Bebe Daniels
{{short description|American actress, singer, dancer, writer, producer (1901–1971)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2017}}
{{Infobox person
| image = Bebedaniels.jpg
| caption = Daniels in 1925
| birth_name = Phyllis Virginia Daniels
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1901|01|14}}
| birth_place = Dallas, Texas, U.S.Adams, Evangeline (January 1931). [https://archive.org/details/The-New-Movie-1931-01-Vol-3-No-1/page/50/mode/2up?q=%22evangeline+adams%27+horoscope%22 "How January Is Written in the Stars"]. The New Movie. p. 50. Retrieved July 16, 2023.Fox, Charles Donald (1925). [https://archive.org/details/famousfilmfolkga00foxc/page/42/mode/2up?q=%22bebe+daniels+was+born%22 Famous Film Folk; A Gallery of Life Portraits and Biographies]. New York: George A. Doran Company. p. 42. 1045380960.
| death_date = {{death date and age|1971|03|16|1901|01|14}}
| death_place = London, England
| resting_place = Hollywood Forever Cemetery
| other_names = Bebe Lyon
| occupation = {{flatlist|
- Actress
- dancer
- singer
- producer
- writer}}
| years_active = 1910–1961
| spouse = {{marriage|Ben Lyon|1930}}
| children = 2, including Barbara Lyon
| signature = File:Bebe Daniels signature.svg
}}
Phyllis Virginia "Bebe" ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|b|iː|b|iː}}) Daniels (January 14, 1901 – March 16, 1971) was an American actress, singer, dancer, writer, and producer.
She began her career in Hollywood during the silent film era as a child actress, became a star in musicals such as Rio Rita, and later gained fame on radio and television in Britain. Over the course of her 50-year career, Daniels appeared in 230 films.
Early life and career
Daniels was born Phyllis Virginia Daniels (Bebe was a childhood nickname) in Dallas, Texas in 1901. Her father was a travelling theater manager, Scottish-born Melville Daniel MacNeal, who changed his name to Danny Daniels after a disagreement with his father over his ambition to change from the medical profession to show business.Life with the Lyons pp. 21–22 Her mother was Phyllis de Forest Griffin, born in Colombia of an American father and a Colombian mother, a stage actress who was in Danny's travelling stock company when their child was born.{{cite book |last=Golden |first=Eve |title=Golden Images: 41 Essays on Silent Film Stars |publisher=McFarland |year=2001 |pages=18 |isbn=978-0-7864-0834-4}}{{Cite book|last=Epting, Charles|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/934885274|title=Bebe Daniels : Hollywood's good little bad girl|date=August 23, 2016|isbn=978-1-4766-6374-6|location=Jefferson, North Carolina|publisher=McFarland & Company, Inc.|oclc=934885274}} When she was ten weeks old, her father proudly carried her on stage when there was no part in the play for a baby.Bebe and Ben p.20
The family moved to Los Angeles in her childhood, and she began her acting career at the age of 4 in the first version of The Squaw Man (play). The same year, she went on tour in a stage production of Shakespeare's Richard III. The following year, she participated in productions by Oliver Morosco and David Belasco.
By the age of 7, Daniels had her first starring role in film as the young heroine in A Common Enemy. At the age of 9, she starred as Dorothy Gale{{citation needed|date=January 2025}} in the 1910 short film The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. At the age of 14, she was hired by comedy producer Hal Roach at $5 per day to star with Roach's star comedian Harold Lloyd in a series of one-reel comedies, starting with the 1915 film Giving Them Fits. Lloyd and Daniels eventually developed a romantic relationship that was well publicized; they were known in Hollywood as "The Boy" and "The Girl".[http://www.silentsaregolden.com/articles/bebeharoldarticle.html The Girl and The Boy, "Bebe and Harold Were A Perfect Match On and Off the Screen"] by Tim Lussier
In 1919, she declined to renew her contract with Hal Roach because she wanted to be a dramatic actress. She accepted an offer from producer-director Cecil B. DeMille, who gave her secondary roles in Male and Female (1919), Why Change Your Wife? (1920), and The Affairs of Anatol (1921).
