Though they did not marry, their romance lasted until the end of Grable's life.


Death

Grable died July 2, 1973, of lung cancer at age 56 in Santa Monica, California. Her funeral was held July 5, 1973, 30 years to the day after her marriage to Harry James — who, in turn, died on what would have been his and Grable's 40th anniversary, July 5, 1983. She was interred inInglewood Park CemeteryInglewood, California, in the Mausoleum of the Golden West, Sanctuary of Dawn section, with her mother Lillian, alongside her father 'Conn' Grable. Sister Marjorie Grable-Arnold joined them in their family crypt upon her death at 71, in 1980.
Among the lumunaries attending her funeral were her ex husband Harry JamesDorothy LamourShirley BoothMitzi GaynorJohnnie Ray,Don AmecheCesar RomeroGeorge RaftAlice Faye and Dan Dailey. "I Had the Craziest Dream," the haunting ballad Betty introduced in "Springtime in the Rockies," was played on the church organ.


Posthumous recognition

Grable has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6525 Hollywood Boulevard. She also has a star on the St. Louis Walk of Fame, and was inducted into the Hall of Famous Missourians in 2009.
Hugh Hefner, founder of Playboy noted on National Public Radio's Morning Edition on April 23, 2007, in an interview with Terry Gross that Grable was his inspiration for founding the Playboy empire.


Filmography


1929–1939

YearTitleRoleDirectorCo-starsNotes
1929Happy DaysChorus GirlBenjamin StoloffCharles EvansMarjorie WhiteRichard KeeneUncredited
1930Let's Go PlacesChorineFrank R. StrayerJoseph WagstaffLola LaneUncredited
New Movietone Follies of 1930ChorineBenjamin StoloffEl BrendelMarjorie WhiteUncredited
Whoopee!Goldwyn GirlThornton FreelandEddie CantorEthel Shutta,Eleanor HuntUncredited
1931KikiGoldwyn GirlSam TaylorMary PickfordUncredited
Palmy DaysGoldwyn GirlA. Edward SutherlandCharlotte Greenwood,Barbara WeeksSpencer ChartersUncredited
1932The Greeks Had a Word for ThemHat Check GirlLowell ShermanJoan BlondellMadge Evans,Ina ClaireUncredited
ProbationRuth JarrettRichard ThorpeJohn DarrowSally BlaneGrable's first credited role
The Age of ConsentStudent at DormitoryGregory La CavaDorothy WilsonArline JudgeUncredited
Hold 'Em JailBarbara JonesNorman TaurogBert WheelerRobert WoolseyEdna May Oliver,
The Kid from SpainGoldwyn GirlLeo McCareyEddie CantorLyda Roberti,Robert YoungUncredited
1933CavalcadeGirl on couchFrank LloydDiana WynyardClive Brook,Una O'ConnorUncredited
Child of ManhattanLucy McGonegleEdward BuzzellNancy CarrollJohn Boles
Melody CruiseFirst StewardessMark SandrichCharles RugglesPhil HarrisUncredited
What Price Innocence?Beverly BennettWillard MackJean ParkerMinna Gombell,Willard Mack
The Sweetheart of Sigma ChiBand Singer with Ted Fio RitoEdwin L. MarinMary CarlisleBuster Crabbe
1934The Gay DivorceeDance SpecialtyMark SandrichFred AstaireGinger Rogers
Student TourCayenneCharles ReisnerJimmy DuranteCharles ButterworthMaxine Doyle
By Your LeaveFrances GretchellLloyd CorriganFrank MorganGenevieve Tobin
1935The NitwitsMary RobertsGeorge StevensBert WheelerRobert Woolsey
Old Man RhythmSylviaEdward LudwigCharles 'Buddy' Rogers,George Barbier
1936CollegiateDorothyRalph MurphyJoe PennerJack OakieNed Sparks
Follow the FleetTrio SingerMark SandrichFred AstaireGinger Rogers
Don't Turn 'em LooseMildred WebsterBenjamin StoloffLewis StoneJames GleasonBruce Cabot
Pigskin ParadeLaura WatsonDavid ButlerStuart ErwinPatsy Kelly,Judy GarlandThe only film in which Grable appeared with Judy Garland.
1937This Way PleaseJane MorrowRobert FloreyCharles 'Buddy' Rogers
Thrill of a LifetimeGwenGeorge ArchainbaudThe Yacht Club Boys
1938College SwingBettyRaoul WalshGeorge BurnsGracie Allen,Martha RayeBob Hope,Edward Everett Horton
Give Me a SailorNancy LarkinElliott NugentBob HopeJack Whiting,Martha Raye
Campus ConfessionsJoyce GilmoreGeorge ArchainbaudEleanore WhitneyWilliam HenryGrable received top billing for the first time
1939Man About TownSusan HayesMark SandrichJack BennyDorothy Lamour
Million Dollar LegsCarol ParkerNick GrindeJohn HartleyDonald O'ConnorJackie Coogan,Dorothea KentCo-starred Jackie Coogan who Grable was married to at the time
The Day the Bookies WeptIna FirpoLeslie GoodwinsJoe Penner


