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Betty Hutton

 
Betty Hutton

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Betty Hutton



 
 
Betty Hutton (born Elizabeth June Thornburg, February 26, 1921 – March 11, 2007) was an American
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 film
Cinema of the United States

United States cinema has had a profound effect on cinema across the world since the early 20th century. Its history is sometimes separated into four main periods: the silent film era, Classical Hollywood cinema, New Hollywood, and the contemporary period ....
 actress
Actor

An actor or actress is a person who acting in a dramatic production and who works in film, television, theatre, or radio programming in that capacity....
 and singer.

on began life as Elizabeth June Thornburg, a daughter of railroad foreman Percy E. Thornburg (1896-1939) and his wife, the former Mabel Lum (1901-1967). Her father abandoned the family for another woman and they did not hear from or see him again until they received a telegram, in 1939, informing them of his death from suicide.






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Betty Hutton (born Elizabeth June Thornburg, February 26, 1921 – March 11, 2007) was an American
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
 film
Cinema of the United States

United States cinema has had a profound effect on cinema across the world since the early 20th century. Its history is sometimes separated into four main periods: the silent film era, Classical Hollywood cinema, New Hollywood, and the contemporary period ....
 actress
Actor

An actor or actress is a person who acting in a dramatic production and who works in film, television, theatre, or radio programming in that capacity....
 and singer.

Biography


Early life

Hutton began life as Elizabeth June Thornburg, a daughter of railroad foreman Percy E. Thornburg (1896-1939) and his wife, the former Mabel Lum (1901-1967). Her father abandoned the family for another woman and they did not hear from or see him again until they received a telegram, in 1939, informing them of his death from suicide. Along with her older sister Marion
Marion Hutton

Marion Thornburg, better known as Marion Hutton was a United States singer and actor.She was the elder sister of actress Betty Hutton. Their father abandoned their family when they were both young, he later committed suicide....
, Betty was raised by her mother, who took the surname Hutton and was later billed as the actress Sissy Jones. The three started singing in the family's speakeasy
Speakeasy

A speakeasy was an establishment which illegally sold alcoholic beverages during the period of History of the United States known as Prohibition in the United States ....
 when Betty was 3 years old. Related troubles with the police kept the family on the move, and eventually they moved to Detroit
Detroit, Michigan

Detroit is the largest city in the U.S. state of Michigan and the county seat of Wayne County, Michigan. Detroit is a major port city on the Detroit River, in the Midwestern United States of the United States....
. When interviewed as an established star appearing at the premiere of Let's Dance (1950), her mother — arriving with her, and following a police escort — quipped, "At least this time the police are in front of us!" Hutton sang in several local bands as a teenager, and at one point visited New York City
New York City

The City of New York is the List of United States cities by population in the United States, while the New York metropolitan area ranks among the List of urban areas by population....
 hoping to perform on Broadway
Broadway theatre

Broadway theatre, commonly called simply Broadway, refers to theatrical performances presented in one of the 39 large professional theaters with 500 seats or more located in the Theatre District, New York in Manhattan, New York City....
, where she was rejected.

A few years later, she was scouted by orchestra leader Vincent Lopez
Vincent Lopez

Vincent Lopez was a United States bandleader and pianist.Vincent Lopez was born of Portuguese immigrant parents in Brooklyn, New York and was leading his own dance band in New York City by 1917....
, who gave Hutton her entry into entertainment. In 1939, she appeared in several musical shorts for Warner Bros.
Warner Bros.

Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc. is one of the world's largest film producer of film and television.It is a subsidiary of Time Warner, with its headquarters in Burbank, California and New York City....
, and appeared on Broadway in Panama Hattie
Panama Hattie

Panama Hattie is a musical theater with music and lyrics by Cole Porter and book by Herbert Fields and B. G. DeSylva. It is also the title of a 1942 MGM musical based upon the play....
 and Two for the Show, both produced by Buddy DeSylva.

