Dorothy Burgess
Dorothy Burgess was an American stage and motion picture actress.
Family, education
Born in Los Angeles in 1907, Burgess was a niece of Fay Bainter. On her father's side she was related to David C. Montgomery of Montgomery and Stone. Her grandfather was Henry A. Burgess, Sr. He came to Los Angeles in 1893, establishing a business at Terminal Island. His home was at 637 West 41st Place. He was born in England. Her dad was H.A. Burgess, a pioneer air transport executive. For a decade he was an assistant to Harris M. Hanshue, who founded Western Air Express, and was its first president. Burgess studied drawing, painting, and sculpture at Mrs. Dow's School in Briarcliff Manor, New York. Her talent in the three artistic disciplines was evident in the creative objects which decorated her Hollywood apartment. Burgess and her mother, Grace, resided in a home in Malibu, California, in 1932.Stage actress
Burgess made her stage debut in a walk-on role in support of her mother's sister, Bainter. She first came to light as a specialty dancer in The Music Box Revue. Burgess played a 17-year-old in the comedy, The Adorable Liar, which was staged at the 49th Street Theater in August 1926. It was her first appearance in New York City.Her knowledge of the stage was proficient and she combined this with ample charm and attractiveness. Burgess was co-featured in a stock company managed by George Cukor and George Kondolf at the Lyceum Theatre in Rochester, New York, during the summer of 1928. Her co-star was Henry Hull. The actors opened in Broadway on April 30. She learned about being a character actor in stock, along with adapting her voice and mannerisms to each new role.
Burgess was on Broadway in The Squall and played the title role in Lulu Belle, in Los Angeles. Burgess was given star billing by David Belasco in Lulu Belle. The play was performed at the Belasco Theater in Los Angeles in October 1929. Burgess depicted a Mexican girl in The Broken Wing, a Paul Dickerson romantic comedy, staged at the El Capitan Theater in Los Angeles, in July 1931. She was typecast as a Spanish woman so much that one reviewer commented that perhaps there was a Spanish onion or a Mexican chili pepper in her family tree. However, offstage she was much more a typical American co-ed than the Carmanesque young ladies, who she often played. She made Hollywood her permanent home, living at 210 South Fuller Avenue.
Movie career
acquired her services and she debuted in In Old Arizona, the first of the outdoor talking films. Burgess portrayed the Mexican minx who was desired by both Edmund Lowe and Warner Baxter. A reviewer noted that her voice was good. The first film made in the Movietone sound system, it was a romance of the old southwest.In May 1929 two large lamps mounted on a tripod toppled over on a sound stage where Burgess was working at the Fox Movietone Studio. She was cut severely over her left eye by one of the incandescent lamps. Burgess was rushed to a studio hospital where several stitches were taken in her wound.
Burgess won the feminine lead in Beyond Victory after Ann Harding decided not to make the movie. The Pathé Pictures release featured William Boyd as the leading man. In December 1931 Burgess signed with First National Pictures for a significant role in Play-Girl, which had a screen story by Maude Fulton. The movie was produced by Warner Bros. and First National.
Burgess had a featured role as a romantic rival of Jean Harlow in Hold Your Man, also starring Clark Gable. Burgess also appeared in Swing High, Taxi!, Ladies They Talk About, Strictly Personal, Headline Shooter, Night Flight, Black Moon, and Miss Fane's Baby Is Stolen. Burgess acted with Lowe and Nancy Carroll in the Paramount Pictures release, I Love That Man, directed by Harry Joe Brown and produced by Charles R. Rogers. Burgess strained ligaments in her back and shoulders during filming at Universal Pictures studio in July 1933. She was performing fight scenes with Mary Carlisle and Sally O'Neil.
Burgess appeared with Richard Barthelmess and Jean Muir in A Modern Hero, which deals with a young circus rider. Gambling starred George M. Cohan, and was produced by Harold B. Franklin at the Eastern Services Studios in Astoria, Queens. Burgess played the part of Dorothy Kane. Her role as 'Trixie' in The Lone Star Ranger represented a return to playing a dance hall girl, as she did in In Old Arizona. The film was produced by Twentieth Century-Fox.
Private life
Burgess became engaged to movie director Clarence Brown in 1932. She was involved in a romance with wealthy New York jeweler Jules Galenzer in 1934.Manslaughter charge
Burgess was charged with manslaughter following an auto accident in which she was driving. 17-year-old Louise Manfredi died in the wreck, in San Francisco, on the night of December 23, 1932. Burgess, driving alone, collided with a cardriven by 18-year-old, Andrew Salz, a student at the University of California-Berkeley. Burgess' hearing was postponed and her bail was fixed at $50. She suffered from shock and was placed in a San Francisco sanitorium. Salz and Burgess each accused the other of responsibility for the accident. Burgess was sued by Italo Manfredi and his wife, Marie, in January 1933.
They sought $25,000 in damages. A compromise payment of $6,150 was approved by the San Francisco Superior Court in August 1933.
Earlier a compromise amounting to $6,000 was agreed upon for damages claimed by 18-year-old swimmer, Betty Lou Davis, who was injured in the same accident.
Death
In May 1961, Dorothy Burgess was brought to the hospital from her home in Palm Springs, California. But just months later, on August 20, 1961, she died at the Motion Picture Country Home, Woodland Hills, California. She was only 54 when she died of lung cancer. Her remains are in vaultage at Chapel of the Pines Crematory in Los Angeles.Partial filmography
- In Old Arizona as Tonia Maria
- Protection as Myrtle Hines
- Pleasure Crazed as Alma Dean
- A Song of Kentucky as Nancy Morgan
- Swing High as Trixie
- Recaptured Love as Peggy Price
- Oh! Oh! Cleopatra as Cleopatra
- Lasca of the Rio Grande as Lasca
- Taxi! as Marie Costa
- Play Girl as Edna
- The Stoker as Margarita Valdez
- Out of Singapore aka Gangsters on the Sea as Concha Renaldo
- Malay Nights as Eve Blake
- On Your Guard as 'Sissy' Shannon
- Ladies They Talk About as 'Sister' Susie
- What Price Decency as Norma
- Strictly Personal as Bessie
- Rusty Rides Alone as Mona Quillan
- Hold Your Man as Gypsy Angecon
- Easy Millions
- It's Great to Be Alive as Al Moran
- I Love That Man as Ethel aka Giggles
- The Important Witness as Ruth Dana
- Headline Shooter as Ruby - Burnett's Moll
- Ladies Must Love as Peggy Burns
- Night Flight aka Dawn To Dark as Pellerin's Girlfriend
- From Headquarters as Dolly White
- Miss Fane's Baby Is Stolen as Dotty
- Orient Express as Mable Express
- Fashions of 1934 as Glenda
- A Modern Hero as Hazel Flint Radier
- Affairs of a Gentleman as Nan Fitzgerald
- Black Moon as Juanita Perez Lane
- The Circus Clown as Babe
- Hat, Coat, and Glove as Ann Brewster
- Friends of Mr. Sweeney as Millie Seagrove
- Gambling as Dorothy Kane
- Village Tale as Lulu Stevenson
- Manhattan Butterfly as Another Singer
- The Lady in Question as Antoinette
- I Want a Divorce as 'Peppy' Gilman
- Cadet Girl as Minor Role
- Lady for a Night as Flo
- Lone Star Ranger as Trixie
- Man of Courage as Sally Dickson
- Girls in Chains as Mrs. Peters
- The West Side Kid as Toodles