Diana Marie Lynn (born Dolores Eartha Loehr, July 5, 1926[2] – December 18, 1971) was an American actress. She built her career by starring in Paramount Pictures films and various television series during the 1940s and 1950s. Two stars on Hollywood Walk of Fame are dedicated to her name.
Early years
Lynn was born in Los Angeles, California. Her father, Louis Loehr, was an oil supply executive, and her mother, Martha Loehr, was a concert pianist.[3] Lynn was considered a child prodigy.[4] She began taking piano lessons at age 4,[5] and by the age of 12 was playing with the Los Angeles Junior Symphony Orchestra.
Lynn made her film debut playing the piano in They Shall Have Music[5] and was once again back at the keyboard, accompanying Susanna Foster, in There's Magic in Music, when it was decided that she had more potential than she had been allowed to show. Paramount Pictures changed her name to "Diana Lynn" and began casting her in films that allowed her to show her personality and developed her skills as an actress.
During the 1950s, Lynn acted in a number of films, portraying Spencer Tracy's daughter in the crime drama The People Against O'Hara and the female lead in the much lampooned Bedtime for Bonzo opposite Ronald Reagan. Lynn co-starred as the schoolteacher in the 1955 film, The Kentuckian, starring Burt Lancaster and Walter Matthau.
She also had many TV leading roles during the 1950s, particularly in the middle years of the decade. As a solo pianist, she released at least one single on Capitol Records[6] with backing by the Paul Weston orchestra.
She also starred in runs of The Moon Is Blue in the United States and the United Kingdom.[8]
Recordings
In 1947, a three-record album of Lynn's piano playing included Mozart's Rondo, Laura, and Body and Soul.[9]
Later years
She acted frequently in television guest roles throughout the 1960s. By 1970, she had relocated to New York City, where she was running a travel agency. She appeared in Company of Killers, a film made for television. Paramount then offered her a part in a new film, Play It as It Lays, and after some consideration, Lynn accepted the offer and moved back to Los Angeles.[10]
In 1968, Lynn invited her friend Mart Crowley to housesit for her while she was out of town. While at her house over those five weeks, Crowley wrote the majority of his groundbreaking play about LGBT life in America, The Boys in the Band.[11]
Death
Before filming started on Play It as It Lays, Lynn suffered a stroke and died on December 18, 1971,[12] at the age of 45.[10] Lynn was cremated. A funeral service was held at Church of the Heavenly Rest in New York City, and a memorial service was held at All Saints' Episcopal Church in Beverly Hills, California.[8][3]
Recognition
In 1942, Parents magazine named Lynn "the most talented juvenile actress."[13] She has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame: for motion pictures, at 1625 Vine Street and for television at 6350 Hollywood Boulevard.[14]
Family
Lynn married architect John C. Lindsay December 18, 1948; they divorced in June 1953.[15] Lynn was then married in 1956 to Mortimer Hall, son of New York Post publisher Dorothy Schiff.[16]
Another daughter, Margaret "Daisy" Hall,[17] is an alumna of the Emma Willard School for Girls in Troy, New York, and as an actress, has starred in numerous French- and lesser-known American-produced films, during the 1980s, '90s, and 2000s.[18][17]