Hollywood career
{{Hollywood1921}}
In the 1920s, Daniels was under contract with Paramount Pictures. She made the transition from child star to adult in Hollywood in 1922, and by 1924, she was acting with Rudolph Valentino in Monsieur Beaucaire. Following this movie, she was cast in a number of light popular films, namely Miss Bluebeard, The Manicure Girl, and Wild Wild Susan. Paramount dropped her contract with the advent of sound movies{{why?|date=January 2025}}. Daniels was hired by the new studio Radio Pictures (later known as RKO Radio) to star in its first feature, the Technicolor musical Rio Rita, co-starring the comedy team of Bert Wheeler and Robert Woolsey. Rio Rita turned out not to be RKO's inaugural film due to production delays, but it was still one of the more successful films of that year. Bebe Daniels became established as a musical star, and RCA Victor hired her to record several records for its catalog.
Radio Pictures starred her in a number of musicals, including Dixiana (1930) and Love Comes Along (1930). Toward the end of 1930, Daniels appeared in the musical comedy Reaching for the Moon, released through United Artists. However, by this time, musicals had gone out of fashion, and most of the musical numbers from the film had to be removed before it could be released. Daniels had become associated with musicals, and Radio Pictures did not renew her contract. Warner Bros. realized she was a box-office draw, and she was offered a contract. During her years at Warner Bros., she starred in My Past (1931), Honor of the Family (1931), and the 1931 pre-code version of The Maltese Falcon. In 1932, she appeared in Silver Dollar (1932) and the successful Busby Berkeley choreographed musical comedy 42nd Street (1933) in which she sang. The same year, she played in Counsellor at Law. Her last film for Warner Bros. was Registered Nurse (1934).
Stalking incidents
File:Actor Ben Lyon with his wife, actress Bebe Daniels, during a trial for Albert F. Holland.jpg
In 1934, Daniels and husband Ben Lyon, whom she had married in June 1930, garnered press attention while having to testify against Albert F. Holland, a 36-year-old World War I veteran with a history of stalking Daniels.{{cite web |url=https://calisphere.org/item/ark:/21198/zz00280swz/|title=Actor Ben Lyon, his wife, actress Bebe Daniels, and their friend, actress Doris Kenyon, during a trial for Albert F. Holland...|date=1934|work=Calisphere|access-date=17 October 2019}} Holland had been under the delusion that he had attended school with Daniels and that they had married in Mexico in 1925. In 1931, he broke into Daniels' hotel room in San Francisco, confronting and terrifying her, and he had to be removed by security. He was arrested and committed to the Arizona State Asylum. Holland escaped from the institution in 1932, and he began sending more than 150 threatening letters to Daniels. Arrested again, he was placed in a psychiatric institution.
Following his release, another confrontation took place, and Holland was again arrested. A lengthy trial in Los Angeles took place, with Holland conducting most of his own defense, including a lengthy cross-examination of Daniels' husband Ben Lyon. Actress Doris Kenyon, a friend of Daniels and Lyon, testified for the prosecution. Ultimately, the jury found Holland to be mentally unfit, and he was committed to a psychiatric facility for an indefinite period. Daniels and Lyon then moved to London.{{cite book|last=Slide|first=Anthony|title=Magnificent Obsession: The Outrageous History of Film Buffs, Collectors, Scholars, and Fanatics|date=2 March 2018|publisher=University Press of Mississippi|page=111|isbn=978-1496810533}}
Career in London and later
Daniels retired from Hollywood in 1935 with her husband, film actor Ben Lyon, and their two children, and moved to London. In February 1939, Daniels and Lyon co-starred in a series of commercial radio shows, the Rinso Radio Revue, recorded in London for Radio Luxembourg.The Era, 16 February 1939 They and Bebe's mother Phyllis all returned to the U.S. on 14 June 1939, leaving their children in Los Angeles in the care of Phyllis, and returned to London seven weeks later. After the start of World War II, they worked for the BBC, starring in the comedy radio series Hi Gang!. Born from an idea by Ben, and with most of the dialogue by Bebe, it enjoyed considerable popularity. A few years later, Daniels starred in the London production of Panama Hattie in the title role. The couple remained in England through the days of The Blitz.
