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Ginny Simms

Biography

Ginny Simms

Edit

Overview

  • Born
    May 25, 1913 · San Antonio, Texas, USA
  • Died
    April 4, 1994 · Palm Springs, California, USA (heart attack)
  • Birth name
    Virginia Ellen Simms
  • Height
    1.68 m

Biography

    • War-era songstress Ginny Simms was born Virginia Simms on May 23, 1913, in Texas but was raised in California, which accounts for her lack of a Southern accent in her speaking/singing voice. Though she studied piano as a child, it was her vocal gifts that launched her career, which started when she formed a singing trio while studying at Fresno State Teachers College. Ginny was performing at a club in San Francisco when she was heard by bandleader/radio star Kay Kyser. She became his featured singer and the big attraction of Kay Kyser's Kollege of Musical Knowledge, a comedy revue done in the style of a quiz show with music. They also became a romantic item. In addition to radio, she kept busy recording swing and pop albums.

      After Ginny broke into films as a guest vocalist in three of Kyser's films for RKO--Micro folies (1939), La villa des piqués (1940) and Playmates (1941), she decided to stay in Hollywood, abandon the tour scene with Kyser, and seek solo fame and fortune. Kyser would replace Ginny with Georgia Carroll both professionally and personally and they later married. Ginny earned her own popular radio show and involved herself deeply in the war effort, earning praise for her tireless work. Some of her well-known recordings (with and without Kyser) include "Deep Purple," "Indian Summer," "I'd Like to Set You to Music," "I Can't Get Started," "I Love Paris," and "Stormy Weather." A dazzling beauty with high cheekbones and megawatt smile, Ginny seemed made for the screen. She co-starred with Bud Abbott and Lou Costello in one of their earlier and funniest comedies, Deux nigauds dans la neige (1943), and scored some important second-lead roles over at MGM with Broadway Rhythm (1944) with George Murphy and Gloria DeHaven, in which she played a movie star who sang "All the Things You Are," and the Cole Porter biopic Nuit et jour (1946) starring Cary Grant and Alexis Smith, in which she sang some of Porter's best loved standards ("I've Got You Under My Skin," "Just One of Those Things," "I Get A Kick Out of You" and "You're the Top"), but her career lost momentum rather quickly (the story at the time was that she had turned down a marriage proposal by newly divorced MGM head Louis B. Mayer, who retaliated by immediately dropping her contract at the studio).

      Ginny left Hollywood altogether in 1951 and her recording career ended not long after. She subsequently retired and ran a travel agency for a time while developing an interest in interior decorating (her first husband, Hyatt Dehn, was the man who started the Hyatt Hotel chain, for which she did much of the interior decorating). She also was involved in real estate with third husband Donald Eastvold. The mother of two sons from her first marriage, Ginny died of a heart attack in 1994 at age 78.
      - IMDb mini biography by: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net

Family

  • Spouses
      Donald Wallace Eastvold Jr.(June 22, 1962 - April 4, 1994) (her death)
      Robert Milton Calhoun(June 27, 1952 - June 4, 1953) (divorced)
      Hyatt Robert Dehn (VonDehn)(July 28, 1945 - March 24, 1952) (divorced, 2 children)

Trademarks

  • Dazzling smile

Trivia

  • Frequent escort of MGM chief Louis B. Mayer after his divorce.
  • Was romantically involved with Kay Kyser at one point but they eventually broke up. She left the band and was replaced by Georgia Carroll, who subsequently became Mrs. Kay Kyser.
  • Buried at Desert Memorial Park, Cathedral City, California, USA
  • She earned distinction during WWII and was given several citations. She had a B-17 Flying Fortress named after her.
  • Had two sons from her first marriage to Hyatt von Dehn, David and Conrad.

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