Betty Blythe

Betty Blythe

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Birthday: 
September 1, 1893 in Los Angeles, California, USA
Birth Name: 
Elizabeth Blythe Slaughter
Height: 
171 cm
Brunette, buxom matinee idol Betty Blythe capitalised on the 'roaring 20's' infatuation with exotic screen sirens to achieve a brief period of stardom. She was notoriously one of the first actresses to ever appear nude (or in various stages of undress) on screen. It wasn't that Betty couldn't act, as well - in fact, she had... Show more »
Brunette, buxom matinee idol Betty Blythe capitalised on the 'roaring 20's' infatuation with exotic screen sirens to achieve a brief period of stardom. She was notoriously one of the first actresses to ever appear nude (or in various stages of undress) on screen. It wasn't that Betty couldn't act, as well - in fact, she had studied art in Paris and at USC and had appeared on stage in a number of traditional plays like "So Long Letty" in both London and New York. In 1918, she joined a roommate on a visit to the Vitagraph Studio in Brooklyn and found immediate employment when one of the directors needed a leading lady. Two years later, she wound up in Hollywood, was signed by Fox Studios as a replacement for Theda Bara and became the protégé of J. Gordon Edwards (grandfather of Blake Edwards of 'Pink Panther' fame. She was eventually cast as the star of one of the most lavishly produced films of the decade, La glorieuse Reine de Saba (1921), directed, of course, by Edwards. Betty later recalled that she was given 28 costumes to wear, all of which would have fitted comfortably into a shoe box. Alas, only a few stills of the movie survive, a fate shared by most of her other silent films.Betty's career was put on hold when Edwards quarrelled with Fox and left the studio. For a while, she freelanced, playing leads in films for lesser studios. She did have a couple of hits in England with Chu-Chin-Chow (1923) and She (1925), in addition to doing theatrical work, which helped her to smoothly make the transition from silent to talking pictures. By that time, however, public tastes had changed and Betty had aged sufficiently to be classified as a character actress. To her credit, she persisted and appeared in support in many an A-grade production, her swan song being a small role in the ballroom scene of My Fair Lady (1964). Show less «

Betty Blythe's FILMOGRAPHY

My Fair Lady

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Lust for Life

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The Barkleys of Broadway

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Letter from an Unknown Woman

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The Secret Life of Walter Mitty

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The Postman Always Rings Twice

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Undercurrent

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The Hoodlum Saint

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Adventure

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They Were Expendable

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Her Highness and the Bellboy

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Bud Abbott and Lou Costello in Hollywood

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Charlie Chan in The Chinese Cat

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The Women

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Topper

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Anna Karenina

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