File:Bebe Daniels from Stars of the Photoplay.jpg
Following the war, Daniels was awarded the Medal of Freedom by Harry S Truman for war service.{{Cite news |last=Hudson |first=Alex |date=2012-01-26 |title=The castaway who annoyed Churchill |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-16707920 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230301112722/https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-16707920 |archive-date=2023-03-01 |access-date=2024-07-12 |work=BBC News |language=en-GB}} In 1945, she returned to Hollywood for a short time to work as a film producer for Hal Roach and Eagle-Lion Films. She returned to the UK in 1948 and lived there for the remainder of her life. Daniels, her husband, her son Richard and her daughter Barbara all starred in the radio sitcom Life with the Lyons (1951 to 1961), which later made the transition to television.
Personal life
Daniels married actor Ben Lyon in June 1930.Donnelley 2003 p.191 They had two children: daughter Barbara in 1931 and a son Richard (born Bryan Moore in 1935), whom they adopted from a London orphanage. In an issue of the contemporary magazine Radio Pictorial, she explained how she saw Richard peering through the railings and instantly thought "A brother for Barbara".{{cite book |last=Golden |first=Eve |title=Golden Images: 41 Essays on Silent Film Stars |year=2000 |publisher=McFarland |isbn=978-0-786-48354-9 |page=21}}
Daniels suffered a severe stroke in 1963 and withdrew from public life. She suffered a second stroke in late 1970. On March 16, 1971, Daniels died of a cerebral hemorrhage in London at the age of 70.{{cite book |last=Donnelley |first=Paul |title=Fade to Black: A Book of Movie Obituaries |publisher=Omnibus Press |date=November 1, 2005 |pages=301 |isbn=978-1-84449-430-9}} Daniels' death came only nine days after her former co-star Harold Lloyd died. Her remains were cremated at London's Golders Green Crematorium and the ashes returned to the United States; she was interred at the Chapel Columbarium at Hollywood Forever Cemetery. Upon his death in 1979, Ben Lyon's remains were interred next to Daniels'.{{cite book |last=D'Agostino |first=Annette M. |title=The Harold Lloyd Encyclopedia |year=2004 |publisher=McFarland |isbn=978-0-786-41514-4 |page=75}}
Selected filmography
class="wikitable sortable"
|+ Short subjects |
class="unsortable" | Release date
! Title ! Role ! class="unsortable" | Notes |
---|
1909
| March 24, 1910 | Dorothy Gale | Role disputed as credits are lost |
December 29, 1910
| Justinian and Theodora | | |
December 21, 1911
| A Counterfeit Santa Claus | | |
January 21, 1913
| The Savage | Bit part | |
January 22, 1914
| Anne of the Golden Heart |Lucy Blake |Lost film |
November 1, 1915
|Co-Worker | |
November 8, 1915
| |Lost film |
December 15, 1915
| Ruses, Rhymes and Roughnecks | |Lost film |
January 5, 1916
|Lonesome Luke Leans to the Literary | | Lost film |
January 31, 1916
| | |
March 15, 1916
| |Lost film |
June 5, 1916
| |Lost film |
December 3, 1916
| | |
January 7, 1917
