Dorothy Adams American actress (1900–1988)
Dorothy Adams
Born Dorothy I. Adams
(1900-01-08 ) January 8, 1900Died March 16, 1988(1988-03-16) (aged 88) Resting place
Inglewood Park Cemetery Occupation Actress Years active 1931−1975 Spouse
Children Rachel Ames
Dorothy I. Adams [ 1] [ 2] (January 8, 1900 – March 16, 1988)[ 3] [ 4] was an American character actress of stage, film, and television.
Partial filmography
1938: Condemned Women as Nurse (uncredited)
1938: Crime Ring as Second Fortune Teller (uncredited)
1938: Broadway Musketeers as Anna, Judy's Governess
1939: Calling Dr. Kildare as Jenny's Mother (uncredited)
1939: Bachelor Mother as Secretary (uncredited)
1939: Mickey the Kid as Student's Mother (uncredited)
1939: On Borrowed Time as Florist (uncredited)
1939: Career as Telephone Operator (uncredited)
1939: The Women as Miss Atkinson (uncredited)
1939: Disputed Passage as Nurse (uncredited)
1939: Ninotchka as Jacqueline - Swana's Maid (uncredited)
1939: A Child Is Born as Nurse (uncredited)
1940: The Fight for Life as The Young Woman
1940: Babies for Sale as Mother in Dr. Gaines' Office (uncredited)
1940: Untamed as 3rd Nurse
1940: Cross-Country Romance as Emmy (uncredited)
1940: We Who Are Young as Bellevue Hospital Nurse (uncredited)
1940: Dr. Christian Meets the Women as Indigent Woman (uncredited)
1940: Lucky Partners as Maid at Ethel's (uncredited)
1940: Nobody's Children as Mrs. Alice Stone (uncredited)
1941: The Devil Commands as Mrs. Marcy
1941: Back Street as Mrs. Brown (uncredited)
1941: Tobacco Road as Payne's Secretary (uncredited)
1941: Penny Serenade as Mother in Stalled Car (uncredited)
1941: The Flame of New Orleans as Cousin
1941: Affectionately Yours as Reception Nurse at Hospital (uncredited)
1941: The Shepherd of the Hills as Elvy
1941: Highway West as Wife (uncredited)
1941: Whistling in the Dark as Mrs. Farrell (uncredited)
1941: One Foot in Heaven as Woman Behind Hope at Baptism (uncredited)
1941: Glamour Boy as Mr. Devin - Fruit Stand Proprietress (uncredited)
1941: Bedtime Story as Betsy
1942: Joe Smith, American as Nurse (uncredited)
1942: Lady Gangster as Deaf Annie
1942: The Gay Sisters as Nurse (uncredited)
1942: Dr. Gillespie's New Assistant as Mrs. Alberts (uncredited)
1943: So Proudly We Hail! as Lt. Irma Emerson
1943: O, My Darling Clementine as Dancer (uncredited)
1944: Since You Went Away as Nurse (uncredited)
1944: Bathing Beauty as Ms. Hanney (uncredited)
1944: Laura as Bessie Clary, Laura's Maid (uncredited)
1945: Keep Your Powder Dry as WAC Seamstress #2 (uncredited)
1945: Circumstantial Evidence as Bolger's Wife
1945: Captain Eddie as Nurse (uncredited)
1945: The Falcon in San Francisco as Hotel Maid (uncredited)
1945: Fallen Angel as Stella's Neighbor (uncredited)
1946: Miss Susie Slagle's as Mrs. Johnson
1946: Sentimental Journey as Martha (uncredited)
1946: O.S.S. as Claudette (uncredited)
1946: The Inner Circle as Emma Wilson
1946: Nocturne as Angry Apartment House Tenant (uncredited)
1946: The Best Years of Our Lives as Mrs. Cameron
1946: A Boy and His Dog (Short) as Mrs. Allen
1947: That's My Man as Millie
1947: The Trouble with Women as Henry's Mothers (uncredited)
1947: Unconquered as Woman Beside Garth Happy at Bagpipes (uncredited)
1948: The Foxes of Harrow as Mrs. Sara Fox (uncredited)
1948: Sitting Pretty as Mrs. Goul (scenes deleted)
1948: The Sainted Sisters as Widow Davitt
1948: He Walked by Night as Paranoid Housewife (uncredited)
1949: Down to the Sea in Ships as Miss Hopkins (uncredited)
1949: Not Wanted as Mrs. Aggie Kelton
1949: Samson and Delilah as Screaming Temple Spectator (uncredited)
1950: Montana as Kitty Maynard (uncredited)
1950: Paid in Full as Emily Burroughs, Nurse (uncredited)
1950: The Outriders as Farmer's Wife (uncredited)
1950: The Cariboo Trail as Nurse
1950: The Jackpot as Watch Saleswoman - Store Employee (uncredited)
1951: The First Legion as Mrs. Dunn
1951: Home Town Story as Hospital Nurse (uncredited)
1952: The Greatest Show on Earth as Sam's Wife (uncredited)
1952: Fort Osage as Mrs. Winfield
1952: Jet Job as Mrs. Kovak
1952: The Winning Team as Ma Alexander
1952: Carrie as Mrs. Meebers
1954: Rose Marie as Townswoman (uncredited)
1954: There's No Business Like Show Business as Nurse (uncredited)
