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Hazel Dawn

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Full Name
  
Hazel Tout

Role
  
Film actress

Name
  
Hazel Dawn


Years active
  
1914-1954

Other names
  
The Pink Lady

Siblings
  
Nancy Tout

Hazel Dawn httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
March 23, 1891 (
1891-03-23
)

Died
  
August 28, 1988, Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States

Spouse
  
Edward Gruelle (m. 1927–1941)

Movies
  
The Lone Wolf, Niobe, The Saleslady, Under Cover

Children
  
Dawn Gruwell Kaufman, Charles E. Gruwell

Similar People
  
James Kirkwood - Sr, Daniel Frohman, Herbert Brenon, Edward Buzzell, Edwin S Porter

Hazel Dawn Jr - Heaven On The RFD - 1951


Hazel Dawn (born Henrietta Hazel Tout; March 23, 1890 – August 28, 1988) was an American stage, film and television actress, and violinist. She was born to a Mormon family in Utah, and studied music in Europe where her father was a missionary. Dawn rose to fame as a stage actress in Ivan Caryll's 1911 Broadway production of The Pink Lady, which ran for over 300 performances and earned Dawn the eponymous nickname.

Contents

Hazel Dawn 2bpblogspotcomn294U6dxT3sTqBMsz44FIIAAAAAAA

She was also an original member of the Ziegfeld Follies in 1907, and would transition into film in 1914, appearing in a total of 15 feature films. She retired from acting in 1954, and spent the remainder of her life working as a casting executive. Dawn died at age 97 in New York City.

Hazel Dawn


Early life

Hazel Dawn Hazel Dawn Wikipedia

Dawn was born Henrietta Hazel Tout in Ogden, Utah in 1890. She went to Wales with her family at the age of eight when her father served as a Mormon missionary there. Dawn studied violin and voice in London, England; Paris, France, and Munich, Germany. She was especially impressed by the attentiveness of teachers she studied under in Paris. Her sister, Nancy Tout, was an opera singer who sang with the Opera Comique in Paris.

Stage work

Hazel Dawn Hazel Dawn Wikiwand

She met producer Ivan Caryll at a party in London. Caryll suggested the name Hazel Dawn, considering Tout to be "impossible." Dawn met composer Paul Rubens who offered her a part in Dear Little Denmark at the Prince of Wales Theatre (1909), where she made her theatrical début. She then starred in The Balkan Princess in 1910 as Olga. She achieved a great success with her performance in Ivan Caryll's The Pink Lady (1911). The show ran a total of 316 performances on Broadway and then toured, making Dawn famous, even though she was not the leading lady. In the production, she introduced My Beautiful Lady, which she sang and played on her violin. Subsequently she was known as "The Pink Lady" and the cocktail may have been named for her.

Hazel Dawn Hazel Dawn My Beautiful Lady

The Little Cafe (1913) was produced by the New Amsterdam Theatre and adapted from a book by C.M.S. McLellan. One reviewer found the play lacking when compared to The Pink Lady, but he enjoyed the song Just Because It's You. Dawn performed it in the third act. He wrote: Dawn was radiantly beautiful and sang far better than did other members of the cast. The Little Cafe was a place in Paris where large crowds assembled to admire the renowned beauty of the owner's daughter.

She starred in the operetta The Debutante (1914) at the National Theater in Washington, D.C. under the management of John C. Fisher. Harry B. Smith penned the book and play adaptation. The setting of the operetta is in London and Paris, with Dawn's depicting a young American girl who is pursued by a nobleman, who desires her fortune. She plays the violin during a scene where she runs away to Paris and makes her musical debut before an appreciative audience. In December, she appeared in The Debutante at the Knickerbocker Theatre. She continued performing for Ziegfeld until 1927, when she married.

Transition to film

She made her screen debut as Kate Shipley in One of Our Girls (1914). Her association with Famous Players-Lasky film company dated from this movie. Dawn followed this role with others in Niobe (1915), Clarissa (1915), and The Masqueraders (1915). Niobe is the screen version of a play written by Harry and Edward S. Paulton. She made The Fatal Card (1915) with Paramount Pictures.

In My Lady Incog (1916), Dawn played a female detective in a motion picture that is a mystery film, comedy, and a romance. Playing the character Nell Carroll, she co-starred with George Majeroni. In The Lone Wolf (1917), she acts with Bert Lytell in an adaptation of a novel by Louis Joseph Vance. Producer Herbert Brenon was responsible for adaptation to film from the book. Her last film credit would be in Margie in 1946.

Personal life

Dawn married Charles Edward Gruell, a mining engineer from Montana, in 1927. At the time, Gruell was purported to be one of the "richest men in the West." The couple had two children. Following Gruwell's death in 1941, Dawn worked in the casting department of J. Walter Thompson advertising agency. She retired in 1963.

Dawn made a claim for $4,643 against the London Theatre Company which filed for bankruptcy in August 1915. The company, which produced and staged plays, was located at 1476 Broadway. Dawn was once the mascot of both the U.S. Military Academy and the U.S. Naval Academy at one of their annual football games. At one point, West Point cadets tossed their hats onto the stage, one of them belonging to future U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

Death

Hazel Dawn died at the home of her daughter in Manhattan in 1988 at age 97. She was survived by her daughter, Dawn Gruwell Kaufman, and a son, Charles E. Gruwell, both of whom resided in New York City.

Legacy

Actress Ruth Gordon cited Dawn as her own inspiration for becoming an actress. Gordon, who was five years younger, predeceased Dawn, dying in 1985. A 14-year-old Adele Astaire, sister of Fred, saw Dawn's performance in The Pink Lady and idolized her, thinking her to be "the most lovely, graceful creature" she had ever seen.

In 1953, Dawn was portrayed by Kay Williams in the film The Actress.

Works cited

  • Hunter, James Michael (2013). Mormons and Popular Culture: The Global Influence of an American Phenomenon. Literature, Art, Media, Tourism, and Sports. II. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-313-39167-5. 
  • Slide, Anthony (2012). The Encyclopedia of Vaudeville. Univ. Press of Mississippi. ISBN 978-1-617-03250-9. 
  • Filmography

    Actress
    1921
    Devotion as
    Ruth Wayne
    1917
    National Red Cross Pageant as
    Undetermined role and episode
    1917
    The Lone Wolf as
    Lucy Shannon
    1916
    Under Cover as
    Ethel Cartwright
    1916
    The Feud Girl as
    Nell Haddon, 'The Spitfire'
    1916
    The Saleslady as
    Helen
    1916
    My Lady Incog. as
    Nell Carroll
    1915
    The Masqueraders as
    Dulcie Larendie
    1915
    The Fatal Card as
    Margaret Marrable
    1915
    The Heart of Jennifer as
    Jennifer Hale
    1915
    Gambier's Advocate as
    Clarissa
    1915
    Niobe as
    Niobe
    1914
    One of Our Girls as
    Kate Shipley
    Self
    1951
    Penthouse Party (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Episode #1.20 (1951) - Self

    References

    Hazel Dawn Wikipedia