Jean Porter
Bennie Jean Porter (December 8, 1922 – January 13, 2018), known professionally as Jean Porter, was an American actress recognized for her supporting roles in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films during the 1940s.[1] Born in Cisco, Texas, she began her career with uncredited appearances in the late 1930s, including in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1938), before signing with MGM and featuring in musicals and comedies such as The Youngest Profession (1943), Bathing Beauty (1944), and Thrill of a Romance (1945).[2] Porter's petite stature and vivacious screen presence made her a notable secondary star, though she never achieved leading lady status, appearing in approximately 30 films overall.[3] In 1948, she married director Edward Dmytryk, whom she met on the set of Till the End of Time (1946), and retired from acting in the early 1950s to raise their family, standing by Dmytryk during his blacklisting amid the Hollywood anti-communist investigations.[1] She passed away from natural causes in Canoga Park, California, at the age of 95.[1]Early Life
Childhood and Family Background
Bennie Jean Porter was born on December 8, 1922, in Cisco, Texas, to Henry C. Porter, a worker for the Texas and Pacific Railway, and Thelma O. Porter (née Snipes or Simper), a music teacher.[2][4][5] As an infant, she was named "Most Beautiful Baby" in Eastland County, an early recognition that highlighted her appeal in local pageants.[1][6] Porter displayed early talent as a child performer in Texas, participating in beauty contests and singing on local radio stations.[7] By age 10, she hosted her own radio program on WRR in Dallas, showcasing her skills in dancing and acting influenced by her mother's musical background.[1][6] Her family's encouragement of these pursuits laid the foundation for her later move westward, though the household remained rooted in modest circumstances tied to her father's railroad employment.[2][4]Entry into Hollywood
Porter's family moved from Texas to Hollywood during her early adolescence, enabling her to pursue entertainment opportunities after initial experiences such as hosting a radio show in Dallas at age 10 and touring with bandleader Ted Lewis.[2] By age 12, she trained in dance at the Fanchon and Marco school, following an all-expenses-paid trip that facilitated her entry into professional performance circles.[2] In 1936, while attending dance lessons, Porter was discovered by director Allan Dwan, leading to her uncredited film debut that same year in the musical Song and Dance Man.[8][2] She continued with minor, often uncredited appearances, including a role in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1938).[2] By 1940, she secured a small part as Carole Landis's younger sister in One Million B.C., marking gradual progression from vaudeville and stage work to screen presence.[9] These early roles established her in Hollywood's ecosystem of bit players and extras, primarily through independent and low-budget productions before transitioning to studio contracts.[2]Acting Career
Early Film Roles and Child Acting
Porter began her film career as a teenager after gaining initial experience in vaudeville performances. Discovered by director Allan Dwan while performing in Texas, she made her uncredited screen debut at age 13 in the 20th Century Fox musical Song and Dance Man (1936), appearing as an unnamed "Girl" in a beer parlor scene.[1][10] Her subsequent early roles remained small and uncredited, reflecting the limited opportunities for young actresses in Hollywood during the late 1930s. At age 15, she appeared without credit in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1938), a United Artists adaptation of Mark Twain's novel directed by Norman Taurog, where she contributed to the ensemble of schoolchildren scenes.[2][4] By 1940, at age 17, Porter had a bit part in Hal Roach's prehistoric adventure One Million B.C., starring Victor Mature and Carole Landis, marking one of her final pre-MGM appearances as a supporting player in a low-budget fantasy film noted for its special effects and caveman costumes.[2][4] These roles, though minor, provided her with on-set training in dance and comedic timing, skills honed from her mother's background as a music teacher and her own vaudeville background, before transitioning to more prominent studio contracts.[11]MGM Contract and Peak Popularity