1955: Many Rivers to Cross as Mrs. Crawford (uncredited)
1955: The Prodigal as Carpenter's Wife
1956: The Broken Star as Mrs. Trail (uncredited)
1956: The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit as Mrs. Hopkins' Maid (uncredited)
1956: The Killing as Ruthie O'Reilly
1956: Three for Jamie Dawn as Helen March
1956: Johnny Concho as Sarah Dark
1956: These Wilder Years as Aunt Martha
1956: The Ten Commandments as Slave woman / Hebrew at Golden Calf / Hebrew at Rameses' Gate
1956: Gunsmoke (TV Series, season 2, episode 1, "Cow Doctor") as Mrs. Pitcher
1957: Hot Rod Rumble as Ma Crawford
1957: The Buckskin Lady as Mrs. Adams
1957: An Affair to Remember as Mother at Rehearsal (uncredited)
1957: 3:10 to Yuma as Mrs. Potter (uncredited)
1958: Leave It to Beaver (TV Series) as Miss Wakeland, Acting Teacher
1958: Gunman's Walk as Mrs. Stotheby (uncredited)
1958: The Big Country as Hannassey Woman
1958: Unwed Mother as Mrs. Paully
1960: From the Terrace as Mrs. Benziger (uncredited)
1961: The Twilight Zone (TV Series, "Dust ", Season 2, episode 12) as Mrs. Canfield
1969: The Good Guys and the Bad Guys as Mrs. Pierce (uncredited)
1975: Peeper as Mrs. Prendergast
References
1 2 3 "Utah, County Marriages, 1871-1941", FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KSPS-SHL : Thu Sep 19 20:40:47 UTC 2024), Entry for Byron Kay Foulger and A. K. Foulger, 13 Apr 1926.
1 2 "Sweet Lavender" . The Vancouver Sun . March 11, 1921. p. 3 Retrieved October 22, 2024.
↑ John A. Willis (1989). Screen World . Crown Publishers. p. 237. ISBN 978-0-517-57332-7 .
↑ Dorothy Adams : Classic Movie Hub (CMH) , retrieved October 19, 2017
↑ "Gossip and Notes" . Courier Democrat . January 18, 1900. p. 5. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
↑ "Dorothy Adams Takes in Moroni Olsen Play" . The Independent-Record . The Independent Record. October 15, 1927. p. 2. Retrieved October 22, 2015 – via Newspapers.com .
↑ "BRAEMAR SCHOOL RESULTS ANNOUNCED; Dorothy I. Adams Wins Silver Medal for General Efficiency" . Vancouver Daily World . June 24, 1916. p. 2. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
↑ "Benefit Play to Be Given" . Morning Register . Morning Register. November 30, 1927. p. 16. Retrieved October 22, 2015 – via Newspapers.com .
↑ Armstrong, Stephen B. (2011). Andrew V. McLaglen: The Life and Hollywood Career . Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company. p. 75. ISBN 978-0-7864-4977-4 .
↑ "TV CASTINGS". The Hollywood Reporter . October 31, 1958. p. 33. ProQuest 2338270688 . Hugo Mauritz, 'Mackenzie's Raiders ;' Stanley Fafara, Jeri Weil, Rusty Stevens, Sue Randall, Dorothy Adams, 'Leave It to Beaver;' Isobel Randolph, '77 Sunset Strip.'
1 2 "Obituaries: Dorothy Adams Foulger". Variety . March 23, 1988. p. 133. ProQuest 1286131681 . Dorothy Adams Foulger, 88, screen actress, died March 16 in Woodland Hills, Calif. Born in North Dakota, raised in Vancouver and a graduate of the University of British Columbia, Dorothy Adams met her future husband, actor-director Byron Foulger, as a member of the touring Olsen Players. The couple later joined the Pasadena Playhouse. [...] Adams taught acting for 12 years during the 1950s and '60s at UCLA. Survived by two daughters, a sister, three grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
↑ "7 Members of UCLA Faculty Will Retire" . The Los Angeles Times . July 16, 1967. sec. J, p. 7. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
↑ Hunter, James Michael (2013). Mormons and Popular Culture: Cinema, television, theater, music, and fashion . ABC-CLIO. pp. 236– 237. ISBN 9780313391675 . Retrieved September 16, 2018 .
1 2 "Obituaries: Byron Foulger". Variety . April 15, 1970. p. 63. ProQuest 1505791621 . Byron Foulger, 70, vet screen and tv actor, died April 4 of a heart condition in Hollywood. [...] Surviving are his wife, actress Dorothy Adams, and daughter Rachel Ames.
↑ "Wedding Bells Will Culminate Stage Romance; Byron Foulger and Dorothy Adams, of Moroni Players, Obtain Marriage License" . Salt Lake Telegram . April 13, 1926. sec. II, p. 1. Retrieved October 22, 2024.
↑ Resting Places: The Burial Sites of 14000 Famous Persons by Scott Wilson
External links
International National Other