| |Lost film |
January 21, 1917
| | Lost film |
February 4, 1917
| |Lost film |
March 18, 1917
| | |
May 20, 1917
| |Lost film |
August 5, 1917
|The Girl | |
September 30, 1917
| | |
October 14, 1917
| The Girl | |
October 28, 1917
| | |
November 11, 1917
| | |
November 25, 1917
| The Girl | |
April 28, 1918
| The Leading Lady | |
May 12, 1918
| Miss Wiggle | |
May 19, 1918
| The Girl | |
December 15, 1918
| The Hired Girl | |
January 26, 1919
| Miss Goulash | |
February 9, 1919
| Switchboard operator | |
March 30, 1919
|Miss Paprika | |
April 6, 1919
|Olga | |
May 4, 1919
|The Girl | |
August 31, 1919
| Bebe | |
November 2, 1919
|The Girl | |
September 24, 1924
| Herself | |
class="wikitable sortable"
|+ Silent features |
Year
! Title ! Role ! class="unsortable" | Notes |
---|
rowspan=2|1919
| The King's Favourite | |
Everywoman
| Vice | Lost film |
rowspan=7|1920
| Sally Clark | |
The Dancin' Fool
| Junie Budd | |
Sick Abed
| Nurse Durant | |
You Never Can Tell
| Rowena Patricia Jones | |
The Fourteenth Man
| Marjory Seaton | Lost film |
Oh, Lady, Lady
| Mary Barber | Lost film |
She Couldn't Help It
| Young Nance | Lost film |
rowspan=6|1921
| Teddy Simpson | |
Two Weeks with Pay
| Pansy O'Donnell/Marie La Tour | Lost film |
The March Hare
| Lisbeth Ann Palmer | Lost film |
One Wild Week
| Pauline Hathaway | Lost film |
The Affairs of Anatol
| Satan Synne | |
The Speed Girl
| Betty Lee | Lost film |
rowspan=6|1922
| Nancy | Lost film |
A Game Chicken
| Inez Hastings | Lost film |
North of the Rio Grande
| Val Hannon | Lost film |
Nice People
| Theodora Gloucester | Lost film |
Pink Gods
| Lorraine Temple | Lost film |
Singed Wings
| Bonita della Guerda | Lost film |
rowspan=5|1923
| Corinne d'Alys | Lost film |
The Glimpses of the Moon
| Susan Branch | Lost film |
The Exciters
| Ronnie Rand |Lost film |
Hollywood
| Herself (cameo) | Lost film |
His Children's Children
| Diane | Lost film |
rowspan=7|1924
| Mescal | |
Daring Youth
| Alita Allen | Lost film |
Unguarded Women
| Breta Banning | Lost film |
Monsieur Beaucaire
| Princess Henriette | |
Sinners in Heaven
| Barbara Stockley | Lost film |
Dangerous Money
| Adele Clark | Lost film |
Argentine Love
| Consuelo Garcia | Lost film |
rowspan=5|1925
| Colette Girard | |
The Crowded Hour
| Peggy Laurence |Lost film |
The Manicure Girl
| Maria Maretti | Lost film |
Wild, Wild Susan
| Susan Van Dusen |Lost film |
Lovers in Quarantine
| Diana | |
rowspan=6|1926
| Jenny | Lost film |
Miss Brewster's Millions
| Polly Brewster | Lost film |
The Palm Beach Girl
| Emily Bennett | Lost film |
Volcano!
| Zabette de Chavalons | |
The Campus Flirt
| Patricia Mansfield | Lost film |
Stranded in Paris
| Julie McFadden | Lost film |
rowspan=4|1927
| Ginette | Lost film |
Señorita
| Señorita Francesca Hernandez | |
Swim Girl, Swim
| Alice Smith | Lost film |
She's a Sheik
| Zaida | |
rowspan=5|1928
| Barbara Manning | |
The Fifty-Fifty Girl
| Kathleen O'Hara | Lost film |
Hot News
| Pat Clancy | Lost film |
Take Me Home
| Peggy Lane | Lost film |
What a Night!
