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1930s Wire Press Photo Beautiful Frances Rafferty
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1930s Wire Press Photo Beautiful Frances Rafferty
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1930s Wire Press Photo Beautiful Frances Rafferty 8x10 B&W photo is in great shape. No blurb; just her name and MGM written on back of photo. A pouty glamour girl in "B" films during the 1940s, actress Frances Rafferty did a role reversal and turned wholesome housewife on TV in the next decade. Born in Sioux City, Iowa, her family moved to Los Angeles when she was 9 during the Depression days in search of work. Frances won a scholarship to the Edith Jane Dancing School the next year and attended UCLA following her high school graduation. She dropped out after earning an understudy position for dancer Vera Zorina in the film I Was an Adventuress (1940), choreographed by the legendary George Balanchine . A severe leg injury suffered after falling during a performance of "The Firebird" at the Hollywood Bowl changed her focus to acting. Coached by such stalwart teachers as Maria Ouspenskaya , Frances was signed by MGM at the age of 19 and began with a dancing bit in Presenting Lily Mars (1943) starring Judy Garland . Other parts in The War Against Mrs. Hadley (1942), Barbary Coast Gent (1944) and Mrs. Parkington (1944) added to her movie camera experience. Her almond eyes gave this beauty a slightly exotic look and she capitalized on it in her best movie performance in Dragon Seed (1944) as the ill-fated Oriental girl who is raped and subsequently murdered. Unable to secure major starring parts in "A" pictures, Frances remained a "B" level co-star with post-war film roles in Bad Bascomb (1946), Lost Honeymoon (1947), Curley (1947) and _Old-Fashioned Girl, An (1948)_ doing little to further her career. A marriage to John Harlan in 1944 lasted only three years. In 1948 she married Thomas R. Baker, an Air Force colonel who later became general manager for the Los Alamitos Racetrack, and had two children. Following a role in The Shanghai Story (1954), Frances set her sights on TV and in that same year won the role of Ruth Henshaw, the daughter of Spring Byington, in the popular sitcom "December Bride" (1954) for which she is best known. Harry Morgan , who played Pete Porter on the show, spun off into his own series with "Pete and Gladys" (1960), and Frances was brought on board to play Nancy, a next-door-neighbor. The show lasted only one season. Frances quietly semi-retired after that with just a handful of TV performances coming her way, then disappeared altogether. She raised quarter horses with her husband in California for a time.Winner adds $4.95 Shipping and Handling in the United States. Outside of the U.S. please add $10.00 shipping and handling. CT residents add 6% sales tax.
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