Jane Isbell

Jane Isbell
Born Clarita Jane Isbell
May 1, 1927(1927-05-01)
Meridian, Mississippi, USA
Died October 19, 1981
Los Angeles, California, USA
Occupation Actress
Spouse Jack M. Althouse (1919 - 2000)

Jane Isbell (May 1, 1927 - October 19, 1981)[1] was a minor actress, a bit player and extra who appeared in some major films produced during Hollywood's Golden Era in the 1930s-40s.

She was born Clarita Jane Isbell in Meridian, Mississippi,[2] the daughter of Theodore Clark Isbell and Elizabeth (Gully) Isbell.[3] Her father was a Vaudeville performer and her mother a granddaughter of Chief Justice George Washington Stone (1811–1894) of the Alabama Supreme Court.[4] Clark Isbell's great-great-grandfather was a colorful Revolutionary War soldier who once saved the life of Andrew Jackson when Jackson was a boy.[5]

The Isbells moved to Los Angeles when Jane was an infant. The elder of two sisters, Jane began modeling and appearing as an extra in films when only four years old. In 1932, she made her first Mickey McGuire comedy starring Mickey Rooney and would eventually make five films in the Mickey McGuire series, similar to the Our Gang films.[6] She grew up with child stars for playmates and was among those tested for the role of Bonnie Butler in Gone With the Wind. She and Ann Gillis were best friends, working in several films together, usually with Gillis a featured player and Isbell an extra and stand-in. She was Gillis' understudy and stand-in for long shots on both Little Orphan Annie and Adventures of Tom Sawyer, appearing as an extra in some scenes.[7] She wrote her first article at age twelve, a piece published in Screen Book magazine, April 1939, about Mickey Rooney.[8] She worked with him again in 1944 in National Velvet.

She graduated in 1944 from Franklin High School in Highland Park, Los Angeles, with special dramatic coaching, and studied art and journalism under John Morley. She appeared on several magazine covers, more often from her modeling work than acting, such as the cover of the Farm Journal and Farmer’s Wife magazine in 1944. She also appeared in The Robert King Hollywood Hair Design Book (1948).[9]

She married 11-29-1947 (Las Vegas, Nev.) Lt. Jack Marvin Althouse, an investment banker and former Navy lieutenant.[10] (12 Apr 1919 – 12 Sept 2000).[11] As her parents had kept her true age a secret, newspaper articles claimed she was only seventeen years old at the time of her marriage, although she was almost twenty. These press statements ignored a columnist who had previously reported in the Los Angeles Evening Herald-Express, Apr. 30, 1945, that she would turn 18 on Apr. 31, 1945.[12] Various newspaper articles mentioned that she was a cousin of ballplayers Frank Isbell of the Chicago White Sox [13] and Cecil Isbell.[14]

Several internet databases, including the IMDB and Flixster, have confused her with Frank Isbell's niece Jane who was born 12 September 1927 in Sedgwick, Kansas, and also died in Los Angeles.[15]

Jane Isbell's biggest roles were in forgettable B-movies, but as an extra she appeared in some of Hollywood's biggest successes, screen triumphs such as National Velvet, Sergeant York, The Women, Broadway Rhythm, The Thin Man Goes Home, Little Orphan Annie, and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Frequently seen in the same frame with Hollywood's biggest stars, her face is often found in screen stills from a number of famous movies. In Billy Wilder's The Major and the Minor, she was one of the wallflower girls doing Veronica Lake imitations, often called the funniest scene in this classic comedy.

Films include:

Luxury Liner (1948)

Betty Co-Ed (1946) as Mrs. Leeds

The Thin Man Goes Home (1945)

Thrill of a Romance (1945) as Giggling Girl

Mom and Dad (1945) as Mary Lou Gardner

National Velvet (1944) as Schoolgirl Jane

Broadway Rhythm (1944) as Co-ed in Drugstore

Bathing Beauty (1944) as Western Union Girl

Junior Jive Bombers (1944)

The Youngest Profession (1943) as Jane

Nobody's Darling (1943)

The Major and the Minor (1942)

Sergeant York (1941) as Gracie's sister

Reaching for the Sun (1941) as Amos' Child

I'm Still Alive (1940) as Mrs. Cady's Daughter

The Women (1939) as Edith Potter's daughter

Woman Doctor (1939)

Little Orphan Annie (1938) as Annie (stand-in)

Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1938) as Becky Thatcher (stand-in)

References

  1. ^ California Death Index; Social Security Death Index.
  2. ^ California Death Index; Isbell Family Forum, Genforum.com.
  3. ^ Hollywood Citizen News, Aug. 11, 1939.
  4. ^ (Los Angeles) Highland Park News Herald, Oct. 18, 1947, p. 3.
  5. ^ THE LIFE OF ANDREW JACKSON (1938) by Marquis James, p.25; Young Hickory: The Making of Andrew Jackson (2001) by Hendrik Booraem, pp. 87-89, 247; additional refences to Littleton Isbell in Emerson's Magazine and Putnam's Monthly (1855), Vol. 2, p.183; The Women of the American Revolution (1856) by Elizabeth Fries Ellet, page 137; "Littleton Esbel's (sic) Race," Illustrated American Advertiser: The Historical Picture Gallery (1856), by John Reuben Chapin, vol. V, p. 371; Appletons' Journal (1876), p. 420; Daughters of the American Revolution Magazine, Volume 103 (1969), p. 132; "Capt. Littleton Randolph Isbell," Isbell Forum, Genforum.com; The Duffies and Related Families," by Elizabeth Lindsay and Sue D. McLeod (Isbell chapter, pp.49-54). Margaret Mitchell, author of Gone With the Wind, was a relative according to History of Clayton County, Georgia, p. 244 and Family Puzzlers Magazine #1047 (November 12, 1988); Isbell Family Genealogy Forum, Genforum.com.
  6. ^ SCREEN BOOK magazine, April 1939.
  7. ^ Toronto STAR WEEKLY, Nov. 19, 1938, p. 11.
  8. ^ SCREEN BOOK magazine, April 1939.
  9. ^ The Robert King Hollywood Hair Design Book (1948), modeling Hollywood Hair Style number 5.
  10. ^ Los Angeles Times, Dec. 10, 1947; Los Angeles Herald Express, Dec. 3, 1947, p. B-4 col. 2; "Jack Althouse Takes Movie Star Bride," Waterloo, Iowa, Daily Courier, Nov. 30, 1947, p.22, column 8; "Young Actress is Bride of Navy Man On November 29," (Los Angeles) Eagle Rock News-Herald, Dec. 26, 1947, p.6; some references incorrectly cite place of marriage as Las Vegas, N.M.
  11. ^ California Death Index.
  12. ^ Los Angeles Evening Herald-Express, Apr. 30, 1945, p.A8. The Hollywood Citizen News, Aug. 11, 1939, states she was 12 years old; "Movie Starlet Visits Here," Waterloo, Iowa Daily Courier, March 30, 1948, p. 6, states she was 20 years old.
  13. ^ "ON THE SIDE” by E.V. Durling, King Feature Syndicate writer, Los Angeles TIMES.
  14. ^ (Los Angeles) Highland Park News Herald, Oct. 18, 1947, p. 3.
  15. ^ The Internet Movie Database; Flixster.com.; http://www.torrentreactor.net; http://moviekids.info/mk/talent/display.php?id=13929&fd=A

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