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- For the 2006 'T' for Tushy, Dorothy Lamour's character is Christina Hill.
- For the 2001 video 18 and Nasty 23, Tama.
- She plays Herself in the 2002 release 18 and Nasty 27.
- Dorothy Lamour plays Herself, Sweater, Sarong & Peekaboo Bang Number in the 2003 video 18 and Nasty Interracial 9.
- In 1992, she takes the role of Herself (Memorial Tribute) in the release Afternoon Delight.
- For the 2001 American Holidays, Dorothy Lamour plays Phyllis.
- In 1988, Dorothy Lamour plays the part of Audrey, Hilton in the tv series Arletty raconte Arletty.
- For the 1915 show 1915 World's Championship Series, she plays the part of Donna Latour.
- In 2001, she plays the part of Nancy Angel in the release of 3 Ceilings.
- She is cast in the role of Mabel 'Lucky' DuBarry in the 2005 movie 40, La.
- She takes the role of Visiting film star in the 1976 feature 68 Albany Street.
- For the 2008 feature 86, Dorothy Lamour plays Ulah.
- She plays the part of Head Saleslady in the 1993 feature Aadmi Khilona Hai.
- In 1986, Dorothy Lamour's character is Arla Dean in the production of Adelgace.
- She plays the part of Merl Kramer in the 1925 release of After a Reputation.
- Lolita Sierra in the 2003 movie Ain't Got No Jazz.
- In 1977, Dorothy Lamour is cast in the role of Mary O'Leary in the release of Al-Kautsar.
- For the 1971 production of Albatros, L', she plays the part of Anna Marie St Claire.
- In 1997, she stars as Herself in the show Alliance for Better Campaigns.
- For the 1980 movie Alludu Pattina Bharatham, she is cast in the role of Dea.
- She plays The Countess in the 1991 show Amjad's Village.
- Dorothy Lamour's character is Molly Fuller in the 1939 show Amma.
- She takes the role of Lucia Maria de Andrade in the 1979 movie Ammazzare il tempo.
- She is cast in the role of Nicky Duval in the 1901 feature Ammunition Wagons Arriving on the Battlefield.
- For the 1995 show Andere Seite, Die, she plays the part of Herself.
- In 1930, Dorothy Lamour's character is Princess Lala in the show Andere, Der.
- Dorothy Lamour plays the part of Diana Wilson in the 1962 movie Ashajeevalu.
- Carlotta Montay in the 1932 release of Aspectos do Convento de Cristo.
- Dorothy Lamour is cast in the role of Anita Alvarez in the 2008 show Aspettando il sole.
- For the 1966 show Avare, L', she plays the part of Albany Yates/Lady Lillian.
- Dorothy Lamour stars as Herself in the 2004 release Back Seat Bangers Vol. 1.
- In 2003, Dorothy Lamour plays Carmelita Castillo in the show Be'Kol Mechir: Sipura Shel Etti Alon.
- For the 1990 video The Big Tease 2, Dorothy Lamour is cast in the role of Herself.
- For the 1999 tv series Black, Bold and Beautiful, Dorothy Lamour plays Antoinette 'Tony' Fairbanks.
- Dorothy Lamour plays the part of Ann Castle in the 2002 release The Blair Thumb.
- In 2000, she plays the part of Manuela in the video Blatino Gang Bang.
- For the 1981 tv series The Body Human: The Loving Process - Women, she plays Aloma.
- For the 1932 movie Baleydier, she stars as Fay Rankin.
- For the 2003 movie Banana Boy, Dorothy Lamour plays 'Skagway' Sal Van Hoyden.
- In 1993, she stars as Martha Spruce (segment "Old Chief Wood'nhead") in the production of Beyond Fear.
- Dorothy Lamour's character is Herself in the 1969 movie Bir sevgili ugruna.
- In 1990, Dorothy Lamour plays the part of Coed in the show Black on White, White and Black.
- In 1989, she takes the role of Marama in the movie Bloody psycho - Lo specchio.
- For the 1899 show Board of Trade, she plays Denise Christian.
- In 1996, she plays the part of Norma Malone in the show Box of Moon Light.
- In 1998, Dorothy Lamour's character is Dorothy Wyndham in the show By Design: The Dramatic Rise of Marc Newson.
- She is cast in the role of Specialty in the 1985 tv series By Reason of Insanity.
