Derelys Perdue

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Derelys Perdue
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Derelys Perdue

Derelys Perdue (March 22, 1902 - September 30, 1989) was an American silent-film actress and popular dancer during the 1920s. Her height was 5' 2.5".

She was born in either Illinois or Kansas City, Missouri. Following high school, she attended a private school for girls.

She began her career as a dancer (she had been dancing since the age of six), gaining much popularity. She first received attention in Hollywood during a stage production entitled Attila and the Huns, with Ramón Novarro playing Attila and Perdue playing one of the Huns.

Perdue went on to appear as a dancer with Navorro in the 1921 film A Small Town Idol. Her first film credit was the 1923 film Daytime Wives. She was named one of the WAMPAS Baby Stars that year.

Perdue reportedly had a bad professional relationship with fellow actress Grace Darmond, with whom she starred with in A Dangerous Adventure (1922). It was later told that the two women were actually fighting it out for real in several scenes, nearling pulling each other's hair out.

However, she still went on to appear in many more films, including the 1924 film The Last Man on Earth. She later played Mrs. Newlywed in the Newlyweds film series of short comedies 1928 and 1929. Soon enough, though, Perdue's career was beginning to fall apart. Her boss, future presidential father Joseph P. Kennedy, insisted that she change her name to Ann Perdue, a more sensible name compared to Derelys. She sued him, but lost, and her film career ended in 1929. The suit was brought against Film Booking Inc. Distributing Agency for Robertson-Cole Photoplays in April 1923. Movie distibutors had conducted a contest in a picture magazine asking fans to suggest a name for Miss Perdue.

Her last film was The Smiling Terror (1929), a low-budget serial.

Throughout her career, she was especially noted for her great talent for dancing in her films. She even organized dancing episodes in several films. She also performed solo or in group at a variety of locations in Los Angeles.

Miss Perdue's romances earned her much publicity in newspapers. She was divorced from Louis M. Feldman in Los Angeles, California in November 1926. In 1923 she was linked romantically with both Craig Biddle Jr. (son of the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania millionaire) and golfer Gene Sarazen. She made an appearance at the greater movie ball in the Ambassador Hotel, Los Angeles, in 1924 with journalist Swing Ricker. She wore a white velvet dress, beaded in a Persian design.

Derelys Perdue died in 1989 in Los Angeles, California.

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