Jean Porter signed a seven-year contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) in 1941, transitioning from bit parts to more substantial supporting roles in the studio's productions.[8] This agreement positioned her within MGM's robust roster of young talent, where she contributed to the studio's signature musicals and comedies during the 1940s.[1] Her prominence grew with the role of an autograph hound in The Youngest Profession (1943), an MGM comedy that highlighted her youthful energy and comedic aptitude.[1] Subsequent appearances included Bathing Beauty (1944), co-starring Esther Williams and Red Skelton, where she participated in aquatic musical sequences, and Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble (1944), opposite Mickey Rooney in the popular Hardy family series.[1] These films exemplified MGM's formula of light entertainment, leveraging Porter's petite frame—standing 5 feet tall and weighing 98 pounds—and vivacious presence to appeal to wartime audiences seeking escapism.[1] In 1945, Porter appeared in Thrill of a Romance alongside Van Johnson and Esther Williams, performing in musical numbers that underscored her dancing skills, and Twice Blessed, a comedy twin-swap tale where she delivered a strong supporting performance.[12] She also played Ruthie, Lou Costello's manicurist girlfriend, in Abbott and Costello in Hollywood (1945), though a planned sing-and-dance routine was excised from the final cut.[12][9] This sequence of roles marked the zenith of her career visibility, as she became a recognizable face in MGM's ensemble casts, often loaned out but rooted in the studio's high-output slate of over 50 films annually during the mid-1940s.[1][12]Post-War Films and Meeting Edward Dmytryk
Following World War II, Jean Porter's roles at MGM began to shift toward supporting parts in dramas and lighter features, reflecting a gradual move away from her wartime ingénue status. In 1946, MGM loaned her to RKO Pictures for Till the End of Time, a film depicting the challenges faced by returning veterans, where she replaced [Shirley Temple](/page/Shirley Temple) in the cast after Temple withdrew.[13] Released on March 29, 1946, the picture featured Porter in a supporting role as Pat, a peer of the protagonists navigating post-war readjustment, earning praise for her performance in a more serious context compared to her prior musical comedies.[1] The production of Till the End of Time marked a pivotal personal moment for Porter, as it was directed by Edward Dmytryk, whose work on the film introduced her to the acclaimed filmmaker. Shooting commenced around late 1945, and Porter recalled meeting Dmytryk during this period, approximately October 1945, while she had been previously dating singer Mel Tormé.[9][1] This encounter occurred amid Dmytryk's first marriage dissolving, setting the stage for their relationship, though they did not wed until December 20, 1948, after his divorce finalized.[9][4] Porter's post-war output remained modest, with additional appearances such as a bit part in Warner Bros.' That Hagen Girl (1947), starring Ronald Reagan and Shirley Temple, but Till the End of Time stood out as her most notable dramatic effort during this phase, coinciding with early signs of her career's trajectory toward fewer leading opportunities.[1]Career Decline and Retirement
Following her marriage to director Edward Dmytryk in 1948, Porter's film roles diminished in prominence and frequency, shifting from MGM's polished musicals and comedies to lower-budget independent productions.[1] Her post-war credits included supporting parts in Cry Danger (1951), a film noir directed by Robert Parrish; Kentucky Jubilee (1951), a musical Western; G.I. Jane (1951), a comedy; Racing Blood (1954), another low-profile drama; and her final feature, The Left Hand of God (1955), where she played Mary Yin opposite Humphrey Bogart, under Dmytryk's direction.[14] These roles marked a departure from the studio system's support, reflecting a broader contraction in her opportunities amid Hollywood's changing landscape after World War II.[15] The association with Dmytryk, who faced blacklisting from 1947 to 1951 for refusing to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee, contributed to Porter's professional setbacks, as industry stigma extended to spouses regardless of their own political involvement—Porter was described as entirely apolitical.[16] Dmytryk himself noted in later reflections that Porter's career "never recovered" due to the fallout, with her unable to secure comparable studio contracts despite her prior visibility in MGM vehicles like Bathing Beauty (1944) and Thrill of a Romance (1945).[17] During Dmytryk's exile and career interruption, Porter assumed financial burdens for the family, which further limited her ability to pursue acting amid personal strains.[12] In the late 1950s, Porter transitioned to television appearances, including guest spots on anthology series, sustaining a modest presence until her full retirement from performing in 1961 at age 38.[18] This withdrawal aligned with Dmytryk's career resurgence post-recantation, allowing her to prioritize family life with their three children, though she later expressed no regrets over forgoing further roles.[7] Her retirement effectively ended a two-decade span in entertainment that had peaked in the mid-1940s but tapered amid external pressures and evolving industry demands.[2]Personal Life
Marriage to Edward Dmytryk
