Virginia Weidler

Virginia Weidler

actress, soundtrack

Virginia Weidler was born on Mar 21, 1927 in USA. Virginia Weidler's big-screen debut came with Surrender directed by William K. Howard in 1931. Virginia Weidler is known for That's Entertainment! directed by Jack Haley Jr., Fred Astaire stars as Self - Co-Host and Bing Crosby as Self - Co-Host. The upcoming new movie Virginia Weidler plays is That's Entertainment! which will be released on Jun 21, 1974.

Delightful child/juvenile actress Virginia Anna Adelaide Weidler (her friends called her "Ginny") had that knowing gleam in her eye that usually spelled trouble in one form or another for anyone nearby. She was born in Eagle Rock, California, in 1927, one of six children. Her mother was former Wagnerian opera singer Margarete Radon (born Margarete Therese Louisa Meyer), and her father was architect Alfred Weidler.Virginia nearly made her acting debut at age 3 in John Barrymore's Moby Dick (1930) but was summarily replaced. A year later, she scored her first small movie bit in Warner Baxter's Surrender (1931) and was on her way. One of her brothers, child actor and musician George Weidler, was Doris Day's first husband (from 1946 to 1949).RKO picked up young Virginia after learning that she could speak a bit of French. The average-looking youngster was ably cast as rural tomboy types in Laddie (1935) and Freckles (1935), the latter film allowing her to do a dead-on parody of Shirley Temple. She earned her first lead in Girl of the Ozarks (1936) and showed she could easily hold her own. After an unimpressive stint with Paramount, who tried to groom her as a rival to Fox's bratty Jane Withers, she was finally picked up by MGM and her film career blossomed. Co-starring with Mickey Rooney in Love Is a Headache (1938), she proved a natural young comedienne and precocious scene-stealer in such films as André Hardy Cow-Boy (1938) (again with Rooney) and Un envoyé très spécial... (1938).Little Virginia could also shine in dramatic outings, as she did with L'empreinte du loup solitaire (1939) and Bad Little Angel (1939), but she was never a good choice for sappy roles, as demonstrated when she played Norma Shearer's whiny imp of a daughter in Femmes (1939). Virginia's forte was providing comedy relief, and she reached her young peak with two classic MGM films: La jeunesse d'Edison (1940), as Rooney's creative sister, and Indiscrétions (1940), as Katharine Hepburn's smart-alecky younger sister. Her tongue-in-cheek rendition of "Lydia the Tattooed Lady" at the piano was just one of many memorable highlights from this vintage classic.The young actress's career started to slip away from her when the teenage Shirley Temple signed with MGM, abruptly bumping "Plain-Jane" Virginia back to secondary status. After rather disappointing receptions to Born to Sing (1942), The Youngest Profession (1943), and Best Foot Forward (1943), the awkward teen left films and turned to vaudeville as a song-and-dance comedy performer, utilizing her full-scale talents as a mimic. She made her legitimate stage debut in "The Rich Full Life" at the John Golden Theatre in 1945, but the show closed within a month.Soon after, Virginia retired from show business, married, and had two children. She passed away from a heart ailment at 41. After her death it was learned that she had suffered from rheumatic fever as a child.

  • Birthday

    Mar 21, 1927
  • Place of Birth

    Eagle Rock, Los Angeles, California, USA

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