On September 8, 1965, Dandridge Was Found Dead In Her Hollywood Home -- An Apparent Suicide Via A Drug Overdose.
Born On November 9, 1922, In Cleveland, Ohio, Dandridge Entered Show Business During The 1930's With Her Sister, As Part Of A Song-And Dance Team Billed As "The Wonder Children."
After Leaving High School, Dandridge, Her Sister, Vivian And Etta Jones Formed A Trio And Called The Dandridge Sisters. They Performed At Venues Such The Apollo Theater And The Cotton ClubIn Harlem.
As A Teenager She Made Her On-Screen Debut In A 1935 Our Gang Short. In 1937 She Appeared In The Marx Brothers Feature, A Day At The Races.
Throughout The 1940's Dandridge Continued To Play Bit Parts On Screen And Sing In Night Clubs, To Support Herself.
In 1954, She Got What Would Become Her Signature Role, In Carmen Jones, An All-Black Version Of The Opera, Carmen. The Film Costarred Harry Belafonte And Pearl Bailey.
Dandridge Became The First African American To Earn An Oscar Nomination As Best Actress For Carmen. She Was The Third African American To Earn An Academy Award Nomination In Any Category, Overall (Hattie McDaniel And Ethel Waters Received Nominations Previously).
Among Her Other Accomplishments: Dandridge Was The First Black Woman To Appear At The Las Vegas Frontier And Waldolf-Astoria And The First Black Woman To Appear On The Cover Of Life Magazine.
Dorothy Dandridge's Next Great Movie Role After Carmen Jones, Was Playing Opposite Sidney Poitier, In Porgy And Bess (1959). She Spent The Next Several Years Acting In Poorly Directed Films, While Fighting Against Hollywood's Racial Stereotyping.
Academy Award-Winning Actress, Halle Berry Paid Tribute To Dandridge In The HBO Film, Introducing Dorothy Dandridge.
Dorothy Dandridge In Tamango
"In Order For Black History To Live, We Must Continue To Breathe Life Into It." -- Hubert Gaddy, Jr.
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That was not nice what that man did to her in that scene. She's not the White man's trash~~ all she was doing was trying to help him adjust. What a beautiful soul trying to care for the Black man and all her repayment was a bunch of "spittle in the face".
Wednesday, September 8th 2010 at 1:51PM
Jen Fad
SUCH A BRAVE WOMAN. SHE WILL ALWAYS BE A CLASSIC AS WELL AS A FIRST CLASS LADY.(SMILE)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA