Claudia Dell (born Claudia Dell Smith;[2] January 10, 1909 – September 5, 1977) was an American showgirl and actress of the stage and movies.
Early life
Dell moved with her mother to New York City in late 1924 or early 1925 to visit Dell's aunt, Claudia Coleman. The aunt reportedly inspired Dell to seek a career on stage, and she became a student of Ned Wayburn.[3]
Stage career
Dell began her professional career on Broadway in 1925 as a chorus member in Gay Paree (1925-1926). She went on to perform in the Ziegfeld Follies of 1927 and Rosalie (1927-1928).[4]
Hollywood
In 1930, Dell was signed by Warner Brothers to appear in the film Sweet Kitty Bellairs.
Shortly after, Al Jolson reportedly demanded that she play opposite him in Big Boy (1930). She was then cast in River's End (1930). [5]
She appeared in over 30 films until her film career ended in 1944.[6]
In the early 1970s, Dell had a syndicated radio program that aired in the Midwest titled The Claudia Dell Show. She wrote a syndicated column for eight years and, in 1973, completed a collaboration with English author Helga Moray. This was for a television script considered for the Theater of the Week program.
Personal life
Dell and Phillip G. Offin married when she was 17. She obtained a divorce from him two years later, in 1930.[7] On December 29, 1934, Dell married theatrical agent Edward Silton. She gave her age as 22.[8] They later divorced. She married retired chewing gum manufacturer Daniel Emmett in 1947.[9]
She worked as a receptionist in a Hollywood beauty shop and appeared in early television dramas. In 1973, she became the student director of the John Robert Powers School of Charm and Modeling in Sherman Oaks, California, and Woodland Hills Promenade. Previously, she worked for 12 years as director of the John Robert Powers School in Beverly Hills, California. Dell said "There is no better work than being associated with a school which helps mold young people for the future and one that gives a whole new dimension to a woman's life."
False statements in Bette Davis Book
Bette Davis wrote in her 1962 autobiography that: "Little Claudia Dell, whose image was used as Columbia Pictures
signature for years, later used it as another kind of jumping-off point. She plunged in despair to her death from the first letter of the very word that crushed her."[10]
None of this is true. Davis later claimed that she "made up the name" and "never knew such a person existed."[11]
^"Claudia Dell Weds". The Bridgeport Post. Connecticut, Bridgeport. Associated Press. December 15, 1947. p. 19. Retrieved January 17, 2017 – via Newspapers.com.
^
Davis, Bette (1962). The Lonely Life: An Autobiography Bette Davis. New York, NY: G.P. Putnams Sons. p. 127.
^
Walter Winchell (February 24, 1963). "Walter Winchell". Las Vegas Sun. Las Vegas, NV. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
^"Claudia Dell". U.S. Social Security Administration, Death Master File. Retrieved March 20, 2024.
^Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14000 Famous Persons by Scott Wilson
Bibliography
Port Arthur, Texas News, Texas Girl Is Latest Find, Sunday, September 21, 1930, Page Nine.
Port Arthur News, Claudia Dell Weds Theatrical Agent, Sunday, December 30, 1934, Page 2.
Van Nuys, California The News, Today's Personality Is...Claudia Dell, Thursday, November 15, 1973. Page 5-C.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Claudia Dell.