1940–1955

YearTitleRoleDirectorCo-starsNotes
1940Down Argentine WayGlenda Crawford/Glenda CunninghamIrving CummingsDon Ameche,Carmen Miranda,Charlotte GreenwoodGrable's first leading role. Alice Faye was originally set to star in the film, but had to withdraw due to illness
Tin Pan AlleyLily BlaneWalter LangAlice FayeJohn PayneJack OakieThe only time Grable and Faye co-starred together in a feature film
1941Moon Over MiamiKathryn 'Kay' LatimerWalter LangDon Ameche,Robert Cummings,Carole Landis
A Yank in the RAFCarol BrownHenry KingTyrone Power
I Wake Up ScreamingJill LynnH. Bruce HumberstoneVictor Mature,Carole LandisGrable's only straight dramatic role
1942Song of the IslandsEileen O'BrienWalter LangVictor MatureJack Oakie
Footlight SerenadePat LambertGregory RatoffJohn PayneVictor MatureJane Wyman
Springtime in the RockiesVicky LaneIrving CummingsJohn Payne,Carmen Miranda,Cesar Romero,Harry JamesGrable's future husband Harry James appeared in the cast
1943Coney IslandKate FarleyWalter LangGeorge Montgomery,Cesar Romero
Sweet Rosie O'GradyMadeline Marlowe/Rosie O'GradyIrving CummingsRobert Young,Adolphe Menjou
1944Four Jills in a JeepHerselfWilliam A. SeiterKay Francis,Carole Landis,Alice FayeMartha RayeCarmen Miranda
Pin Up GirlLorry Jones/Laura LorraineH. Bruce HumberstoneJohn Harvey,Martha Raye
1945Diamond HorseshoeBonnie CollinsGeorge SeatonDick HaymesPhil SilversWilliam Gaxton
The Dolly SistersYansci 'Jenny' DollyIrving CummingsJohn PayneJune Haver
1946Do You Love MeGirl in Taxi (cameo)Gregory RatoffMaureen O'Hara,Dick Haymes,Harry JamesGrable had a cameo as a fan of Harry James's character
1947The Shocking Miss PilgrimCynthia PilgrimGeorge SeatonDick Haymes,Anne Revere
Mother Wore TightsMyrtle McKinley BurtWalter LangDan DaileyMona FreemanGrable's most successful film at the time and her personal favourite
1948That Lady in ErmineFrancesca/AngelinaErnst LubitschOtto Preminger (uncredited)Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.,Cesar RomeroLubitsch died early into production. Preminger finished the film but insisted on Lubitsch receiving full credit
When My Baby Smiles at MeBonny KayeWalter LangDan DaileyJack OakieJune HavocDailey received an Oscar nomination for Best Actor
1949The Beautiful Blonde from Bashful BendWinifred JonesPreston SturgesCesar Romero,Rudy Vallee
1950Wabash AvenueRuby SummersHenry KosterVictor MaturePhil HarrisRemake of Grable's earlier hit 'Coney Island'
My Blue HeavenKitty MoranHenry KosterDan DaileyDavid WayneJane WyattMitzi Gaynor
1951Call Me MisterKay HudsonLloyd BaconDan DaileyDanny ThomasRemake of Grable's earlier hit 'A Yank in the RAF'
Meet Me After the ShowDelilah LeeRichard SaleMacdonald Carey,Rory Calhoun,Eddie Albert
1953The Farmer Takes a WifeMolly LarkinsHenry LevinDale Robertson,Thelma Ritter
How to Marry a MillionaireLoco DempseyJean NegulescoMarilyn Monroe,Lauren BacallGrable and Monroe's only film together. Monroe would become the top star of Hollywood throughout the 1950s just as Grable had done in the previous decade.
1955Three for the ShowJulie LowndesH.C. PotterJack Lemmon,Marge Champion,Gower Champion
How to Be Very, Very PopularStormy TornadoNunnally JohnsonSheree North,Robert Cummings,Charles Coburn,Tommy NoonanGrable's last film


