Judith Barrett | |
Birth Name: | Lucille Kelley |
Birth Date: | 2 February 1909 |
Birth Place: | Venus, Texas, U.S. |
Death Place: | Palm Desert, California, U.S. |
Other Names: | Nancy Dover |
Occupation: | Actress |
Years Active: | 1928–1940 |
Spouse: |
Judith Barrett (born Lucille Kelley, February 2, 1909 – March 10, 2000), also known as Nancy Dover,[1] was an American film actress of the late 1920s and through the 1930s, up until 1940.
Born and raised in Venus, Texas, Barrett was one of three children of a cattle rancher Sam Kelley.[2]
At sixteen, Barrett got on a train to Hollywood. Her first big chance came when she started in a lavish commercial film in 1928, The Sock Exchange opposite Bobby Vernon. In 1929, Barrett starred in five films, and made a successful transition to "talking films". From 1928 to 1933 she was billed as "Nancy Dover", and from 1930 to 1933 she appeared in nine films, all credited.
In 1933, Barrett appeared in only one film, Marriage Humor opposite Harry Langdon and Vernon Dent, while doing stage work. She would not have another role until 1936, when she starred in the crime drama Yellowstone opposite Henry Hunter, and alongside Ralph Morgan and Alan Hale. It was the first film that she was billed as "Judith Barrett". She appeared in two films that year, and five in 1937, one of which was her first uncredited role.
From 1938 to 1940, Barrett appeared in ten films, all credited, including Road to Singapore, the first "road" picture by the team of Bing Crosby and Bob Hope. Barrett retired from film acting following her appearance in the 1940 comedy Those Were the Days!, starring William Holden and Bonita Granville.
Noted for her beauty, the October 16, 1939 edition of the Baltimore Sun said of her: "Judith Barrett, pretty and blonde actress, is the first Telegenic Girl to go on record. In other words, she is the perfect type of beauty for television. ... She is slated for the first television motion picture."[3] The Salt Lake Tribune noted that Barrett was "selected after months of exhaustive tests by television experts, sound engineers, photographers and make-up specialists."[4] Paramount Pictures followed up on the selection by featuring her in its film, Television Spy (1939).[4]
In March 1940, Barrett married Lindsay C. Howard in Yuma, Arizona.[5] They divorced on April 8, 1952.[6] She had earlier been married to actor Cliff Edwards.[5]
She eventually settled in Palm Desert, California, where she was residing at the time of her death at the age of 91 on March 10, 2000.[7] She had two children with Howard and the marriage ended in divorce.
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1928 | June | Credited as Nancy Dover | ||
1929 | Happy Heels | Credited as Nancy Dover | ||
1929 | Scandal | Janet | Credited as Nancy Dover | |
1929 | Skirt Shy | Nancy, the maid | Credited as Nancy Dover | |
1929 | Dynamite | Good Mixer | Uncredited, Credited as Nancy Dover | |
1929 | Romance De Luxe | Credited as Nancy Dover | ||
1930 | Nancy | Credited as Nancy Dover | ||
1930 | Oh Darling | Credited as Nancy Dover | ||
1930 | The Brunette Dance Hall Girl | Credited as Nancy Dover | ||
1930 | Harry's Girl | Credited as Nancy Dover | ||
1930 | The Thoroughbred | Colleen Riley | Credited as Nancy Dover | |
1931 | Cimarron | Donna Cravat | Credited as Nancy Dover | |
1931 | Big Business Girl | Sarah Ellen | Credited as Nancy Dover | |
1931 | Hollywood Halfbacks | Kay | Credited as Nancy Dover | |
1933 | Marriage Humor | Credited as Nancy Dover | ||
1936 | Yellowstone | Ruth Foster | ||
1936 | Flying Hostess | Helen Brooks | ||
1937 | Ina Heath | |||
1937 | Let Them Live | Rita Johnson | ||
1937 | Armored Car | Ella Logan | ||
1937 | Vogues of 1938 | Model | Uncredited | |
1937 | Behind the Mike | Jane Arledge | ||
1938 | Illegal Traffic | Marie Arden | ||
1939 | Persons in Hiding | Blase Blonde | ||
1939 | I'm from Missouri | Lola Pike | ||
1939 | Dixie Del Marr | |||
1939 | Television Spy | Gwen Lawson | ||
1939 | Disputed Passage | Winifred Bane | ||
1939 | Marie Clark | |||
1940 | Road to Singapore | Gloria Wycott | ||
1940 | Women Without Names | Peggy Athens | ||
1940 | Those Were the Days! | Mirabel Allstairs | (final film role) |