Gertrude Michael | |
---|---|
Born |
Lillian Gertrude Michael June 1, 1911 Talladega, Alabama, U.S. |
Died | December 31, 1964 Beverly Hills, California, U.S. |
(aged 53)
Occupation | actress |
Years active | 1932–1961 |
Gertrude Michael (June 1, 1911 – December 31, 1964) was an American film, stage and television actress.
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl H. Michael, she was born Lillian Gertrude Michael in Talladega, Alabama. She graduated from Talladega High school at the age of 14. She became a singer on the radio.
Michael attended the University of Alabama, where she studied law, and Converse College, Spartanburg, South Carolina, pursuing a study of music. Then she went to the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music to continue studying music. Her work there earned her a scholarship for studying five years in Italy.
Her childhood home in Talladega, Alabama was destroyed by fire in 2007.
In 1929 in Cincinnati she made her stage debut in the Stuart Walker stock theater company. She subsequently appeared on Broadway in Rachel Crothers' Caught Wet (1931). She entered the movies playing Richard Arlen's fiancée in Wayward (1932), but her best-remembered role is probably either as Rita Ross in Murder at the Vanities (1934), one of the last pre-Code films, in which she sang an ode to marijuana (Sweet Marijuana) or as Alica Hatton, the snooty society girl in the Mae West comedy I'm No Angel (1933).
Among her television appearances, Michael was seen eleven times on Fireside Theater between 1950-1955 and three times on Schlitz Playhouse. She also made a guest appearance on Perry Mason in 1958 as Helen Rucker in "The Case of the Sun Bather's Diary."