- In 2007, Dorothy Lamour plays Millie Cook in the video Champions of Faith: Baseball Edition.
- Dorothy Lamour plays Lona in the 1985 production Covenant.
- For the 2009 show The Caliph's House, Herself.
- Gloria Manners in the 1965 production of Campanadas a medianoche.
- In 1930, Dorothy Lamour stars as Miss Lafleur in the production of Caramellas.
- For the 1921 release of The Cat and the Monkey, Dorothy Lamour is cast in the role of Herself.
- She plays Carol Maynard in the 1947 release of The Circus Comes to Clown.
- In 2000, Dorothy Lamour plays the part of Tura in the production of The Contract.
- For the 2000 release Crime Prevention Scare Films Vol. 1, Dorothy Lamour plays Mima.
- In 1996, Dorothy Lamour plays Lulu Belle in the show Deadly Voyage.
- She plays the part of Princess Shalmar in the 2005 release Dodger Blue: The Championship Years.
- She plays Angel O'Reilly in the 2007 show Crashing.
- Dorothy Lamour is cast in the role of Herself in the 1989 movie Curse of the Zombi.
- The erstwhile "sarong girl" of 1930s-vintage Hollywood exotica such as The Jungle Princess (1936), The Hurricane (1937), Her Jungle Love (1938), and others, Lamour enjoyed a lengthy screen career, during which time she was one of the movie industry's most popular stars, both on- and offscreen. While she always seemed most at home in lighthearted musicals and comedies (such as the "Road" pictures in which she costarred with Bing Crosby and Bob Hope), Lamour occasionally delivered skillful, heartfelt performances in dramatic pictures as well.
Named "Miss New Orleans" in 1931, Lamour entered show business as a bigband vocalist. She made her screen debut, in fact, in a Vitaphone big-band short subject. Signed by Paramount in 1936, she made her feature debut in College Holiday that year, playing a bit part, but it was her chance casting in the title role of Jungle Princess (also 1936) that changed the course of her career and made her a star. When director John Ford cast her and Jon Hall as the juvenile lovers in his South Seas spectacular The Hurricane (1937) her future was assured-and her screen image, with long dark tresses and a sarong, was cemented forever. Paramount kept her busy throughout the rest of the decade in Swing High, Swing Low, Last Train From Madrid, Thrill of a Lifetime (all 1937), The Big Broadcast of 1938, Her Jungle Love, Spawn of the North, Tropic Holiday (all 1938), St. Louis Blues, Man About Town and Disputed Passage (all 1939).
Oddly enough, Lamour got her best dramatic opportunities on loan to 20th Century-Fox for a brace of big-budget 1940 productions: the crime drama Johnny Apollo which costarred her with Tyrone Power, and the circus story Chad Hanna pairing her with Henry Fonda. Later that year, back at Paramount, she was cast in another South Seas role, this time opposite Crosby and Hope, in a modest programmer titled Road to Singapore The surprise success of that buoyant comedy launched one of moviedom's most popular (and profitable) series, which reunited the starring triumverate on the Road to Zanzibar (1941), Road to Morocco (1942), Road to Utopia (1945), Road to Rio (1947), Road to Bali (1952), and, much later, The Road to Hong Kong (1962). Lamour made an engaging straight woman for the duo, and got to introduce some popular songs along the way (including "Personality," in Road to Utopia). Lamour and Hope also worked together in Caught in the Draft (1941), They Got Me Covered (1943), and My Favorite Brunette (1947), and she became a mainstay of his later TV specials, W_henever he'd gather former leading ladies around him.
When movie work dwindled in the 1950s, Lamour turned to nightclubs and the stage, and toured successfully in "Hello, Dolly!" Her autobiography, "My Side of the Road," was published in 1980.
OTHER FILMS INCLUDE: 1941: Aloma of the South Seas 1942: The Fleet's In, Beyond the Blue Horizon 1943: Dixie, Riding High 1944: And the Angels Sing, Rainbow Island 1945: A Medal for Benny, Duffy's Tavern, Masquerade in Mexico 1947: Wild Harvest, Variety Girl 1948: On Our Merry Way, Lulu Belle, The Girl From Manhattan 1949: The Lucky Stiff 1951: Here Comes the Groom (making an unbilled cameo appearance in this Bing Crosby vehicle); 1952: The Greatest Show on Earth (playing a supporting role in this Cecil B. DeMille circus spectacular); 1963: Donovan's Reef 1964: Pajama Party 1976: Won Ton Ton, the Dog Who Saved Hollywood 1987: Creepshow 2
- "I was the happiest and highest-paid straight woman in the business."
