
Dennie Moore
Personal Info
Known for
Acting
Gender
Female
Birthday
1902-12-30
Day of Death
1978-02-22 (75 years old)
Place of Birth
New York City, New York, USA
Dennie Moore
Biography
From Wikipedia
Dennie Moore (December 30, 1902 – February 22, 1978) was an American film and stage actress. In the 1930s, she decided to embark on a film career and in 1935 she arrived to Hollywood and made her screen debut in an uncredited role in the Cary Grant-Katharine Hepburn film, Sylvia Scarlett for RKO Radio Pictures.
She primarily was what is known as a "free-lance actress" and floated between Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Warner Bros. Studios. In the course of her film career, she would star in twenty-two films between 1935 and 1951. Some of her film credits include parts in Boy Meets Girl (1938), The Women (1939), Saturday's Children (1940), Dive Bomber (1941), and Anna Lucasta (1949). By the mid-1940s, Moore found herself getting less work in Hollywood, but more parts on the New York stage. In 1951, she made her last screen appearance as Mrs. Bea Gingras in The Model and the Marriage Broker. Moving back to New York City she made one final performance onstage in The Diary of Anne Frank in the role of Mrs. Van Daan. In 1957, she retired from acting altogether, aged 54.
Acting
(1951)
The Model and the Marriage Broker
as Mrs. Bea Gingras
(1949)
Anna Lucasta
as Blanche
(1941)
Dive Bomber
as Mrs. James
(1940)
Saturday's Children
as Gertrude 'Gert' Mills
(1940)
Women in War
as Ginger
(1939)
The Women
as Olga
(1939)
Eternally Yours
as Waitress
(1939)
Bachelor Mother
as Mary
(1939)
These Glamour Girls
as Jane's Roommate Mavis (uncredited)
(1939)
The Adventures of Jane Arden
as Teenie Moore
(1939)
No Place to Go
as Harriet Shaffer
(1938)
Boy Meets Girl
as Miss Crews
(1938)
Secrets of an Actress
as Miss Blackstone
(1938)
Mystery House
as Annette
(1938)
Cowboy from Brooklyn
as Abby Pitts
(1937)
Angel
as Emma MacGillicuddy Wilton
(1937)
The Perfect Specimen
as Clarabelle
(1937)
Submarine D-1
as Arabella
(1936)
Meet Nero Wolfe
as Mazie Gray
(1935)
Sylvia Scarlett
as Maudie (uncredited)