Short subjects

  • Crashing Hollywood (1931)
  • Ex-Sweeties (1931)
  • Once a Hero (1931)
  • Lady! Please! (1932)
  • Hollywood Luck (1932)
  • The Flirty Sleepwalker (1932)
  • Hollywood Lights (1932)
  • Over the Counter (1932)
  • Air Tonic (1933)
  • School for Romance (1934)
  • Love Detectives (1934)
  • Elmer Steps Out (1934)
  • Business Is a Pleasure (1934)
  • Susie's Affairs (1934)
  • Ferry-Go-Round (1934)
  • This Band Age (1935)
  • The Spirit of 1976 (1935)
  • A Night at the Biltmore Bowl (1935)
  • Drawing Rumors (1935)
  • A Quiet Fourth (1935)
  • Screen Snapshots Series 15, No. 11 (1936)
  • Sunkist Stars at Palm Springs (1936)
  • Screen Snapshots Series 16, No. 7 (1937)
  • Screen Snapshots Series 16, No. 10 (1937)
  • Screen Snapshots Series 18, No. 4 (1938)
  • Hedda Hopper's Hollywood No. 1 (1941)
  • The All-Star Bond Rally (1945)
  • Hollywood Park (1946)
  • Screen Snapshots: Hollywood Shower of Stars (1955)


Box Office popularity

The following table shows the box office attractions of each year from 1940 to 1951. Betty Grable appeared on this list every year except for1946 as she had no films released that year. She topped the list 4 times in 194319441947 and 1948.
- 1940 -- 1941 -- 1942 -- 1943 -- 1944 -- 1945 -
#Actor#Actor#Actor#Actor#Actor#Actor
1Errol Flynn1Errol Flynn1Errol Flynn1Betty Grable1Betty Grable1Ingrid Bergman
2Clark Gable2Clark Gable2Betty Grable2Gary Cooper2Humphrey Bogart2Betty Grable
3Cary Grant3Gary Cooper3Greer Garson3Humphrey Bogart3Bing Crosby3Bing Crosby
4Joan Crawford4Betty Grable4Veronica Lake4Ingrid Bergman4Ingrid Bergman4Gene Kelly
5Gary Cooper5Lana Turner5Clark Gable5Jean Arthur5Cary Grant5Gene Tierney
6Spencer Tracy6Tyrone Power6Gary Cooper6Cary Grant6Judy Garland6Joan Crawford
7Ginger Rogers7Cary Grant7Lana Turner7Alice Faye7Gene Tierney7Gary Cooper
8Alice Faye8Barbara Stanwyck8Robert Taylor8Greer Garson8Gary Cooper8Alan Ladd
9Betty Grable9Fred Astaire9Cary Grant9Veronica Lake9Rita Hayworth9Dana Andrews
10Tyrone Power10Veronica Lake10James Cagney10Henry Fonda10John Wayne10Rita Hayworth
- 1946 -- 1947 -- 1948 -- 1949 -- 1950 -- 1951 -
#Actor#Actor#Actor#Actor#Actor#Actor
1Bing Crosby1Betty Grable1Betty Grable1Bob Hope1John Wayne1John Wayne
2Lana Turner2Lana Turner2Humphrey Bogart2Bing Crosby2Betty Grable2Gene Kelly
3Bob Hope3Cary Grant3Lana Turner3Betty Grable3Bob Hope3Betty Grable
4John Garfield4Bob Hope4John Wayne4John Wayne4Bing Crosby4Humphrey Bogart
5Cary Grant5Gary Cooper5Gene Kelly5Hedy Lamarr5James Stewart5Ava Gardner
6Ingrid Bergman6Bing Crosby6Cary Grant6Humphrey Bogart6Spencer Tracy6Montgomery Clift
7Joan Crawford7Gene Tierney7Clark Gable7Gene Kelly7Gregory Peck7Bob Hope
8Gene Tierney8John Garfield8Judy Garland8Cary Grant8Betty Hutton8Gary Cooper
9Rita Hayworth9Loretta Young9Ingrid Bergman9Gary Cooper9Hedy Lamarr9Doris Day
10Humphrey Bogart10Linda Darnell10Bing Crosby10Spencer Tracy10William Holden10Marlon Brando

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