- About working with Hope & Crosby: "I felt like a wonderful sandwich, a slice of white bread between two slices of ham."
- "I made 60 motion pictures and only wore the sarong in about six pictures, but it did become a kind of trademark."
- Went to secretarial school where she became an excellent typist and even as a wealthy star, she typed her own letters.
- In 1946 (with the full assistance of Paramount's publicity department) she staged a memorable stunt by publicly burning a sarong, the garment with which she had been associated since her first starring role.
- During World War II, she toured the country selling $300 million in United States War Bonds.
- "The Moon of Manakoora" from 1937's Hurricane, The (1937), was her signature song.
- Host of NBC Radio's "Sealtest Variety Theater" (aka The Dorothy Lamour Show) (1948-1949).
- Derived her acting name name "Dorothy Lamour" from her step-father, who was surnamed "Lambour".
- Interred at Forest Lawn (Hollywood Hills), Los Angeles, California, USA, in the Enduring Faith section, lot 387, space 2.
- Miss New Orleans 1931.
- Femme fatale in the Bing Crosby - Bob Hope "Road" series of Paramount Pictures offerings from 1941 to 1953. In the final, 1962 entry, 'Road to Hong Kong', Lamour appeared, yes, with Crosby and Hope but the f.f. this time was Joan Collins.
- Wearing a floral print wrap-around sarong.
- Dorothy Lamour was born with the birth name of Mary Leta Dorothy Slaton on December 10, 1914, in New Orleans, Louisiana. She was a beautiful child who turned heads as a teenager with her long dark hair. However, her dreams were to become a professional singer not acting. After she won a beauty contest as Miss New Orleans in 1931, she headed to Chicago to find her work as a singer. For a while Dorothy worked as an elevator operator in a department store before going on to become a vocalist in the Herbie Kay band. Kay would become her first husband in 1935, but the marriage would only last four years. In addition to the band, Dorothy also performed on a Chicago radio program as a singer. She not only performed with Kay but also Rudy Vallee and Eddie Duchin. 1933 found Dorothy in Hollywood where she landed a bit part in a musical as a chorus girl entitled FOOTLIGHT PARADE. Her role went uncredited. She didn't appear in films again until 1936 W_hen she landed a part as a coed in COLLEGE HOLIDAY. Fame would not be elusive for long because she was about to land the role that would define her career. Later in 1936, Dorothy got the part of Ulah in THE JUNGLE PRINCESS produced by Lloyd Shelton and filmed with Paramount. It was a sort of female Tarzan role. This film was a tremendous money maker as Dorothy stole the show in her wrap-around sarong. Dorothy became an instant star as the child of nature, raised with a pet tiger among the tropical natives. Ray Milland starred opposite her as the man from civilization who woos and wins her. The scene where Milland is trying to teach her the word kiss is touching yet humorous. When he kisses her and tells her that is a kiss she runs away. She went on to play similar parts in the sarong in productions such as THE HURRICANE (1937), TYPHOON (1940), and BEYOND THE BLUE HORIZON (1942). The sarong would stay with her in the Bob Hope and Bing Crosby ROAD series. The trio would star in THE ROAD TO SINGAPORE, THE ROAD TO TO UTOPIA and THE ROAD TO ZANZIBAR. The road series stated in 1940 and lasted until 1962. Hope and Crosby had the leads but Dorothy but not in her usual role. Joan Collins had that one. She actually only wore the sarong in six of her 59 pictures but it was to define her career. Dorothy was a tremendously great actress with roles in DISPUTED PASSAGE (1939), DIXIE (1943), and ON OUR MERRY WAY (1948). She could show great range in comic or dramatic roles. After making three films in 1949, her career began to trail off as she would only make ten films between 1951 and 1987. That last one was CREEPSHOW 2 where she played a housewife who gets murdered, a long way from the sarong and movies such as JOHNNY APOLLO and A MEDAL FOR BENNYDorothy was 81 when she died of an undisclosed ailment on September 22, 1996 in Los Angeles, California.
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