Career

When DeSylva became a producer at Paramount Pictures
Paramount Pictures

Paramount Pictures Corporation is an American motion picture production company and distribution company, located on Melrose Avenue in Hollywood, California....
, Hutton was signed to a featured role in The Fleet's In
The Fleet's In

The Fleet's In is a movie musical produced by Paramount Pictures, directed by Victor Schertzinger, and starring Dorothy Lamour and William Holden....
 (1942) which starred Paramount's number one female star Dorothy Lamour
Dorothy Lamour

Dorothy Lamour was an United States film actor. She is probably best-remembered for appearing in the Road to... movies, a series of successful comedies co-starring Bob Hope and Bing Crosby....
. Hutton made an instant impact with the moviegoing public but Paramount did not immediately promote her to major stardom, giving her second leads in a Mary Martin
Mary Martin

Mary Virginia Martin was an Tony Award and Emmy Award winning actress. She originated many roles over her career including Nellie Forbush in South Pacific and Maria in The Sound of Music....
 musical and another Lamour film before casting Betty as Bob Hope
Bob Hope

Bob Hope, Order of the British Empire, Order of St. Gregory the Great , was an British-born American comedian and actor who appeared in vaudeville, on Broadway theatre, and in radio, television and movies....
's leading lady in Let's Face It (1943
1943 in film

The year 1943 in film involved some significant events.EventsTop grossing films Awards16th Academy Awards*Bataan ...
). Following the release of The Miracle of Morgan's Creek
The Miracle of Morgan's Creek

The Miracle of Morgan's Creek is a satire screwball comedy film written and directed by Preston Sturges, starring Eddie Bracken and Betty Hutton, and featuring Diana Lynn, William Demarest and Porter Hall....
 (1944
1944 in film

The year 1944 in film involved some significant events....
), Betty was indisputably a major star and with the release of Incendiary Blonde
Incendiary Blonde

Incendiary Blonde is a 1945 Musical film Biographical film of 1920s nightclub star Texas Guinan. Filmed in Technicolor by director George Marshall , it starred actress Betty Hutton in the title role....
 (1945
1945 in film

The year 1945 in film involved some significant events....
), Hutton had supplanted Lamour as Paramount's number one female box office
Box office

A box office is a place where Ticket s are sold to the public for admission to a venue. Patrons may perform the transaction at a countertop, through an unblocked hole through a wall, or at a wicket ....
 attraction.

Hutton made 19 films in 11 years, from 1942 to 1952 including a hugely popular The Perils of Pauline
The Perils of Pauline (1947 film)

The Perils of Pauline is a feature film released by Paramount Pictures. The movie is a fictionalized Hollywood account of silent film star Pearl White's rise to fame, starring Betty Hutton as White....
 in 1947
1947 in film

The year 1947 in film involved some significant events....
. She was billed over Fred Astaire
Fred Astaire

Fred Astaire was an United States Academy Award-winning film and Broadway theatre dance, choreographer, singer and actor. His stage and subsequent film career spanned a total of seventy-six years, during which he made thirty-one musical films....
 in the 1950 musical Let's Dance. Hutton's greatest screen triumph was Annie Get Your Gun
Annie Get Your Gun (film)

Annie Get Your Gun is a 1950 United States musical film loosely based on the life of sharpshooter Annie Oakley. The Metro Goldwyn Mayer release, with music and lyrics by Irving Berlin and a screenplay by Sidney Sheldon based on the Annie Get Your Gun , was directed by George Sidney....
 for MGM, which hired Hutton to replace an exhausted Judy Garland
Judy Garland

Judy Garland was an American actress and alto singer. Through a career that spanned 45 of her 47 years, Garland attained international stardom as an actress in musical and dramatic roles, as a recording artist and on the concert stage....
 in the role of Annie Oakley
Annie Oakley

Annie Oakley was an United States Marksman and exhibition shooting. Oakley's amazing talent and timely rise to fame led to a starring role in Buffalo Bill show, which propelled her to become the first American female superstar....
. The film and the leading role, retooled for Hutton, was a smash hit, with the biggest critical praise going to Betty (her obituary in The New York Times
The New York Times

The New York Times is an American daily newspaper published in New York City. The largest metropolitan newspaper in the United States, "The Gray Lady"?named for its staid appearance and style?is regarded as a national newspaper of record....
 described her as "a brassy, energetic performer with a voice that could sound like a fire alarm") but Hutton, like Garland, was earning a reputation for being extremely difficult.

