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Mozelle Britton

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Cause of death
  
Heart attack

Role
  
Movie actress

Alma mater
  
Pasadena Playhouse

Children
  
Mason Alan Dinehart

Years active
  
1930 to 1936

Siblings
  
Allamae Gingg

Name
  
Mozelle Britton


Mozelle Britton image1findagravecomphotos250photos200817258

Born
  
May 12, 1912 (
1912-05-12
)
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA

Resting place
  
Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California

Occupation
  
Film actress and journalist

Died
  
May 18, 1953, Los Angeles, California, United States

Spouse
  
Thomas W. Gosser (m. 1948–1953), Alan Dinehart (m. 1933–1944)

Movies
  
The Fighting Ranger, Paramount on Parade, Night Waitress, Rainbow on the River

Similar People
  
Alan Dinehart, Mason Alan Dinehart, A Edward Sutherland, Lew Landers, Victor Schertzinger

Mozelle Britton (May 12, 1912 – May 18, 1953) was an American movie actress and columnist. Born in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, she relocated to southern California when she was seventeen years old.

Contents

Film career

She studied at the Pasadena Playhouse and later appeared in films produced at Fox and Columbia Pictures.

Personal life

She also worked as an assistant casting director at Columbia, when she met and married actor Alan Dinehart in 1933. He was divorced at the time; the marriage lasted eleven years until his death. They had a son, Mason Alan Dinehart, also known as Alan Dinehart, III. In 1948, she wed Thomas W. Gosser, an engineer and inventor. They separated five months before her death. She turned to writing and produced a daily column carried in a number of California and out-of-state newspapers.

In April 1953, Britton sought police aid in finding her son, Alan, who she believed was eloping with his 16-year-old sweetheart. The pair was found the following day, unwed and broke, and returned to their homes.

This "Mason Alan Dinehart" was subsequently cast in thirty-four episodes as a young Bat Masterson on the ABC/Desilu television series, The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, starring Hugh O'Brian in the title role.

Death

Mozelle Britton died at the age of forty-one at the Good Samaritan Hospital in Los Angeles, where she had been under treatment for a heart ailment. According to her sister, Mrs. Allamae Gingg, Britton's death was hastened by overwork. She had been preparing a benefit show in San Diego for the American Cancer Society.

Mozelle and Alan Dinehart are entombed together at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California.

Mozelle Britton left her entire $60,000 estate to her mother, Ida Belle Britton. She left her son and second husband $1 each. In the case of her son, Britton wrote that she anticipated her mother would nevertheless "take care of his needs".

Filmography

Casting Department
1933
The Last Trail (casting assistant - uncredited)
1933
Arizona to Broadway (casting assistant - uncredited)
1933
It's Great to Be Alive (casting assistant - uncredited)
1933
Life in the Raw (casting assistant - uncredited)
1933
The Man Who Dared (casting assistant - uncredited)
1933
I Loved You Wednesday (casting assistant - uncredited)
Actress
1936
Night Waitress as
Waitress (uncredited)
1936
Rainbow on the River (uncredited)
1934
The Fighting Ranger as
Rose (as Mozelle Brittonne)
1930
Paramount on Parade as
Chorus Girl (uncredited)

References

Mozelle Britton Wikipedia