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Dorothy Abbott

Biography

Dorothy Abbott

Edit

Overview

  • Born
    December 16, 1920 · Kansas City, Missouri, USA
  • Died
    December 15, 1968 · Los Angeles, California, USA (suicide)
  • Birth name
    Dorothy Esther Abbott

Biography

    • Perennial starlet Dorothy Abbott was a sexy, vivacious, wide-smiling model, showgirl and actress who could brighten up a room. Unfortunately, her cinematic offerings wound up being pretty minimal and her last years were marred by depression and, ultimately, a tragic end.

      She was born Dorothy E. Abbott on December 16, 1920, in Kansas City, Missouri and started her career off as a chorine with Earl Carroll and his Los Angeles-based revues and in Las Vegas showrooms where she was dubbed the rather mystifying title of "The Girl with the Golden Arm". Paramount Studios perked up on the lovely blonde with the Betty Page-like bangs and gave her a starting contract at $150 a week. Groomed in dozens of decorative "good time girl" bits -- dancers, chorus girls, waitresses, stewardesses, party girls, nurses and models -- she was at the same time promoted as a cheesecake pinup, "winning" such dubious titles as "Miss Wilshire Club," "Miss Los Angeles Transit" and "Miss Oil Cans".

      The dusky-voiced Dorothy was usually briefly seen and not heard in such dramatic and lightweight fare as Le fil du rasoir (1946), En route vers Rio (1947), Les yeux de la nuit (1948) (in which she has her first speaking role as a maid), Ma vie est une chanson (1948), Match d'amour (1949), Les quatre filles du Dr March (1949), La fille de Neptune (1949), Annie, la reine du cirque (1950), Fini de rire (1951), Pourquoi croire à l'amour (1952), _The Las Vegas Story (1952)_, Amours, Délices... et Golf (1953), La joyeuse parade (1954), Les pièges de la passion (1955), La Fureur de vivre (1955), Règlements de comptes à O.K. Corral (1957), Le Rock du bagne (1957), Pacifique Sud (1958), La garçonnière (1960), Un soupçon de vison (1962), Le téléphone rouge (1963) and Dear Heart (1964). Her one starring role came early in the exploitative, lowbudget potboiler A Virgin in Hollywood (1953) as a star reporter out to get a seamy Hollywood story, but she was unable to capitalize on it.

      Working bit parts at the studio during the days, she would often perform on stage in little theatre shows at night. On the sly, when work was meager, she became a real estate agent in the 1950s in order to help supplement her income. TV chores included guest roles in "Leave It to Beaver" and "Ozzie and Harriet". She also had a recurring part for one season as Jack Webb's girlfriend on the La police est sur les dents (1954) series.

      Dorothy married LAPD narcotics squad officer-turned homicide detective Adolph Rudy Diaz in 1949. Diaz, who was of Native American (Apache) descent, eventually retired as a cop in order to pursue acting. By this time, the marriage was in trouble and the couple separated. Going by the stage name of Rudy Diaz in 1967, he began to get work and was seen out in public with other women. The divorce was finalized in 1968, but Dorothy took it hard and never seemed to get over it. On December 15, 1968, she committed suicide at her Los Angeles home -- one day before her 48th birthday. She was interred (as Dorothy E. Diaz) at Rose Hills Memorial Park, Whittier, Los Angeles County, California, Plot: Valley Lawn, Lot 2939.
      - IMDb Mini Biography By: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net

Family

  • Spouse
      Rudy Diaz(August 11, 1952 - December 15, 1968) (her death, 1 child)
  • Children
      Ronald R. Diaz

Trivia

  • Was a decorative showgirl at Las Vegas' Flamingo Hotel and at Earl Carroll's popular theatre-restaurant on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles. She was discovered by Paramount talent agents there and signed briefly for films. She sold real estate in later years and killed herself after the breakup of her marriage to actor Rudy Diaz.
  • She was married to Rudy Diaz in 1949 when he was an L.A. narcotics / homicide detective. They had a son, Ronald R. Diaz.
  • In her pre-Hollywood years, Dorothy was a model and a Flamingo Hotel showgirl (known as The Girl with the Golden Arm). Later she moved to Hollywood and was groomed as showgirl types in such films as Le fil du rasoir (1946), En route vers Rio (1947), Ma vie est une chanson (1948), Terre damnée (1950), Donnez-lui une chance (1953) and La joyeuse parade (1954).

Salary

  • Pourquoi croire à l'amour (1952) - $175 / week

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