Jean Porter met Edward Dmytryk, a film director, in 1946 while working on the set of the RKO Pictures war drama Till the End of Time, where she appeared in a supporting role.[19][7] Their relationship developed amid Dmytryk's rising professional profile and Porter's established presence in Hollywood musicals and dramas. The couple married on May 12, 1948, in Ellicott City, Maryland, shortly after Dmytryk's involvement in the House Un-American Activities Committee hearings had begun to impact his career.[20][2] At the time, Porter was 25 years old, and the wedding marked Dmytryk's second marriage.[21] Despite the professional and legal challenges Dmytryk faced due to his refusal to testify before Congress—leading to imprisonment, blacklisting, and eventual exile to the United Kingdom for work—the marriage endured for over 51 years until Dmytryk's death from heart and kidney failure on July 1, 1999, at age 90.[22][2] Porter supported Dmytryk through these trials, including his 1951 recantation and return to directing in Hollywood, and the pair collaborated professionally later in life by co-authoring the book On Screen Acting in 1984, which drew on their combined experiences in film.[2]Family and Children
Porter and Dmytryk had three children together: Richard, Victoria, and Rebecca.[20][2] The couple relocated to England in 1948 amid Dmytryk's blacklisting, where Porter gave birth to their first child, Richard Edward Dmytryk, in 1949; he died in 1992.[23] Their daughter Rebecca Dmytryk pursued wildlife rescue and rehabilitation work.[20] Limited public details exist on Victoria Dmytryk's life, consistent with the family's preference for privacy following the Hollywood blacklist era.[22] Dmytryk, from his prior marriage, had one son, but Porter had no children before her union with him.[22]Hollywood Blacklist Era
Context of Communist Infiltration in Hollywood
During the Great Depression of the 1930s, economic distress and the perceived appeal of socialist solutions drew numerous intellectuals, writers, and artists in Hollywood toward leftist ideologies, including membership in the Communist Party USA (CPUSA).[24] The CPUSA established organized cells within the film industry, particularly among screenwriters and directors, with figures like John Howard Lawson serving as influential leaders who advocated for embedding ideological messages in scripts through subtle narrative techniques rather than overt propaganda.[25] These efforts were supported by Communist front organizations, such as the Hollywood Anti-Nazi League and the Hollywood Writers Mobilization, which attracted thousands of participants under the guise of anti-fascist or pro-democratic causes while advancing Soviet-aligned agendas.[26] CPUSA influence extended to labor unions and guilds, where party members agitated for control, as testified by industry figures like Ronald Reagan and Walt Disney during congressional hearings; they described systematic attempts to steer strikes and production decisions toward partisan ends.[26] FBI investigations documented these activities, noting that Communists prioritized producing films sympathetic to the Soviet Union and class-struggle themes, with party directives emphasizing infiltration over domination to avoid detection.[27] At its height in the late 1930s, the CPUSA claimed tens of thousands of members nationwide, including a notable contingent in Hollywood's creative sectors, though exact figures for the industry remain estimates based on later defections and testimonies rather than contemporaneous rolls.[28] World War II temporarily aligned CPUSA goals with U.S. interests via the popular front strategy, leading to pro-Allied films that downplayed Soviet totalitarianism; however, postwar revelations of Soviet espionage—such as the 1945 Gouzenko defection exposing atomic spy networks—and the 1946 onset of the Cold War heightened concerns over domestic subversion.[29] These factors prompted the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) to launch its 1947 probe into Hollywood, focusing on whether the industry's global reach was being exploited for Communist propaganda amid fears that films could shape public opinion on foreign policy and internal loyalty.[30] While academic narratives influenced by postwar leftist sympathies often minimized the threat as mere McCarthyite hysteria, declassified FBI files and recantations from former members substantiate coordinated infiltration efforts aimed at cultural influence.[31]Edward Dmytryk's Communist Party Membership and Refusal to Testify
Edward Dmytryk joined the Communist Party USA (CPUSA) in the spring of 1944, during a period of heightened political activism in Hollywood amid World War II alliances against fascism.[32] His involvement stemmed from associations with party members in the film industry, including producer Adrian Scott, and reflected broader leftist sympathies among some creative professionals disillusioned with domestic inequalities. Dmytryk's membership lasted approximately through 1945, though he later described it as brief and motivated more by intellectual curiosity than ideological commitment.[33] In October 1947, Dmytryk was subpoenaed by the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) as part of its probe into alleged Communist infiltration of the motion picture industry, which included examining whether party members influenced film content to promote Soviet propaganda. During hearings held from October 20 to 30 in Washington, D.C., he appeared as the eighth witness among the group known as the Hollywood Ten. Dmytryk refused to answer direct questions about his CPUSA membership or associations with other suspected Communists, citing the First Amendment's protections for free speech and assembly rather than invoking the Fifth Amendment against self-incrimination.