Hollywood actor often cast as a good-time girl who became the fifth and last wife of Hopalong Cassidy star William Boyd
In the 1930s and 40s, in order to fill up the programmes of double bills, Hollywood studios churned out hundreds of cheap "programmers" through which some actors, such as Grace Bradley, who has died aged 97, gained a modicum of fame. Bradley later became more celebrated as "Mrs Hopalong Cassidy", the fifth and last wife of William Boyd, the actor who embodied the cowboy hero. The petite, seductive and sassy Bradley, who never made a colour film, was a redhead but was frequently seen as a blonde. From 1933 to 1943, she appeared in dozens of quickly made second features, often cast as what were termed "good-time girls", as distinct from good girls, sometimes with invented ooh-la-la French names.
Born in Brooklyn, New York, Bradley played the piano, sang and danced, on stage and in nightclubs,...
In the 1930s and 40s, in order to fill up the programmes of double bills, Hollywood studios churned out hundreds of cheap "programmers" through which some actors, such as Grace Bradley, who has died aged 97, gained a modicum of fame. Bradley later became more celebrated as "Mrs Hopalong Cassidy", the fifth and last wife of William Boyd, the actor who embodied the cowboy hero. The petite, seductive and sassy Bradley, who never made a colour film, was a redhead but was frequently seen as a blonde. From 1933 to 1943, she appeared in dozens of quickly made second features, often cast as what were termed "good-time girls", as distinct from good girls, sometimes with invented ooh-la-la French names.
Born in Brooklyn, New York, Bradley played the piano, sang and danced, on stage and in nightclubs,...
- 11/8/2010
- by Ronald Bergan
- The Guardian - Film News
Grace Bradley when she was a Paramount starlet in the 1930s. I’ve just learned that brave, beautiful Grace Bradley Boyd has passed away, having just celebrated her 97th birthday. This remarkable woman led an incredible life, from the time she entered show business in her teens, to the day she married the man she’d idolized on the screen, William Boyd, to the years she spent in her 80s and 90s teaching other senior citizens Tai Chi near her home in Orange County, California. The year before last, pop culture guru Russ Cochran published a long-awaited book about the Boyds that…...
- 9/23/2010
- Leonard Maltin's Movie Crazy
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