Birth Date: | 21 September 1913 |
Birth Place: | Brooklyn, New York, United States |
Death Place: | Dana Point, California, United States |
Yearsactive: | 1930–1954 |
Spouse: | William Boyd (m.1937-1972; his death) |
Othername: | Grace Bradley Boyd |
Grace Bradley (September 21, 1913 – September 21, 2010) was an American film actress who was active in Hollywood during the 1930s.
Bradley was born in Brooklyn and was an only child.[1] As a child she took piano lessons and at the age of six gave her first recital. She attended the Eastman School of Music near Rochester, New York where, at the age of 12, she was awarded a scholarship. Originally, she had wanted to become a professional pianist. While in school she took dance lessons and played piano.
As one obituary noted, she "played the piano, sang and danced, on stage and in nightclubs, from an early age to help support her widowed mother."
Her grandfather had wanted her to be educated in Berlin, Germany so that she could receive a more formal education but a Broadway producer discovered her during one of her dance recitals and hired her for a professional show.[2]
On December 22, 1930, she made her Broadway debut at New York's Hammerstein Theatre in Ballyhoo of 1930.[3] Her next stage appearance came one year later at The Music Box Theater in The Third Little Show. Soon Bradley found herself working in various New York nightclubs and theatres. In March 1933, she appeared in Strike Me Pink at the Majestic Theater. She left the show after deciding to give Hollywood a try.
Although she made one film in 1932, her film career did not gather steam until she starred in the film Too Much Harmony (1933), which provided her "first film credit". Beginning in 1933 she was under contract to Paramount Pictures and reportedly took home $150 per week.
Her typical roles were described in an obituary: "From 1933 to 1943, she appeared in dozens of quickly made second features, often cast as what were termed 'good-time girls,' as distinct from good girls, sometimes with invented ooh-la-la French names."[4] In the 1930s, she became one of the period's most popular musical stars.
In May 1937, Bradley agreed to a blind date and met Hopalong Cassidy star William Boyd. The two of them hit it off so well that they married the next month. The union was happy but childless. In the 1940s, Bradley's star began to wane and, in 1943, she starred in her last big role in Taxi, Mister. Following this film, Bradley had officially played out her Paramount contract, and she spent the remainder of the 1940s alongside her husband, traveling around the country with him helping promote his cowboy image. She made one more film appearance, an uncredited cameo role in Tournament of Roses (1954).
Bradley was a Republican and supported the campaign of Dwight Eisenhower during the 1952 presidential election.[5]
Following Boyd's death on September 12, 1972, Bradley retired from the entertainment world, but still continued to do things to help keep Boyd's memory alive. She also endured years of fighting for the legal rights to her late husband's 66 "Hopalong Cassidy" features. With her acting career behind her, she devoted her time to volunteer work at the Laguna Beach Hospital where her husband had spent his final days.
Grace Bradley Boyd died on her 97th birthday in 2010. Two days later, private services were held at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California, where she was interred with her husband in the Great Mausoleum, Sanctuary of Sacred Promise.[6]