Blonde singer/actress Constance Moore was a stylish, glamorous lead in
many "B" war-era musicals. Born in Sioux City, Iowa, on January 18,
1920, she was raised in Dallas, Texas, and nurtured ambitions to be a
singer. The one-time brunette with the rich contralto started out as a
band vocalist prior to entering films. Universal took notice and signed
her up initially, but she is probably better known for the vocal work
she did as leading lady in Republic Pictures tunefests, her best
showcases being
Show Business (1944) and
Atlantic City (1944). In the former, she joined co-stars
Eddie Cantor,
George Murphy and
Joan Davis in the vintage songs "I Want a Girl, Just
Like the Girl That Married Dear Old Dad" and "Dinah". In the latter,
she was top-billed and soloed on "After You've Gone" and "On a Sunday
Afternoon".
As for her non-singing endeavors, Constance was seen to good advantage
as both the femme colleague Wilma Deering to
Buster Crabbe's planetary hero
in the popular
Buck Rogers (1939) serial, and as the lovely young daughter of
W.C. Fields' character in the classic comedy
You Can't Cheat an Honest Man (1939), in which she also
played second fiddle to love interest
Edgar Bergen and his puppet Charlie
McCarthy. That same year Constance would yet again receive lower
billing to the puppet in the mystery
Charlie McCarthy, Detective (1939). She and "husband"
Macdonald Carey
complemented
Rosalind Russell and
Fred MacMurray in the comedy romp
Take a Letter, Darling (1942) as a
secondary couple, and she later provided lovely distraction from the
rugged goings-on in the WWII picture
I Wanted Wings (1941) and westerns
Mexicana (1945) and
In Old Sacramento (1946). Constance retired from films in 1947 after co-starring with
Eddie Albert in
Hit Parade of 1947 (1947). She reappeared on TV only a few times in later
years. Outside of some guest shots on such shows as
Laramie (1959) and
My Three Sons (1960), she co-starred with
Robert Young in the short-lived, post-
Father Knows Best (1954)
series
Window on Main Street (1961) and then replaced
Irene Hervey in the dramatic series
The Young Marrieds (1964)
while in its second season. She also occasionally worked up elegant
nightclub acts. Married in 1939 to agent John Maschio and the mother of two,
her husband later became a successful real estate agent. After her
retirement, Constance indulged herself in still life painting. Her
husband passed away in 1998 and she followed in 2005 of heart failure
following a long illness. The couple had two children.