Dorothy Lee (actress) explained

Birth Name:Marjorie Elizabeth Millsap
Birth Place:Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Birth Date:23 May 1911
Death Place:San Diego, California, U.S.
Spouse:Robert O. Boothe (1927 - 1929)
Jimmie Fidler (1930 - 1932)
Marshall D. Duffield (1933 - 1935)
A. Gordon Atwater (1936 - 1939)
F. John Bersbach, Jr. (1941 - 1960)
Charles J. Calderini (1960 - 1985)
Yearsactive:1927 - 1941

Dorothy Lee (born Marjorie Elizabeth Millsap, May 23, 1911 – June 24, 1999) was an American actress and comedian during the 1930s. She appeared in 28 films,[1] usually appearing alongside the comedy team of Bert Wheeler and Robert Woolsey.

Biography

Born in Los Angeles, Marjorie Elizabeth Millsap was the daughter of Homer and Bess Millsap.[2] Her father was an attorney in Los Angeles.

She became an actress known as Dorothy Lee. Her first film was Syncopation (1929).

Lee began her career as a dancer in a stage show, Ideas. When she happened to be watching scenes shot backstage for a film, the director asked her to take a small part in the film because the woman who was supposed to have the part did not show up. She later went to New York for a role in the stage show Hello Yourself. Her work in that production caught the attention of a movie director at RKO Radio Pictures, leading to her being in Syncopation, which was being filmed in New York.[3]

At 18, she signed with RKO and began working with Wheeler & Woolsey; of W & W's 21 feature films, Lee is the leading lady in 13 of them. She became so identified with the comedians that she seldom appeared apart from them. She withdrew from the series after producer David O. Selznick tampered with her performance in Girl Crazy; she returned when Selznick's successor Mark Sandrich cast her in two well-received features in 1934, Hips, Hips, Hooray! and Cockeyed Cavaliers. During her temporary retirement RKO replaced her with Mary Carlisle and then Betty Grable, but Lee returned in 1935 for two appearances.[4]

The Wheeler & Woolsey series ended when Robert Woolsey died in 1938. Dorothy Lee resumed her film career in 1939, playing incidental roles for RKO, Republic, Monogram, and Universal, retiring permanently from the screen in 1941. She continued to perform in person, in stage shows and at show-business functions.

Personal life

Lee married six times into wealthy families, but the first five unions failed for essentially the same reason: whenever she got married, the husband would insist that she must give up show business and become a member of high society. Lee would make an attempt to please her husband, but the relationship ultimately failed when Lee kept accepting job offers. One such instance was in 1938, just after Robert Woolsey had died: Bert Wheeler was struggling to re-establish himself as a solo performer, and asked Dorothy Lee to tour with him in vaudeville. She immediately interrupted her private life to help her friend,[5] over her husband's objections.

Her marriages:

Death

Lee died on June 24, 1999, aged 88, in San Diego, California, from respiratory failure, and is buried in Prospect Hill Cemetery, Rice, Jo Daviess County, Illinois.

Partial filmography

Note that a completely different actress named "Dorothy Lee" appeared in several silent film in 1924 and 1925, and is sometimes confused with this Dorothy Lee, who made her film debut in 1929.

With Wheeler & Woolsey:

Solo performances:

Notes and References

  1. News: Dorothy Lee; Co-Starred in Comedy Films . The Los Angeles Times . July 3, 1999 . California, Los Angeles . 24.
  2. Jamie Brotherton and Ted Okuda, Dorothy Lee: The Life and Films of the Wheeler and Woolsey Girl, McFarland, 2013, p. 5.
  3. News: Movieland Mutterings . . . . February 26, 2023 . Los Angeles Record . June 15, 1929 . 12. Newspapers.com.
  4. Edward Watz, Wheeler & Woolsey: the Vaudeville Comic Duo and Their Films, 1919-1937, McFarland, 1994, p. 246.
  5. Brotherton and Okuda, p. 106.
  6. Brotherton and Okuda, p. 11.
  7. Brotherton and Okuda, p. 135.
  8. News: Dorothy Lee, Film Player, Is Wed . February 26, 2023 . The Kansas City Star . Associated Press . November 8, 1930 . 2. subscription.
  9. Brotherton and Okuda, p. 59.
  10. News: Dorothy Lee wins decree: Film Actress Divorces Marshall D. Duffield at Reno . February 26, 2023 . The New York Times . Associated Press . November 3, 1935 . 35. subscription .
  11. News: Dorothy Lee weds . February 26, 2023 . The New York Times . March 8, 1936 . N 7. subscription.
  12. Brotherton and Okuda, p. 111.
  13. News: Dorothy Lee, Film Actress, Wed . February 26, 2023 . The New York Times . Associated Press . December 11, 1941 . 39. subscription .
  14. Brotherton and Okuda, p. 124.