A major little talent, this French-American moppet star of the late
'40s and early '50s was able to parlay her precocious popularity
into a modest young adult career, but then left it for family. She has nevertheless maintained on its
fringe for decades.
Gigi Perreau was born on February 6, 1941, in Los Angeles to a French
father, who fled his native country at the onset of WWII, and an
American mother. Her beginnings in acting started way back to the tender age of
2-1/2 when her mother was approached by a talent agent who
represented child actors and who took an initial interest in her
5-year-old brother Gerald. But Gigi grabbed a little attention for herself.
When producer/director
Mervyn LeRoy
discovered little Gigi could speak French as well as English at such a
precious age, he cast her as
Greer Garson's
daughter in
Madame Curie (1943). Gigi went on to play
Gloria DeHaven as a toddler in
Two Girls and a Sailor (1944) and a child to
Bette Davis in the classic soaper
Mr. Skeffington (1944).
MGM signed her up and Gigi spent several years there where, among other roles, she played the daughter of
Katharine Hepburn in the composer Schumann biopic
Song of Love (1947) and a child to
Lana Turner in
Green Dolphin Street (1947). Gigi earned her best reviews when Universal-International picked up her option. She positively bloomed as a top juvenile player and received an award from the Screen Children's Guild while appeared in top quality films, both light-hearted and tear-stained.
At Universal, Gigi was quite endearing as
Claudette Colbert's lively daughter in the domestic comedy
Family Honeymoon (1948); quite touching in the melodrama
My Foolish Heart (1949) starring
Susan Hayward; and quite earnest in the lead role of a child who witnesses a murder in the film noir
Shadow on the Wall (1950) starring
Ann Sothern. She had a standout role as
Piper Laurie's kid sister and a Charleston partner to
Charles Coburn in the Roaring 20's comedy
Has Anybody Seen My Gal (1952) and got to monkey around with a monkey in the comedy
Bonzo Goes to College (1952).
In the mid '50s, things started tapering off
for the former pigtailed child star as she tried to adjust
through the awkward teenage years. Appearances in such lowbudget exploitation as
The Cool and the Crazy (1958),
Girls Town (1959), and
Hell on Wheels (1967) pretty much
tell the story.
Developing into a lovely-looking young adult, she also graced the small screen. She co-starred in two short-lived series: the sitcom
The Betty Hutton Show (1959) and the detective drama
Follow the Sun (1961). She also guested on such shows as "Whirlybirds," "The Donna Reed Show," The Detective," "Hawaiian Eye," "Surfside 6," "Laramie," "Rawhide," "The Rebel," "The Roaring 20s," "The Rifleman," "Perry Mason," "Gunsmoke," "Gomer Pyle," "My Three Sons," "Ironside," "The Brady Bunch," and "Adam-12."
At age 20, Gigi married and had a son and a daughter; a second marriage
produced another son and daughter.
Rarely seen on film or TV since the late
'60s, Gigi has continued on as
a stage director and college prep drama teacher. Brother Gerald (aka
Peter Miles)
equipped himself quite well as a child actor performing in
The Red Pony (1949),
The Good Humor Man (1950), and
Quo Vadis (1951). Gigi appeared with
him in the movies
Enchantment (1948)
and
Roseanna McCoy (1949) and
played his sister on
The Betty Hutton Show (1959).
Gigi's two younger sisters,
Janine Perreau and
Lauren Perreau, also dabbled in film and
TV as youngsters, but to a much lesser degree.