In 1944, she signed with Capitol Records
Capitol Records

Capitol Records is a major United States-based record label owned by EMI and located in Hollywood, California and New York City as part of Capitol Music Group....
, one of the first artists to do so, but was unhappy with their management, and later signed with RCA Victor. Among her many films was an unbilled cameo in Sailor Beware
Sailor Beware

Sailor Beware is a 1951 film starring the comedy team of Martin and Lewis and is an adaption of a 1933 play of the same name. It was released on February 9, 1952 in film by Paramount Pictures....
 (1952) with Dean Martin
Dean Martin

Dean Martin was an United States singer, film actor and comedian of Italians descent. He was one of the best known musical artists of the 1950s and 1960s....
 and Jerry Lewis
Jerry Lewis

Jerry Lewis is an American comedian, actor, producer, writer, director and singer. He is best-known for his slapstick humor on stage, screen and television, his singing ability in a string of music album recordings and his charity fund-raising telethons for the Muscular Dystrophy Association ....
, in which she portrayed Dean's girlfriend, Hetty Button. Her time as a Hollywood
Classical Hollywood cinema

Classical Hollywood cinema or the classical Hollywood narrative, are terms used in history of film which designates both a visual and sound style for making motion pictures and a mode of production used in the Cinema of the United States between roughly the 1910s and the 1960s....
 star came to an end due to contract disagreements with Paramount following The Greatest Show on Earth
The Greatest Show on Earth

The Greatest Show on Earth is a List of American films of 1952 drama film set in the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus. The film was produced, directed, and narrated by Cecil B....
 (1952
1952 in film

The year 1952 in film involved some significant events....
) and Somebody Loves Me
Somebody Loves Me

"Somebody Loves Me" is a popular music song.The music was written by George Gershwin, the lyrics by Ballard MacDonald and B. G. De Sylva. The song was published in 1924 in music....
 (1952), a biopic of singer Blossom Seeley
Blossom Seeley

Blossom Seeley was a singer and entertainer.Seeley was born Minnie Guyer, in San Francisco, California, USA. She made a series of solo records in the 1920s....
. The New York Times indicated that her film career ended because of her insistence that her husband at the time, Charles O'Curran, direct her next film; when the studio declined, Hutton broke her contract. Betty's last completed film was a small one, 1957's Spring Reunion. She gave an understated, sensitive performance in the drama; box office receipts showed the public didn't accept a subdued Hutton.

Hutton worked in radio, appeared in Las Vegas
Las Vegas, Nevada

Las Vegas is the most populous city in the U.S. state of Nevada, the seat of Clark County, Nevada, and an internationally renowned major resort city for gambling, shopping, and entertainment....
 and in nightclubs, then tried her luck on the new medium of television
Television in the United States

Television is one of the media of the United States of the United States. In an expansive country of Demography of the United States, television programs are some of the few things that nearly all Americans can share....
. An original musical TV "spectacular" written especially for Hutton, Satin 'n Spurs (1954), was an enormous flop with the public and critics, despite being one of the first television programs televised nationally by NBC in compatible color. Desilu Productions
Desilu Productions

'Desilu Productions' was a Los Angeles, California-based company jointly owned by couple and TV actors Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz.Desilu Studios was home to I Love Lucy, and additionally, such hit television series as Star Trek: The Original Series, The Andy Griffith Show, Mission: Impossible, The Untouchables , Mannix'...
 took a chance on Hutton and in 1959 gave her a sitcom The Betty Hutton Show
The Betty Hutton Show

The Betty Hutton Show is a short lived television Situation comedy that aired on the CBS during the 1959-1960 season. Although Betty Hutton was a popular actress, the show only lasted a few episodes before being cancelled....
, which quickly faded. Hutton returned to Broadway briefly when she temporarily replaced a hospitalized Carol Burnett
Carol Burnett

