Dorothy Arnold (Olson)

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Dorothy Arnold (November 21, 1917November 13, 1984) was an American film actress and the first wife of baseball star Joe DiMaggio. Her 20-year movie career began with 1937’s Freshies and ended with 1957’s Lizzie.

She was born Dorothy Arnoldine Olson in Duluth, Minnesota, and by the age of 12 was performing on amateur nights at Duluth’s Lyric Theater and with the local Salvation Army Band. She graduated from Denfeld High School in 1935.

Her first theatrical job was with the Band Box Revue, traveling out of Chicago. She studied at Paramount School in New York and played bits in pictures as a dancer.

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[edit] Career

Arnold tested twice with Paramount Pictures, but it was Universal Studios that offered her a stock contract. She appeared in 15 films between 1937 and 1939. Her most memorable roles were as the imperiled heroine Jean Drew in The Phantom Creeps (with Bela Lugosi and Robert Kent) and the undercover chorus girl Gloria DeVere in The House of Fear (with Irene Hervey and William Gargan).

Following her marriage to DiMaggio, she quit acting. A brief comeback in 1957 included her last film, MGM’s Lizzie (with Eleanor Parker and Joan Blondell) and appearances on TV’s The Adventures of Jim Bowie and Dragnet.

[edit] Marriages

She met DiMaggio in 1937 — she was 19, he was 23 — on the set of Manhattan Merry-Go-Round. DiMaggio had a minor speaking role in the film; Arnold had no lines.

When Arnold visited her home town of Duluth on July 13, 1939, she was showing off her engagement ring. She married DiMaggio on Nov. 18, 1939 at SS Peter and Paul Cathedral in San Francisco. A UP report about the wedding noted that “San Francisco’s North Beach Italian population turned out in a carnival spirit that jammed streets and broke police lines.” Thousands of people (estimates vary from 10,000 to 20,000) gathered outside the cathedral and overflowed into Washington Square. The wedding party had to battle the crowd for 15 minutes to get inside the church. The bride and her father, Victor Arnold Olson, needed a police escort to fight the crowd.

The couple honeymooned in Honolulu, and lived in an apartment in the Upper West Side of Manhattan. On Oct. 23, 1941, the year of DiMaggio’s famous 56-game hitting streak, Dorothy gave birth to their first child, Joseph DiMaggio III.

The couple split up in 1942, but later reconciled in front of the press. They separated again on Oct. 6, 1943. DiMaggio enlisted in the U.S. Army and was sent to Hawaii. Arnold filed for divorce, which was granted on May 12, 1944. She received $500 a month in alimony, custody of Joe Jr. and $150 in child support. Despite the divorce, they spent Christmas together in 1945.

She married stockbroker George Schuster in 1946. The two were divorced within five years.

In 1951, she told Hollywood gossip columnist Hedda Hopper she was thinking of “getting back with Joe,” but in early 1952 DiMaggio met Marilyn Monroe, whom he would marry on Jan. 14, 1954. They divorced after nine months.

In 1991, a piece of fruitcake from the DiMaggio/Arnold wedding was auctioned off for $1,100. It was incorrectly reported to be from DiMaggio’s marriage to Monroe.

Arnold married Ralph Peck (Peckovich from Globe, Arizona) in the late 1960s. Together they owned a supper club in Palm Springs/Cathedral City, California, called Charcoal Charley's, where she performed. She died in Palm Desert, California, from pancreatic cancer in 1984 at the age of 66.

[edit] References

  • "DiMaggio's first wife was starlet from Duluth," by Paul Walsh. Dec. 22, 1998 Minneapolis Star Tribune.

[edit] External links