[34] This defiance aligned with the collective strategy of the Hollywood Ten, who viewed HUAC's inquiries as an unconstitutional overreach into private beliefs, though legal precedents did not recognize a First Amendment privilege to withhold such testimony from congressional committees.[35] On November 24, 1947, HUAC cited Dmytryk and the other nine for contempt of Congress, leading to criminal convictions upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1950. He served a six-month prison sentence starting in 1950, during which time his career stalled due to industry backlash.[36] Dmytryk maintained his refusal stemmed from principle, not ongoing loyalty to the CPUSA, which he had already distanced himself from by the mid-1940s amid growing disillusionment with Stalinist tactics.[33]Blacklisting, Exile, and Dmytryk's Recantation
Following his 1947 refusal to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) as one of the Hollywood Ten, Edward Dmytryk was convicted of contempt of Congress and sentenced to six months in prison, serving four months and 17 days at the Federal Correctional Institution in Millpoint, West Virginia, beginning in early 1948.[37] The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the conviction in April 1950, but by then Dmytryk had been released and, along with his wife Jean Porter—whom he had married in May 1948—faced severe professional ostracism under the Hollywood blacklist imposed by studios adhering to the 1947 Waldorf Statement.[38] Porter's acting career, already waning, effectively ended due to her association with Dmytryk, though she secured a minor role in Cry Danger (1951) through connections like Dick Powell.[2] Unable to work in the U.S. film industry, Dmytryk and Porter relocated to England in 1949, where Dmytryk directed the independent production Give Us This Day (also known as Salt to the Devil), a drama about Italian immigrant laborers filmed partly in the UK and Italy with a budget strained by blacklist-related funding challenges.[4] The couple endured financial hardship during this self-imposed exile, relying on limited European opportunities while Dmytryk sought to sustain his directing career outside Hollywood's control; the film premiered at the 1950 Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, winning an award but facing distribution barriers in the U.S. due to his status.[39] Porter supported the family amid these uncertainties, forgoing her own prospects in solidarity. In April 1951, after returning to the U.S., Dmytryk recanted his prior defiance and testified cooperatively before HUAC on April 25, admitting membership in the Communist Party from spring 1944 to fall 1945 and naming approximately 26 individuals as former associates or party members, including figures like John Howard Lawson.[40][35] This testimony, which Dmytryk later described as providing only information already known to investigators, enabled his clearance from the blacklist, allowing him to resume directing American films such as The Sniper (1952).[41] The recantation drew sharp criticism from blacklist sympathizers, who labeled him an "informer," but it reflected Dmytryk's stated disillusionment with the party and desire to provide for his family, including Porter and their children.[37]Impact on Jean Porter's Professional Opportunities
Porter's marriage to Edward Dmytryk in 1948 coincided with the intensification of the Hollywood blacklist, during which her husband's refusal to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1947 led to his contempt conviction, six-month imprisonment from 1950 to 1951, and exile in England for independent film work.[3] As Dmytryk's spouse, Porter faced professional repercussions through association, though she herself was described as apolitical and not directly targeted by the blacklist.[17] Her MGM contract-era prominence in the 1940s waned, with no major studio roles immediately following the marriage, limiting her access to high-profile opportunities amid industry-wide scrutiny of suspected communist sympathizers and their families.[1] A rare exception occurred in 1951, when producer Dick Powell, a friend of Dmytryk's, cast her in a small supporting role in Cry Danger, filmed while Dmytryk remained incarcerated.[2] This isolated gig highlighted how personal networks occasionally mitigated blacklist-related barriers for spouses, but such instances were infrequent. After Dmytryk's recantation before HUAC in April 1951 and his clearance to work in Hollywood, Porter appeared in his 1955 film The Left Hand of God opposite Humphrey Bogart, marking her final feature film credit.[20] These post-recantation roles underscored the conditional nature of her opportunities, tied largely to her husband's rehabilitated status rather than independent demand. By the mid-1950s, Porter's career had shifted predominantly to television, with guest spots on programs including The Red Skelton Show, Sea Hunt (1961), and 77 Sunset Strip (1961), reflecting a downgrade from feature films to episodic work.[4] She retired from acting entirely in 1961, after which no further professional engagements are recorded.[20] The blacklist era's guilt-by-association effects on Porter's trajectory—compounded by the industry's post-war contraction and her age (nearing 40 by retirement)—prevented any sustained revival, as her pre-blacklist momentum as an MGM ingénue dissipated without recovery.[17]Later Years and Death
