Yvette Dugay (born Audrey Lee Pearlman; June 24, 1932 – October 14, 1986)[1] was an American actress. Her name was often spelled as Yvette Duguay.
Yvette Dugay | |
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![]() Yvette Dugay | |
Born | Audrey Lee Pearlman June 24, 1932 |
Died | October 14, 1986 (aged 54) Los Angeles, California |
Other names | Yvette Duguay |
Occupation | Actress |
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Pearlman,[2] she began acting at the age of six months, and continued her career well into adulthood, proving to be one of the few child stars of the time to maintain a successful career.[citation needed]
Although Duguay’s family reportedly originated in Marseilles, France, as wine merchants, she was recorded to have been born in Paterson, New Jersey.[2][3][note 1][4][note 2][5] Her family decided to move out to Hollywood when Duguay was only two,[citation needed][note 3][2] and she lived out the rest of her life there. Dugay was a graduate of Hollywood High School.[2]
Director Arthur Lubin once described Dugay as "a rare actress with a bottomless well of emotion."[2] Her filmography spans 40 years. She started her career when she was only six months old, modeling for baby talcum powder.[5] She made her Broadway debut at age seven in a play starring Walter Huston. Duguay began spelling her name Dugay around the age of 12, about the time that she landed the role of a young Maria Montez in Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves (1944). She was typecast as being able to play exotic-looking characters from an early age.
Universal-International signed Duguay in July 1951 when she was 19,[5] earning her a weekly salary of $1,250.[citation needed][note 4][6] She portrayed a Native American woman, Starfire, in the Western film Cattle Queen of Montana (1954) that starred Barbara Stanwyck and future President of the United States Ronald Reagan. Cattle Queen turned out to be one of her most recognizable roles, but Duguay also portrayed a Native American character, Minnehaha, in another film, Hiawatha (1952), in which she starred opposite Vince Edwards.
Her other credits include the film noir The People Against O'Hara (1951), opposite Spencer Tracy and James Arness, The Cimarron Kid (1952), Francis Covers the Big Town (1953), and The Domino Kid (1957).
She also played a Native American woman in an episode of Bronco (1959), a Warner Bros. television series starring Ty Hardin. Her last role was playing the Lone Woman in 1960 on the series Cheyenne.
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Duguay's first husband was Hal Paiss, with whom she had three children, son William C. Paiss, daughter Madeline J. Paiss, and son Matthew D. Paiss. She divorced Paiss in June 1966.
She married John F. Sheeley in Los Angeles in June 1967 and divorced him in October 1972. She married her third husband, Robert C. Anderson, who would survive her, on August 27, 1983.
Duguay died in Los Angeles on October 14, 1986, aged 54, from undisclosed causes.
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