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Olympe Bradna

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Occupation
  
Dancer, actress

Years active
  
1921-1941


Name
  
Olympe Bradna

Role
  
Dancer

Olympe Bradna Picture of Olympe Bradna

Born
  
12 August 1920 (
1920-08-12
)
Paris, France

Died
  
November 5, 2012, Lodi, California, United States

Spouse
  
Douglas Woods Wilhoit (m. 1941–2012)

Movies
  
Say It in French, The Night of Nights, South of Pago Pago, International Squadron, Stolen Heaven, Knockout

Parents
  
Jeanne Bradna, Joseph Bradna

Similar People
  
Alfred E Green, Andrew L Stone, Lothar Mendes, Lewis Milestone, Lewis Seiler

Olympe Bradna - Biographie


Olympe Bradna (12 August 1920 – 5 November 2012) was a French dancer and actress, who emigrated to the United States where she lived for the rest of her life.

Contents

Olympe Bradna French dancer and actress Olympe Bradna 1937 Flickr

Early years

Olympe Bradna httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb6

Bradna was born in a dressing room in the Olympic Theatre in Paris, and her full name was Antoinette Olympe Bradna. Her father, Joseph Bradna, was a Bohemian Czech and her mother, Jana Bradna, was Austrian German. (Another source says that her mother was French.) They were circus performers before Olympe began her career. (Jana Bradna had been an opera singer before she joined her husband in the circus.) Her aunt also was in the circus, as an equestrienne. An item in a newspaper in 1936 reported that Bradna "followed a line of trained dogs on the stage in France, when she was only 18 months old."

Dancing

Olympe Bradna Olympe BradnaAnnex

Branda appeared at 18 months of age with her parents, who were world-famous bare back riders. By the time she was 8, Bradna "had attracted so much attention that agents were anxious to book her as a 'single.'" Her parents accompanied her to Sweden, Norway, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, and France as she danced. She performed "an acrobatic dance" in the Paris, France, production of Hit the Deck.

Olympe Bradna Olympe BradnaAnnex

Later she joined the Folies Bergère. She was with that group for eight months and danced at the French Casino in New York City for eight more months.

Olympe Bradna r96bradnajpg

She danced in Stockholm, New York City and other world capitals.

Film

Bradna started her film career in France, then, in 1934, moved to Hollywood, California where she saw her greatest success, [1] signing a seven-year contract with Paramount Pictures. In 1935, she was one of seven young women "named by Paramount ... as possible screen stars of the future." She was one of six newcomers selected by Paramount in December 1935 to appear in a planned musical. Her screen debut came in Three Cheers for Love (1936). In 1936, she appeared in College Holiday. Later, branching out from musicals to more serious films, she had roles in The Last Train from Madrid and Souls at Sea.

During her career she appeared in more than a dozen films and was seen opposite such notable film stars as Ronald Reagan, George Raft and Gary Cooper.

Early retirement, later years

In May, 1941 Olympe married Douglas Woods Wilhoit, at which point she retired from acting. For many years she and her family lived in Stockton, California, before ultimately settling in Lodi, California. Together, she and Douglas would have four children, five grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. They were married for over seventy years, with Douglas passing away in February, 2012, just nine months prior to Olympe's death. [2]

Death

Bradna died November 5, 2012, in Stockton, California, at age 92. (Another source says, "... Bradna died at her home in San Joaquin, California ...) She was survived by a son, two daughters, five grandchildren, and eight great-grandchildren.

Filmography

Actress
1941
International Squadron as
Jeanette
1941
Highway West as
Myra Abbott
1941
Knockout as
Angela Grinnelli
1940
South of Pago Pago as
Malia
1939
The Night of Nights as
Marie Alyce O'Farrell
1938
Say It in French as
Julie
1938
Stolen Heaven as
Steffi
1937
Souls at Sea as
Babsie
1937
The Last Train from Madrid as
Maria Ronda
1936
College Holiday as
Felice L'Hommedieu
1936
Three Cheers for Love as
Frenchy
1934
Flofloche as
Reine
1933
Roger la Honte as
Suzanne Laroque
Self
1941
Meet the Stars #5: Hollywood Meets the Navy (Documentary short) as
Self

References

Olympe Bradna Wikipedia