Carol Creighton Burnett is an United States actress, comedienne, singer, dancer and writer. Burnett started her career in New York. After becoming a hit on Broadway theatre, she debuted on television....
 in Fade Out - Fade In
Fade Out - Fade In

Fade Out - Fade In is a musical theatre with a book and lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph Green and music by Jule Styne. The story involves the movie industry in the 1930s....
 in 1964. In 1967, she was signed to star in two low-budget Westerns
Western (genre)

The Western is a fiction genre seen in film, television, radio, literature, painting and other visual arts. Westerns are devoted to telling stories set primarily in the later half of the 19th century in what became the Western United States , but also in Western Canada, Mexico , Alaska and even Australia ....
 for Paramount, but was fired shortly after the projects began.

Afterwards, Hutton had trouble with alcohol and substance abuse (sleeping pills), eventually attempting suicide after losing her singing voice in 1970, and having a nervous breakdown
Nervous Breakdown

Nervous Breakdown was the first Extended play#The 7" EP in punk rock by the American hardcore punk band Black Flag . It was released in 1978 and was the inaugural release on SST Records....
. She divorced her fourth husband, jazz trumpeter Pete Candoli
Pete Candoli

Pete Candoli was an United States swing music and West Coast jazz trumpeter. He played with the big bands of Woody Herman, Stan Kenton, and many others, and worked extensively in the studios of the recording and television industries....
, and declared herself bankrupt. Renewed interest in Betty was generated in a well-publicized "Love-In for Betty Hutton" held at New York City's Riverboat Restaurant, emceed by comedian Joey Adams
Joey Adams

Joey Adams , born Joseph Abramowitz, was a Borscht Belt comedian who was inducted into the Friars Club in 1977 and wrote the book Borscht Belt in 1973....
, with several old Hollywood pals on hand. The 1974 event raised $10,000 (USD) for Betty and gave her spirits a big boost. Steady work, unfortunately, still eluded her. Her last TV outings were an interview with Mike Douglas
Mike Douglas

Mike Douglas, born Michael Delaney Dowd, Jr. , was an United States entertainer....
 and a brief guest appearance in 1975 on Baretta
Baretta

Baretta is a United States detective fiction television series which ran on American Broadcasting Company from 1975 to 1978. The show was a milder version of a successful 1973?74 ABC series, Toma , starring Tony Musante as chameleon-like, real-life New Jersey police officer David Toma....
.

However, after regaining control of her life through rehab, and the mentorship of a Roman Catholic priest named Father Peter Maguire, Hutton converted to Roman Catholicism
Roman Catholic Church

The Roman Catholic Church, officially known as the Catholic Church is the world's largest Christianity Ecclesia , representing over half of all Christians and one-sixth of the world population....
 and took a job as a cook at a rectory
Rectory

File:Pfarrhaus Ilmenau.JPGFile:R?ti - Kloster R?ti - Pfarrhaus IMG 1658.JPGDepending on Christian denomination, local custom, and the status of the minister, the building inhabited by the leader of a local Christian church can be referred to by one of several names....
 in Portsmouth, Rhode Island
Portsmouth, Rhode Island

Portsmouth is a New England town in Newport County, Rhode Island, Rhode Island, United States. The population was 17,149 at the United States Census, 2000....
. A 9th grade drop-out, Hutton went back to school and later received her Master's Degree in psychology from Salve Regina University
Salve Regina University

Salve Regina University is a university in Newport, Rhode Island. Founded by the Sisters of Mercy, the university is a co-educational, private, non-profit institution chartered by the State of Rhode Island in 1934....
. She would work as a casino hostess, charity counselor and acting teacher into the late 1980s.

Hutton followed Dorothy Loudon
Dorothy Loudon

Dorothy Loudon was an American actress noted for her comedy and belting singing voice, which she used to deliver a wide range of musical comedy and songs of the Roaring Twenties....
 as the evil Miss Hannigan in Annie on Broadway in 1980. Her last known performance in any medium was on Jukebox Saturday Night, which aired on PBS in 1983.

