Dorothy Dandridge

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Dorothy Dandridge

Birth name Dorothy Jean Dandridge
Born November 9, 1922
Cleveland, Ohio
Died September 8, 1965 (aged 42)
West Hollywood, California
Years active 1935-1961

Dorothy Jean Dandridge (November 9, 1922September 8, 1965) was an American actress. She was the first African American to be nominated for the Academy Award in the Best Actress category and the third African American to receive a nomination in any category overall (after Hattie McDaniel and Ethel Waters).


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Singing in her church's choir, her mother, Ruby Dandridge — an ambitious, small-time local performer who would become a successful stage and screen actress — created an act with her daughters that performed as "The Wonder Children." The "Wonder Children" toured in the South for five years with Ruby's lesbian partner, Geneva Williams, while Ruby continued working and performing in Ohio. Some biographies document this period as the beginning of the sexual abuse the young Dorothy would suffer from Williams until adolescence. During this period, the young Dandridge toured non-stop, rarely attending school.

With the start of the Great Depression, work for the Wonder Children dried up as it did for many of the Chitlin' circuit performers. Ruby Jean Butler Dandridge packed her family and moved to Hollywood in search of a new career for her daughters and herself. In Los Angeles, she found steady work, playing a domestic in small parts on the radio and in film. During this time, Geneva continued to train and rehearse the girls; Dorothy was also re-enrolled in school. Her first on-screen appearance was as an extra in a 1935 Our Gang short called Teacher's Beau.

Dandridge did not receive another role until 1940, when she appeared in Four Shall Die a race film, in which she played a murderer. All of her early roles were stereotypical parts for African American actresses, but her singing ability brought her popularity in nightclubs around the country. During this period, she starred in several "soundies", video films designed to be displayed on juke boxes, including Paper Doll by the Mills Brothers Cow Cow Boogie, "Jig In The Jungle", "Mr. & Mrs. Carpenters (Rent Party)".

Dorothy Dandridge and Pearl Bailey in Carmen Jones (1954)
Dorothy Dandridge and Pearl Bailey in Carmen Jones (1954)

The most important role of her career nearly escaped her. Until Carmen Jones, Dandridge had maintained subtly different on-screen and off-screen personas. While her natural sensuousness was always apparent, her films to this point generally portrayed her as the "nice girl" in contrast to her club performer presence. Biographers write that she was directed to read for the character Cindy Lou (eventually cast with Olga James). However, Dandridge auditioned for Carmen in full costume and character. The film would also mark the beginning of her on-screen and off-screen relationship with director Otto Preminger.

Dandridge was cast in Carmen Jones, the remake of the play of the same name "Carmen Jones", in November 1954, receiving an Oscar nomination for [Best Actress]. She appeared on the cover of Life magazine, the first African American to appear on the cover.

Dorothy Dandridge, Stuart Whitman and Broderick Crawford in The Decks Ran Red (1958)
Dorothy Dandridge, Stuart Whitman and Broderick Crawford in The Decks Ran Red (1958)

Despite the Oscar nomination, Dandridge had to go to Italy to make her next movie, Tamango, in 1956. She agreed to play "Tuptim" in The King and I, but later changed her mind (Rita Moreno got the part instead). This reneging may have led to her lack of work in Hollywood, and she was once again forced to go on tour and perform at clubs across the nation. In 1957, she played in Island in the Sun which was controversial for its portrayal of an interracial romance; in 1959 she starred in Porgy and Bess alongside Sidney Poitier, for which she was nominated for a Golden Globe Award.

In 1961, Dandridge guest-starred on the Ed Sullivan Show. She sang a ballad, giving viewers the chance to hear her real voice. (All the leads in Carmen Jones had been dubbed, with the exception of Pearl Bailey.)

Dandridge married Harold Nicholas on September 6, 1942. The couple had one child, Harolyn Nicholas, Dandridge's only child. Harolyn was born on September 2, 1943; she was severely mentally handicapped. The couple divorced in October 1951. Dandridge became involved with Otto Preminger while he was still married. This affair lasted for years, but Preminger refused to divorce his wife.

Dandridge married Jack Denison, a white man, on June 22, 1959. Denison was physically abusive and took much of Dandridge's money to put into his restaurant business and into oil deals. She filed for divorce after two years, but was left in debt. She had to take Harolyn out of a private institution and place her into a public institution.

In 1965, Dandridge was found dead in her home in West Hollywood, California from an overdose of Imipramine, a tricyclic antidepressant. She was 42 when she died. Modern analysts believe that she may have suffered from bipolar disorder. As she was depressed and apparently destitute, many speculate that her death was a suicide, that Dandridge's death was the result of accidentally taking pain medication (for a severely injured ankle) in conjunction with her other routine medications. Nicholas cites Earl Mills' (then) recent scheduling of two high-paying films in Mexico and several well-paying club engagements as evidence that Dandridge had turned the corner financially and needed only to complete the work to restore her financial health. Her business manager at the time was Jerome Rosenthal, who years later would be found guilty of plundering the fortune of client Doris Day.

Although her funeral was well-attended, notable absentees included Otto Preminger, Jack Denison, and her sister, Vivian Dandridge. Her father, Cyril Dandridge, was given the wrong information by Ruby Dandridge and also did not attend. Harold Nicholas left her a rose. Dandridge's cremated remains are interred in Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery, in Glendale, California. After her mother died in 1987, she was interred with Dandridge at Forest Lawn. Her father died in 1989, and her sister Vivian died in 1991 of a massive stroke. Her daughter still lives in a California institution.

Halle Berry in Introducing Dorothy Dandridge (1999)
Halle Berry in Introducing Dorothy Dandridge (1999)

  • Fellow Clevelander Halle Berry played Dandridge in the made-for-TV movie, Introducing Dorothy Dandridge (1999), for which she won an Emmy Award. Berry was noted for her striking resemblance to Dandridge, and for her engaging depiction of the actress’ struggle to succeed in the racially biased industry of 1950s Hollywood. Coincidentally, Berry later became the first African American to receive the Academy Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture. In her speech, Berry paid tribute to Dandridge.
  • Her great-grand niece, who goes by the name of "Fantasy", bears an eerily striking resemblance to her. A retired actress, she now resides in Auburn Hills, Michigan.
  • Dandridge was one of the actresses considered for the film based on Cleopatra by director Rouben Mamoulian, which eventually went to Elizabeth Taylor.
  • Pop Icon Janet Jackson cites Dandridge as her idol and was in the running to play the part played by Halle Berry. She owns the rights to a biography of Dandridge and has publicly stated her intentions to make a movie based on Dandridge's life. In the music video for her song Twenty Foreplay Janet pretends to be Dorothy Dandridge in various glamorous situations. Janet considers Dorothy to be "America's first Black Sex Symbol"

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