| Dorothy Winston |
class="wikitable sortable"
|+ Sound films and television |
Year
! Title ! Role ! class="unsortable" | Notes |
---|
1929
| Rio Rita | Rita Ferguson | Incomplete film, the version available is an edited 1932 re-release |
rowspan=5|1930
| Peggy | Incomplete film |
Alias French Gertie
| Gertie Jones/aka Marie | |
Dixiana
| Dixiana Caldwell | |
Lawful Larceny
| Marion Dorsey | |
Reaching for the Moon
| Vivien Benton | |
rowspan=3|1931
| My Past | Miss Doree Macy | |
The Maltese Falcon
| Ruth Wonderly | |
Honor of the Family
| Laura | Lost film |
1932
| Lily Owens Martin | |
rowspan=5|1933
| Dorothy Brock | |
Cocktail Hour
| Cynthia Warren | |
Counsellor at Law
| Regina "Rexy" Gordon | |
The Song You Gave Me
| Mitzi Hansen | |
A Southern Maid
| Juanita/Dolores | |
1934
| Sylvia 'Ben' Benton | |
1935
| Diane De Valle | |
1936
| May Hardy | Alternative title: Not Wanted on Voyage |
1938
| Carol Deane | |
1941
| Hi Gang! | The Liberty Girl | |
1947
| {{center |
}}
| Producer |
1954
| Bebe Lyon | Alternative title: Family Affair |
1955
| Bebe | Alternative titles: Mr. and Mrs. in Paree |
1955–1960
| Bebe Lyon | Unknown episodes |
Selected radio performances
class="wikitable sortable" |
Year
! Title ! Role ! class="unsortable" | Notes |
---|
1939
| Rinso Radio Revue | Bebe Daniels | Radio Luxembourg, with Ben Lyon, Tommy Handley and others |
1941-1949
| Hi Gang! | Bebe Lyon | BBC, with Ben, Barbara and Richard Lyon and Vic Oliver |
1950-1961
| Bebe Lyon | BBC, with Ben, Barbara and Richard Lyon |
Bibliography
- {{Cite book |last=Allgood |first=Jill |title=Bebe and Ben |year=1975 |publisher=Robert Hale & Co. |isbn=978-0-709-14942-2}}
- {{Cite book |last1=Daniels |first1=Bebe |last2=Allgood |first2=Jill |title=282 ways of making a salad with favorite recipes by British and American personalities and stars |year=1950 |publisher=Cassell & Co |oclc=13066530}}
- {{Cite book |last1=Daniels |first1=Bebe |last2=Lyons |first2=Ben |title=Life with the Lyons, the Autobiography of Bebe Daniels and Ben Lyon |year=1953 |publisher=Odhams Press |asin=B0000CIGNZ}}
- {{Cite book |last=Epting |first=Charles L. |title=Bebe Daniels:Hollywood's Good Little Bad Girl |year=2016 |publisher=Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Co Inc |isbn=978-1476663746}}
Footnotes
{{reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category|Bebe Daniels}}
{{Portal|Biography}}
- {{AFI person | 161736-Bebe-DanielsLyon }}
- {{IMDb name|0199841}}
- {{Tcmdb name}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20160303185125/http://www.silentsaregolden.com/articles/BebeDanielsarticle.html Good Little Bad Girl: Bebe Daniels]
- [http://film.virtual-history.com/person.php?personid=709 Photographs and bibliography]
- [http://www.earlyaviators.com/emcquee1.htm Bebe Daniels' maternal grandmother's family]
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Daniels, Bebe}}
Category:20th-century American actresses
Category:American child actresses
Category:American expatriate actresses
Category:American expatriates in England
Category:American film actresses
Category:Film producers from Texas
Category:American musical theatre actresses
Category:American silent film actresses
Category:American stage actresses
Category:American radio actresses
Category:American television actresses
Category:American television producers
Category:American women television producers
Category:American people of Scottish descent
Category:American people of Colombian descent
Category:Burials at Hollywood Forever Cemetery
Category:Paramount Pictures contract players
Category:Recipients of the Medal of Freedom
Category:American women screenwriters
Category:Warner Bros. contract players
Category:20th-century American women writers
Category:20th-century American singers
Category:20th-century American businesspeople
Category:20th-century American businesswomen
Category:20th-century American women singers
Category:American women film producers