Blanche Mehaffey (July 28, 1908 – March 31, 1968) was an American showgirl and film actress from Cincinnati, Ohio. Her hair was an auburn color.
Blanche Berndt Mehaffey, mother of Blanche Mehaffey
The daughter of Edward Mehaffey and his wife, soprano Blanche Berndt, she had a brother, Edward Mehaffey Jr. She started as a dancer with the Ziegfeld Follies before coming to Hollywood to play comedy roles in motion pictures. Show producer Florenz Ziegfeld said she possessed the most beautiful eyes in the entire world. She was among the Baby Stars of 1924 chosen by the Wampas. Others in the group were Clara Bow, Dorothy Mackaill, and Hazel Keener.
Her debut in movies was in the silent film Fully Insured (1923) at Hal Roach Studios. She played in many Hal Roach comedies for a number of years with her leading men usually Charley Chase and later Glenn Tryon. She occasionally appeared in features such A Woman of the World (1925) with Pola Negri. Mehaffey dropped out of filming to study voice and languages for over a year in New York City. Mehaffey returned to movies in Sunrise Trail (1931), a film which featured her playing opposite cowboy star Bob Steele. The motion picture was her first talkie movie.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blanche_Mehaffey
Blanche Mehaffey
Active - 1924 - 1938 | Born - Jul 28, 1908 in Cincinnati, OH | Died - Mar 31, 1968 in Los Angeles, CA | Genres - Action, Western, Drama, Comedy, Crime
Biography by Hans J. Wollstein
Blond American screen actress Blanche Mehaffey was voted a 1924 WAMPAS Baby Star by the Hollywood publicists on the strength of a couple of pleasant comedies opposite Glenn Tryon. She later changed her name to Joan Alden -- presumably to escape maudlin melodramas such as Princess from Hoboken (1927) -- but Call of the Wild (1927), opposite second-string canine star Dynamite, was no improvement, and she returned to her old moniker. Her movies in the early years of sound film were unsuccessful. She had married sound engineer Ralph M. Like and he produced a series of very low-budget melodramas that are still watched -- and laughed at -- today. Ralph Like was the kind of producer who never met a corner he couldn't cut, and several of the Like-Mehaffey collaborations were downright embarrassing. Sally of the Subways (1932), for example, ostensibly a crime drama, was an excruciatingly slow affair that featured neither Sally nor subways, and The Devil Monster (1933) and The Wages of Sin (release date undetermined) delivered little more than alluring titles. Chagrined by the turn her career was taking, Mehaffey changed her name once again, this time to Janet Morgan, but it didn't make a bit of difference, and she left films in 1935. In 1948 an embarrassed Mehaffey attempted to prevent the new owners of her old films from selling them to television. Unfortunately for unsuspecting viewers, the lawsuit was dismissed and cinematic blunders such as Soul of the Slums (1931) and the aforementioned Wages of Sin have become treasured perennials at Bad Movie festivals.
http://www.allmovie.com/artist/blanche-mehaffey-p48223
Blanche Mehaffey was an American showgirl and film actress from Cincinnati, Ohio. Her hair was an auburn color.
Mehaffey started as a dancer with the Ziegfeld Follies before coming to Hollywood to play comedy roles in motion pictures. Show producer, Florenz Ziegfeld, said she possessed the most beautiful eyes in the entire world. She was among the Baby Stars of 1924 chosen by the Wampas. Others in the group were Clara Bow, Dorothy Mackaill, and Hazel Keener.
Her debut in movies was in the silent film His Wild Oats (1916). She played in many Hal Roach comedies for a number of years.
She dropped out of filming to study voice and languages for over a year in New York City. Mehaffey returned to movies in Sunrise Trail(1931), a film which featured her playing opposite cowboy star Bob Steele. The motion picture was her first talking movie.
Mehaffey wed oil well suppy dealer George Joseph Hausen at the Jonathan Club in Los Angeles, California in January 1928. They stayed married only ten weeks before the actress obtained a divorce decree.
Blanche Mehaffey died in Los Angeles, California in 1968
You can find people similar to Blanche Mehaffey by visiting our lists WAMPAS Baby Stars and Dancers from Ohio.
Full name at birth | Blanche Berndt Mehaffey
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Claim to fame | WAMPAS Baby Star of 1924
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Date of birth | 28 July 1908
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Place of birth | Cincinnati, Ohio USA
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Date of death | 31 March 1968
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Age | 59 (age at death)
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Place of death | Los Angeles, California USA
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Cause of death | Drug Overdose
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Resting place | Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Glendale), Glendale, Los Angeles County, California, USA
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Occupation | Actress, showgirl
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Height | 5' 3" (160 cm)
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Blanche Mehaffey is known for her role in the film Devil Monster (1946) as Louise (as Blanche Mehaffy).
She is also known for her role in the film Confessions of a Vice Baron (1943) as Florence Jones (edited from 'Wages of Sin') (uncredited).
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