Post-Retirement Activities
Following her retirement from acting in 1961, Porter collaborated with her husband, director Edward Dmytryk, on On Screen Acting: An Introduction to the Art of Acting for the Screen, published in 1984 by Focal Press. The work consists of a dialogue between Dmytryk as director and Porter as actress, detailing techniques for naturalistic performance on camera, including emphasis on subtle facial expressions, voice modulation, and synchronization with editing rhythms drawn from their professional experiences.[42][43] The book drew on Dmytryk's directorial insights from films like Till the End of Time (1946), where he and Porter first met, and her on-set observations, advocating for actors to prioritize internal motivation over exaggerated gestures suited to theater. It received attention in film education circles for its practical, experience-based approach rather than theoretical abstraction.[44]Death and Immediate Aftermath
Jean Porter died on January 13, 2018, at the age of 95, from natural causes in Canoga Park, California.[1][20] Her death was confirmed by her daughter, Rebecca Dmytryk, who reported it to The Hollywood Reporter the following day.[1][45] The announcement highlighted Porter's career as a petite MGM starlet in the 1940s and her marriage to director Edward Dmytryk, one of the Hollywood Ten, whom she wed in 1948 and who predeceased her in 1999.[1][18] Obituaries appeared promptly in outlets including the New York Daily News and local Texas publications, reflecting her origins in Cisco, Texas, but no public funeral or memorial services were widely reported.[45][6] Porter's passing drew limited contemporary media attention, consistent with her post-retirement life away from the spotlight since the 1960s.[1]Legacy
Critical Assessment of Film Work
Jean Porter's film work centered on supporting roles in 1940s MGM musicals, comedies, and occasional dramas, where she typically played vivacious ingénues or energetic young women. Her petite frame and lively demeanor made her a reliable presence in ensemble casts, contributing cheerfulness to productions like Bathing Beauty (1944) and Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble (1944).[1] Contemporary and retrospective accounts highlight her as a "vivacious supporting player," valued for adding effervescence without overshadowing leads.[1][12] In musicals such as Thrill of a Romance (1945), Porter's dance sequences and comedic timing complemented stars like Esther Williams, aligning with her strengths in light entertainment.[4] She also demonstrated versatility in non-musical fare, including the horror-tinged Cry of the Werewolf (1944), though her roles there were secondary to leads like Nina Foch. Descriptions of her as "cheery and energetic" recur in analyses of her oeuvre, underscoring a consistent appeal rooted in unassuming charm rather than dramatic depth.[4] Porter's own reflections indicate satisfaction with such parts, despite occasional frustrations with edited scenes, as in Abbott and Costello in Hollywood (1945).[9] Later films like Till the End of Time (1946) and Cry Danger (1951) showcased her in more dramatic contexts, portraying optimistic teens or lively socialites that evoked post-war buoyancy.[4] While never a critical darling or box-office draw in her own right, her performances earned niche praise for reliability and vitality, particularly in B-pictures and programmers.[4] This assessment aligns with her status as a secondary star, whose career peaked amid Hollywood's studio system but lacked the range or opportunities for profound artistic evaluation.[20]Role in Highlighting Hollywood's Political Realities
Jean Porter's marriage to director Edward Dmytryk positioned her as a firsthand witness to the Hollywood blacklist's enforcement and its roots in communist organizing within the film industry. Dmytryk, who joined the Communist Party USA in 1944 and served as a functionary in its Hollywood cells until leaving in 1946 due to disillusionment, initially refused to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) in October 1947, resulting in his citation for contempt of Congress and a six-month prison term served from 1950 to 1951.[37][1] Facing professional exile alongside Dmytryk during their 1948–1951 period in England, Porter encountered direct studio pressure upon their return; MGM director Edward Buzzell advised her to "drop Dmytryk" to salvage her career, warning she would "never work at MGM again."[9] This association halted her MGM contract roles, illustrating how blacklist guilt-by-marriage extended to spouses, even as Dmytryk's 1951 recantation—admitting party membership and naming 26 Hollywood communists, including writers and producers—enabled his rehabilitation and directed scrutiny toward verified infiltration efforts, such as party-directed script alterations and union manipulations.