Marvel Marilyn Maxwell she appeared in several films and radio programs, and entertained the troops during World War II and the Korean War on USO tours with Bob Hope. During the 1930s, she worked as an usher in Fort Wayne, Indiana, at the Rialto Theater, located at 2616 South Calhoun Street.
In Fort Wayne, she attended Central High School. She dropped out of school in her sophomore year to join an Indianapolis band as a singer.
Career
right|thumb|upright|From the trailer for [[Stand by for Action (1942)]]
She started her professional entertaining career as a radio singer and a singer on stage with Ted Weems' big band while still a teenager.
She moved to Hollywood after being with the Pasadena Playhouse and signed with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1942 as a contract player.
Among the radio programs in which she appeared were Beat the Band, Kraft Music Hall and The Abbott and Costello Show.
She appeared in several Dr. Kildare films with Van Johnson – Dr. Gillespie's Criminal Case (1943); Three Men in White (1944); and Between Two Women (1945).
Maxwell appeared twice as a singer in the second season (1955–1956) of The Jimmy Durante Show. She sang at the Latin Quarter nightclub in New York City and other top nightclubs of the time. until March 23, 1951. Maxwell's six-year marriage to writer and producer Jerry Davis ended in 1960. Her only child, Matthew, was born to Maxwell and Davis in 1956.
Maxwell met and became friends with actor and singer Frank Sinatra when they crossed paths, both of them in separate nationally renowned big bands in the late 1930s. Their friendship continued after Maxwell gave up singing for acting and moved to Hollywood and Sinatra had moved from New Jersey to Beverly Hills in the early 1940s. By 1945, the friendship had progressed into an extra-marital affair. Sinatra's wife, Nancy, saw Maxwell wearing a diamond bracelet she had earlier seen in Sinatra's car which she assumed was for her. Taking this as evidence of Sinatra's infidelity, Nancy ordered Maxwell and her husband Conte to immediately leave the Sinatra family Christmas gala of 1945. Confronted after the party, Sinatra admitted the affair to his wife, but claimed it was only casual. Soon after, Maxwell and Sinatra ended their sexual liaison.
thumb|left|125px|Trailer for [[High Barbaree (film)|High Barbaree (1947)]]
From 1950 to 1954, Maxwell had an affair with actor and comedian Bob Hope who was married to singer Dolores (Reade) Hope. Hope and Maxwell's relationship was so open that many in Hollywood referred to her as Mrs. Bob Hope.
During the 1950s, Maxwell became good friends with actor Rock Hudson. After her marriage to Davis ended in 1960, Hudson's agent Henry Willson arranged for Maxwell to become one of several women Hudson publicly "dated" to counter rumors of the actor's homosexuality.
Death
On March 20, 1972, at age fifty, Maxwell was found dead in her home by her fifteen-year-old son, who had arrived home from school. The cause was an apparent heart attack; she had been treated for hypertension and pulmonary disease.
Radio appearances
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Year !! Program !! Episode/source
|-
| 1944|| Kraft Music Hall ||Resident singer
|-
| 1946|| Stars over Hollywood || A Woman's Touch
|-
| 1947||The Abbott and Costello Show|| Who's On 1st, 17 April 1947
|-
| 1948||The Jack Benny Show|| From Cleveland, 20 June 1948
|-
| 1949||The Martin and Lewis Show|| episode 10
|}
Filmography
Features
- Stand by for Action (1942) – Audrey Carr
- Dr. Gillespie's Criminal Case (1943) – Ruth Edly
- Salute to the Marines (1943) – Helen Bailey
- Thousands Cheer (1943) – Drug Store Clerk in Red Skelton Skit
- Swing Fever (1943) – Ginger Gray
- Three Men in White (1944) – Ruth Edley
- Lost in a Harem (1944) – Hazel Moon
- Between Two Women (1945) – Ruth Edley
- The Show-Off (1946) – Amy Fisher Piper
- High Barbaree (1947) – Diana Case
- Summer Holiday (1948) – Belle
- Race Street (1948) – Robbie Lawrence
- Champion (1949) – Grace
- Key to the City (1950) – Sheila
- Outside the Wall (1950) – Charlotte Maynard
- The Lemon Drop Kid (1951) – 'Brainey' Baxter
- New Mexico (1951) – Cherry
- Off Limits (1952) – Connie Curtis
- East of Sumatra (1953) – Lory Hale
- Paris Model (1953) – Marion Parmalee
- New York Confidential (1955) – Iris Palmer
- Rock-A-Bye Baby (1958) – Carla Naples
- Critic's Choice (1963) – Ivy London
- Stage to Thunder Rock (1964) – Leah Parker
- The Lively Set (1964) – Marge Owens
- Arizona Bushwhackers (1968) – Molly
- From Nashville with Music (1969) – Mabel
- The Phynx (1970) – Herself
Short subjects
- Screen Snapshots: Hollywood Goes to Bat (1950) – Herself
- Brooklyn Goes to Las Vegas (1956) – Herself
References
Further reading
External links
- Marilyn Maxwell at the British Film Institute
- Audio of Beat the Band April 7, 1940 episode Maxwell appears as Marvel Maxwell.
