Sybil Jason | |
Birth Name: | Sybil Jacobson |
Birth Date: | 23 November 1927 |
Birth Place: | Cape Town, South Africa |
Death Place: | Northridge, California, U.S. |
Resting Place: | Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills |
Occupation: | Actress, singer |
Years Active: | 1931 - 1940 |
Sybil Jason (born Sybil Jacobson; 23 November 1927 - 23 August 2011) was an American child film actress who, in the late 1930s, was presented as a rival to Shirley Temple.[1]
Born in Cape Town, South Africa, on 23 November 1927,[2] Sybil Jason began playing the piano at age two and, a year later, began making public appearances doing impersonations of Maurice Chevalier. She was introduced to the theatre-going public of London by way of her uncle, Harry Jacobson, a then-popular London orchestra leader and also pianist for Gracie Fields. The apex of her career came with a concert performance with Frances Day at London's Palace Theatre. Her theatre work led to appearances on radio and phonograph records as well as a supporting role in the film Barnacle Bill (1935).
Irving Asher, the head of Warner Bros.' London studio, saw Jason's performance in Barnacle Bill and arranged for her to make a screen test for the studio. The test was a success, resulting in Warner Bros. signing her to a contract. Her American film debut came as the lead in Little Big Shot (1935), directed by Michael Curtiz and co-starring Glenda Farrell, Robert Armstrong, and Edward Everett Horton.
Jason followed this with supporting roles opposite some of Warner Bros. most popular stars, including Kay Francis in I Found Stella Parish (1935), Al Jolson in The Singing Kid (1936), Pat O'Brien and Humphrey Bogart in The Great O'Malley (1937), and again with Kay Francis in Comet Over Broadway (1938). Warners also starred her in The Captain's Kid (1937), and four Vitaphone two-reelers filmed in Technicolor: Changing of the Guard, A Day at Santa Anita, Little Pioneer, and The Littlest Diplomat.
Jason never became the major rival to Shirley Temple that Warner Bros. had hoped, and her film career ended after playing two supporting roles at 20th-Century Fox. These films — The Little Princess (1939) and The Blue Bird (1940) — supported Temple, who became her lifelong friend.[2]
Jason married Anthony Albert Fromlak (aka Anthony Drake) on 30 December 1950. He died in 2005.[3] Their daughter, Toni Maryanna Rossi, is married to Phillip W. Rossi, producer of The New Price Is Right.
She became a naturalized United States citizen in 1952.[4]
Sybil Jason died in 2011 and was buried at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills.[5]
Year | Title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1934 | He Was Her Man | Little Girl | Uncredited | |
1935 | Barnacle Bill | Jill as a child | ||
Dance Band | Girl on train | |||
Broadway Gondolier | (scenes deleted) | |||
Little Big Shot | Gloria "Countess" Gibbs | |||
A Dream Comes True | Herself | Uncredited | ||
I Found Stella Parish | Gloria Parish | |||
1936 | The Singing Kid | Sybil Haines | ||
Changing of the Guard | Sybil | Short | ||
The Captain's Kid | Abigail Prentiss | |||
1937 | The Great O'Malley | Barbara "Babs" Phillips | ||
A Day at Santa Anita | Peaches Blackburn | Short | ||
Little Pioneer | Betsy Manning | Short | ||
The Littlest Diplomat | Sybil Hardwick | Short | ||
1938 | Comet Over Broadway | Jacqueline "Jackie" Appleton | ||
1939 | Woman Doctor | Elsa Graeme | ||
The Little Princess | Becky | |||
1940 | The Blue Bird | Angela Berlingot | (final film role) |