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Published 02 Aug, 2016 06:53am

Gloria DeHaven, star of Hollywood musicals, dies at age 91

GLORIA DeHaven, the perky singing actress who starred in a parade of breezy Hollywood musicals in the 1940s and 1950s and gave Frank Sinatra his first big-screen kiss, has died at age 91, her agent said on Monday.

DeHaven, who appeared in more than two dozen films starting as a child in a bit role in Charlie Chaplin’s last silent movie, died on Saturday in hospice care in Las Vegas, Scott Stander said in an email.

A versatile singer from a show business family, she thrived in Hollywood musicals, mostly from the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio, until the genre fell out of fashion in the 1950s.

DeHaven starred in Two Girls and a Sailor (1944) with Van Johnson, June Allyson and Jimmy Durante; Summer Holiday (1948) with Mickey Rooney; Yes Sir That’s My Baby (1949) with Donald O’Connor; Summer Stock (1950) with Judy Garland and Gene Kelly; and So This Is Paris (1955) with Tony Curtis.

In the musical Step Lively (1944), DeHaven gave a young Sinatra his first on-screen smooch. In the late 1950s, DeHaven’s film career stalled and she turned to acting on television and in stage musicals and singing in nightclubs.

She was born in Los Angeles on July 23, 1925, to parents who were vaudeville performers. She made her film debut with a small role in Chaplin’s Modern Times (1936), a silent gem released in the era of talkies, exploring the pitfalls of modern industrialised society.

Published in Dawn, August 2nd, 2016

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