After the death of her ally Father Maguire, Hutton returned to California in 1999 after decades in New England. Hutton hoped to become closer to her daughters and grandchildren, as she told Robert Osborne
Robert Osborne

Robert Osborne is an United States actor and film historian best known as the host of the Turner Classic Movies network since its inception in 1994....
 on TCM
Turner Classic Movies

Turner Classic Movies is a cable television channel featuring television commercial-free classic movies, mostly from the Turner Entertainment and Warner Bros....
's Private Screenings in April 2000, though her children remained distant. She told Osborne that she understood their hesitancy to accept a now elderly mother. The TCM interview first aired on July 18, 2000. The program was rerun as a memorial on the evening of her death in 2007, and again on July 11, 2008.

Marriages

The actress's first marriage was to camera manufacturer Ted Briskin on September 3, 1945; they divorced in 1950. Two daughters were born to the couple, Lindsay Diane Briskin (born 1946) and Candice Elizabeth Briskin (born 1948). Ted Briskin had a brief 21-day marriage to Joan Dixon
Joan Dixon

Joan Dixon was an American film and television actress in the 1950s. She is known for her role in the film noir, Roadblock ....
 after this divorce. He died in 1980 in Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California

Los Angeles is the largest city in the U.S. state of California and the List of United States cities by population in the United States. Often abbreviated as L.A. and nicknamed The City of Angels, Los Angeles is rated as a beta global city, has an estimated population of 3.8 million and spans over in Southern California....
.

Hutton's second marriage was in 1952 to choreographer Jacob Glazier, and they divorced in 1955; he died in 1982.

Her third marriage was in 1955 to Alan W. Livingston
Alan W. Livingston

Alan Wendell Livingston is an United States businessman. He is also a writer/record producer best-known for creating Bozo the Clown for a series of record-album and illustrative read-along children's book sets....
, an executive with Capitol Records, who had created Bozo the Clown
Bozo the Clown

Bozo the Clown was a clown character very popular in the United States in the 1950s, as a result of widespread franchising in early television....
; they divorced five years later, although some accounts refer to this as a nine-month marriage.

Her fourth and final marriage was in 1960 to jazz trumpeter Pete Candoli
Pete Candoli

Pete Candoli was an United States swing music and West Coast jazz trumpeter. He played with the big bands of Woody Herman, Stan Kenton, and many others, and worked extensively in the studios of the recording and television industries....
, who was born in 1923, a brother of Conte Candoli
Conte Candoli

Secondo "Conte" Candoli was an United States jazz trumpeter based on the West Coast of the US. He played in the big bands of Woody Herman, Stan Kenton, Benny Goodman, and Dizzy Gillespie, and in Doc Severinsen's NBC Orchestra on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson....
. Hutton and Candoli had one child, Carolyn Candoli (born 1962) and then divorced in 1967 (although some accounts place the year as 1964).

Death

. Her epitaph reads "Loved by all".]] Hutton lived in Palm Springs, California
Palm Springs, California

Palm Springs is a desert city in Riverside County, California, California, approximately 111 miles east of Los Angeles, California and 136 miles northeast of San Diego, California....
 until her death caused by complications from colon cancer at 86 years of age. Carl Bruno, executor of her estate and a long-term friend, told the Associated Press
Associated Press

The Associated Press is an Media of the United States news agency. The AP is a cooperative owned by its contributing newspapers, Radio station and Television station stations in the United States, which both contribute stories to the AP and use material written by its staffers....
 that she died on the evening of Sunday, March 11, 2007. Hutton is buried at Desert Memorial Park in Cathedral City, California
Cathedral City, California

Cathedral City is a city in Riverside County, California, California, United States. The population was 42,647 at the 2000 census. Sandwiched between Palm Springs, California and Rancho Mirage, California, it is one of the cities in the Coachella Valley of southern California....
. None of her three daughters attended the funeral.

