She was the standard prototype of the porcelain-pretty collegiate and
starry-eyed romantic interest in a host of Depression-era films and
although her name may not ring a bell to most, Mary Carlisle enjoyed a
fairly solid decade in the cinematic limelight.
The petite Boston-born, blue-eyed blonde was born on February 3, 1914, and brought to Hollywood in 1918, at age 4, by her
mother after her father passed away. The story goes that the
14-year-old and her mother were having lunch at the Universal
commissary when she was noticed by producer
Carl Laemmle Jr., who immediately gave
her a screen test. Her age was a hindering factor, however, and Mary
completed her high school studies before moving into the acting
arena. An uncle connected to MGM helped give the young hopeful her
break into the movies as a singer/dancer a few years later.
Mary started out typically as an extra and bit player in such films as
Madam Satan (1930),
The Great Lover (1931) and in
Grand Hotel (1932) in which she
played a honeymooner. The glamorous, vibrant beauty's career was given
a build-up as a "Wampas Baby Star" in 1933 and soon she began finding
work in films playing stylish, well-mannered young co-eds. Although she
performed as a topline actress in a number of lightweight pictures such as
Night Court (1932) with
Anita Page,
Murder in the Private Car (1934)
starring
Charles Ruggles, and
It's in the Air (1935) alongside
Jack Benny, she is perhaps best remembered as
a breezy co-star to
Bing Crosby in three of
his earlier, lightweight '30s musicals:
College Humor (1933),
Double or Nothing (1937) and
Doctor Rhythm (1938). In the last picture
mentioned she is the lovely focus of his song "My Heart Is Taking
Lessons". Her participation in weightier material such as
Kind Lady (1935) was often
overshadowed by her even weightier co-stars, in this case
Basil Rathbone and
Aline MacMahon.
Disappointed with the momentum of her career and her inability to extricate herself from the
picture-pretty, paragon-of-virtue stereotype, Mary traveled and lived
in London for a time in the late '30s. Following her
damsel-in-distress role in the horror opus
Dead Men Walk (1943) with
George Zucco and
Dwight Frye, Mary retired from the
screen, prompted by her marriage to
James Blakeley, a flying
supervisor, the year before. The Beverly Hills couple had one son. Her
husband, a former actor who also appeared in '30s musicals with Crosby
as a dapper second lead
(e.g., in
Two for Tonight (1935)), later
became an important executive (producer, editor, etc.) at Twentieth
Century-Fox.
In later years Mary managed an Elizabeth Arden Salon in
Beverly Hills and received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Her husband passed away in 2007. Mary herself lived to the ripe old age of 104 on August 1, 2018.