[1][19] Porter documented these dynamics in her unpublished manuscript The Cost of Living, which details the blacklist's familial repercussions while framing Dmytryk's trajectory from party involvement to testimony, emphasizing the era's ideological conflicts over personal hardships alone.[9][12] In interviews, she referenced Dmytryk's 1973 memoir Odd Man Out, which substantiates communist cells' structured operations in Hollywood—recruiting via fronts like the Screen Writers Guild and pushing propaganda in films—thus validating HUAC's inquiries as responses to empirical patterns of subversion rather than mere hysteria.[9] Her accounts counter narratives minimizing infiltration by underscoring causal evidence from an insider's recantation, revealing how party discipline initially suppressed dissent but crumbled under scrutiny. By articulating the blacklist's tangible costs without disputing the underlying communist presence Dmytryk exposed—evidenced by his testimony on specific meetings, dues collection, and content directives—Porter's perspective illuminated the political trade-offs: effective containment of influence at the expense of broad enforcement, including collateral impacts on non-members like herself.[19] This family-level lens complemented Dmytryk's technical breakdowns of party tactics, contributing to historical reckonings that prioritize documented activities over retrospective sanitization.[37]Cultural and Historical Significance
Jean Porter's portrayals in 1940s MGM productions, such as Bathing Beauty (1944) and Thrill of a Romance (1945), embodied the era's escapist cinema, offering audiences comedic and musical diversions during and immediately after World War II.[20] These B-movies and supporting roles underscored Hollywood's role in bolstering morale through wholesome ingénue characters, reflecting the studio system's emphasis on formulaic entertainment that prioritized commercial appeal over artistic depth.[9] Her work in films like Till the End of Time (1946), where she met Edward Dmytryk, captured post-war themes of readjustment, aligning with broader cultural narratives of American resilience.[12] Historically, Porter's career trajectory illuminates the collateral effects of Hollywood's confrontation with communist influence in the late 1940s, as her 1948 marriage to Dmytryk—then facing House Un-American Activities Committee scrutiny—led to diminished opportunities despite her lack of political involvement.[1] MGM restricted her assignments, loaning her out before she freelanced, exemplifying how association with blacklisted figures enforced informal loyalty tests across the industry.[9] This pattern, driven by studios' responses to verified Party activities among filmmakers, extended repercussions to family members, altering professional paths in an environment where ideological alignment increasingly determined viability.[12] Porter's longevity into the 21st century, culminating in her death on January 13, 2018, at age 95, positioned her as a living archive of these transitions, with writings like The Cost of Living detailing familial strains from the blacklist without romanticizing the underlying threats.[12] Her accounts, drawn from direct experience, contribute to understanding the causal links between Hollywood's internal politics and external pressures, offering a counterpoint to narratives that minimize the empirical basis for anti-communist measures.[9] Thus, Porter symbolizes the intersection of glamour and geopolitics, where individual trajectories mirrored the industry's pivot from unchecked ideological experimentation to enforced accountability.Filmography
Feature Films
Jean Porter appeared in feature films from 1942 to 1955, primarily in supporting roles for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer during the 1940s, often in musicals, comedies, and dramas.[1][20] Her credits include uncredited and credited parts, with notable billed roles such as Patsy in The Youngest Profession (1943), Katy Anderson in Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble (1944), and Joanne Leeds in Betty Co-Ed (1946).[20] She met her future husband, director Edward Dmytryk, on the set of Till the End of Time (1946).[20] The following table lists her feature film appearances in chronological order:| Year | Title |
|---|---|
| 1942 | Fall In[15] |
| 1942 | About Face[15] |
| 1943 | The Youngest Profession[15][20] |
| 1943 | Calaboose[15] |
| 1943 | Nazty Nuisance[15] |
| 1944 | Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble[15] |
| 1944 | Bathing Beauty[15][1] |
| 1944 | San Fernando Valley[15] |
| 1945 | Twice Blessed[15] |
| 1945 | Abbott and Costello in Hollywood[15] |
| 1945 | What Next, Corporal Hargrove?[15] |
| 1945 | Thrill of a Romance[46] |
| 1946 | Betty Co-Ed[15] |
| 1946 | Till the End of Time[15] |
| 1946 | Easy to Wed[20] |
| 1947 | Little Miss Broadway[15] |
| 1947 | That Hagen Girl[15] |
| 1951 | Kentucky Jubilee[15][12] |
| 1951 | G.I. Jane[15][12] |
| 1951 | Cry Danger[20] |
| 1954 | Racing Blood[15] |
| 1955 | The Left Hand of God[15][20] |