Hit songs

  • "Murder, He Says" (1943) (performed in the film Happy Go Lucky)
  • "Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief
    Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief

    "Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief" is a popular music song.The music was written by Hoagy Carmichael, the lyrics by Paul Francis Webster. The song was published in 1945 in music....
    "
  • "I Wish I Didn't Love You So"
  • "It Had To Be You
    It Had to Be You (song)

    "It Had to Be You" is a popular music song written by Isham Jones with lyrics by Gus Kahn, and was first published in 1924 in music.The song was performed by Priscilla Lane in the 1939 film The Roaring Twenties and by Danny Thomas in the 1951 film I'll See You in My Dreams ....
    "
  • "Hit the Road to Dreamland
    Hit the Road to Dreamland

    "Hit the Road to Dreamland" is a popular music. The music was written by Harold Arlen, the lyrics by Johnny Mercer.The song was introduced in 1943 in the wartime musical film Star Spangled Rhythm....
    "
  • "Orange Colored Sky
    Orange Colored Sky

    "Orange Colored Sky" is a popular music song.It was written by Milton DeLugg and Willie Stein and published in 1950 in music.The best-known version of the song was recorded by Nat King Cole , but a number of other singers have recorded it, including Cole's daughter, Natalie Cole....
    "
  • "You Can't Get a Man with a Gun
    You Can't Get a Man with a Gun

    "You Can't Get a Man with a Gun" is a song from the 1946 in music musical theatre Annie Get Your Gun , by Irving Berlin. It was originally performed by Ethel Merman....
    "
  • "Can't Stop Talking"
  • "Blow a Fuse
    Blow a Fuse

    "Blow a Fuse" is a song performed by Betty Hutton.Covers *In 1995, Bj?rk released the song as "It's Oh So Quiet"....
    " (Covered by Björk
    Björk

    Bj?rk Gu?mundsd?ttir is an Icelandic singer-songwriter, composer, actor and record producer, whose work includes seven solo albums and two film soundtracks....
     as "It's Oh So Quiet
    It's Oh So Quiet

    "It's Oh So Quiet" performed by Bj?rk is a renamed cover of the Betty Hutton song "Blow a Fuse". It remains her biggest hit, reaching #4 in the UK and spending 15 weeks on the UK singles chart, generating plenty of mainstream airplay....
    ")
  • "A Bushel and a Peck
    A Bushel and a Peck

    "A Bushel and a Peck" is a popular music song written by Frank Loesser and published in 1950 in music. The song was introduced in the Broadway musical theater Guys and Dolls, which opened at the 46th Street Theater on November 24, 1950....
    " (with Perry Como
    Perry Como

    Pierino "Perry" Como was an United States singer and television personality. During a career spanning more than half a century he recorded exclusively for the RCA Victor label after signing with it in 1943....
    )
  • "His Rocking Horse Ran Away"
  • "Bluebirds in My Belfry"
  • "The Fuddy Duddy Watchmaker"
  • "Ol' Man Mose"
  • "There's a Fellow Waiting in Poughkeepsie"
  • "Arthur Murray Taught Me Dancing in a Hurry"


Filmography


Features

  • The Fleet's In
    The Fleet's In

    The Fleet's In is a movie musical produced by Paramount Pictures, directed by Victor Schertzinger, and starring Dorothy Lamour and William Holden....
     (1942
    1942 in film

    The year 1942 in film involved some significant events, in particular the release of a film consistently rated as one of the Films considered the greatest ever, Casablanca .....
    )
  • Star Spangled Rhythm
    Star Spangled Rhythm

    Star Spangled Rhythm is a 1942 in film all-star cast musical film made by Paramount Pictures during World War II as a morale booster. Many of the Hollywood studios produced such films during the war, generally musicals, frequently with flimsy storylines, and with the specific intent of entertaining the troops overseas and civilians back...
     (1942)
  • Happy Go Lucky (1943
    1943 in film

    The year 1943 in film involved some significant events.EventsTop grossing films Awards16th Academy Awards*Bataan ...
    )
  • Let's Face It (1943)
  • The Miracle of Morgan's Creek
    The Miracle of Morgan's Creek

    The Miracle of Morgan's Creek is a satire screwball comedy film written and directed by Preston Sturges, starring Eddie Bracken and Betty Hutton, and featuring Diana Lynn, William Demarest and Porter Hall....
     (1944
    1944 in film

