Nan Grey
Actor/Actriz
30
Movies
1
TV Shows
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Grey was born Eschal Loleet Grey Miller in Houston, Texas. In 1934, she went to Hollywood with her mother for a holiday. She was persuaded by a friend to take a screen test and ended up in pictures. She attended the school that Universal Studios operated for children who had film contracts. Grey's screen debut was in 1934 in Warner Brothers' Firebird. She starred opposite John Wayne in the 1936 film Sea Spoilers. Grey appeared in the Universal Monsters films Dracula's Daughter (1936) and The Invisible Man Returns (1940). She also appeared in the popular 1936 musical comedy Three Smart Girls as well as the 1939 sequel Three Smart Girls Grow Up.
Grey played Kathy Marshall in the NBC radio soap opera Those We Love 1938-1945. She also played in The Lux Radio Theatre, November 8, 1937 episode, She Loves Me Not with Bing Crosby, Joan Blondell, and Sterling Holloway.
Description above from the Wikipedia article Nan Grey, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
As Actor/Actress
Rawhide
Carlie Evans
La hija de Drácula
Lili
Girls' School
Linda Simpson
Babbitt
Eunice Littlefield
Ex-Champ
Joan Grey
The Invisible Man Returns
Helen Manson
The Firebird
Alice von Attem
The House of the Seven Gables
Phoebe Pyncheon
Three Smart Girls Grow Up
Joan Craig
La torre de Londres
Lady Alice Barton
Love Before Breakfast
Telephone Girl (uncredited)
A Little Bit of Heaven
Janet Loring
Sea Spoilers
Connie Dawson
Mary Jane's Pa
Lucille Preston
The Storm
Peggy Phillips
The Jury's Secret
Mary Norris
Three Smart Girls
Joan Craig
You're Not So Tough
Millie
Reckless Living
Laurie Andrews
The Under-Pup
Priscilla Adams
The Black Doll
Marian Rood
Sutter's Gold
Ann Eliza Sutter
Danger on the Air
Christina "Steenie" MacCorkle
The Great Impersonation
Middleton's Daughter (uncredited)
Some Blondes Are Dangerous
Judy Williams
Let Them Live
Judith Marshall
Under Age
Jane Baird
The Affair of Susan
Miss Skelly
Crash Donovan
Doris Tennyson
Sandy Is a Lady
Mary Phillips