    The year 1944 in film involved some significant events....
    )
  • And the Angels Sing (1944)
  • Here Come the Waves (1944)
  • Incendiary Blonde
    Incendiary Blonde

    Incendiary Blonde is a 1945 Musical film Biographical film of 1920s nightclub star Texas Guinan. Filmed in Technicolor by director George Marshall , it starred actress Betty Hutton in the title role....
     (1945
    1945 in film

    The year 1945 in film involved some significant events....
    )
  • Duffy's Tavern
    Duffy's Tavern

    Duffy's Tavern, an United Statesn radio programming situation comedy , often featured top-name stage and film guest stars but always hooked those around the misadventures, get-rich-quick-scheming, and romantic missteps of the title establishment's malaprop-prone, metaphor-mixing manager, Archie, played by the writer/actor who co-created...
     (1945)
  • The Stork Club (1945)
  • Cross My Heart (1946
    1946 in film

    The year 1946 in film involved some significant events....
    )
  • The Perils of Pauline
    The Perils of Pauline (1947 film)

    The Perils of Pauline is a feature film released by Paramount Pictures. The movie is a fictionalized Hollywood account of silent film star Pearl White's rise to fame, starring Betty Hutton as White....
     (1947
    1947 in film

    The year 1947 in film involved some significant events....
    )
  • Dream Girl (1948
    1948 in film

    The year 1948 in film involved some significant events....
    )
  • Red, Hot and Blue
    Red, Hot and Blue

    Red, Hot and Blue is a 1936 musical theater by Cole Porter originally starring Ethel Merman, Jimmy Durante, and Bob Hope.It was loosely adapted as a 1949 film starring Betty Hutton, Victor Mature, and June Havoc ....
     (1949
    1949 in film

    The year 1949 in film involved some significant events....
    )
  • Annie Get Your Gun
    Annie Get Your Gun (film)

    Annie Get Your Gun is a 1950 United States musical film loosely based on the life of sharpshooter Annie Oakley. The Metro Goldwyn Mayer release, with music and lyrics by Irving Berlin and a screenplay by Sidney Sheldon based on the Annie Get Your Gun , was directed by George Sidney....
     (1950
    1950 in film

    The year 1950 in film involved some significant events....
    )
  • Let's Dance (1950)
  • The Greatest Show on Earth
    The Greatest Show on Earth

    The Greatest Show on Earth is a List of American films of 1952 drama film set in the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus. The film was produced, directed, and narrated by Cecil B....
     (1952
    1952 in film

    The year 1952 in film involved some significant events....
    )
  • Sailor Beware
    Sailor Beware

    Sailor Beware is a 1951 film starring the comedy team of Martin and Lewis and is an adaption of a 1933 play of the same name. It was released on February 9, 1952 in film by Paramount Pictures....
     (1952)
  • Somebody Loves Me (1952)
  • Spring Reunion (1957
    1957 in film

    The year 1957 in film involved some significant events....
    )


Short subjects

  • Paramount Headliner: Queens of the Air (1938
    1938 in film

    The year 1938 in film involved some significant events....
    )
  • Vincent Lopez and His Orchestra (1939
    1939 in film

    The year 1939 in film involved some significant events....
    )
  • One for the Book (1939)
  • Three Kings and a Queen (1939)
  • Public Jitterbug Number One (1939)
  • A Letter from Bataan (1942
    1942 in film

    The year 1942 in film involved some significant events, in particular the release of a film consistently rated as one of the Films considered the greatest ever, Casablanca .....
    )
  • Strictly G.I. (1943
    1943 in film

    The year 1943 in film involved some significant events.EventsTop grossing films Awards16th Academy Awards*Bataan ...
    )
  • Skirmish on the Home Front (1944
    1944 in film

    The year 1944 in film involved some significant events....
    )
  • Hollywood Victory Caravan (1945
    1945 in film

    The year 1945 in film involved some significant events....
    )


Further Reading

Rocking Horse, a Personal Biography of Betty Hutton, by Gene Arceri. (2009, BearManor Media)

External Links

  • The Betty Hutton Website
  • at who2.com
  • (fan site)