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Dolores Gray
Biography
Dolores Gray was a tall, blonde, shapely actress-singer with a big contralto voice who starred in stage and screen musicals in the 1940s and '50s. She also appeared on radio and television and in nightclubs, and, in addition to her original cast and soundtrack recordings, recorded for two major labels and scored a handful of chart entries. If she never achieved the stardom of such contemporaries as Ethel Merman and Mary Martin, she was a sturdy second-echelon talent who worked steadily, especially in the theater, from the '40s to the '80s.

Gray spent her early years in Chicago. Her parents divorced when she was two, and five years later her father died. As a child, she was the victim of gang violence in her hometown, shot in the chest when caught in a crossfire, and, since the wound was deemed inoperable, she carried a bullet in her left lung for the rest of her life. After that incident, her mother moved her to Los Angeles, where she studied voice and, at 14, made her nightclub debut. When she was 15, she was discovered by Rudy Vallée, who put her on his nationally broadcast radio show. In August 1941, at 17, she appeared in the musical revue Fun for the Money in Los Angeles, and soon after she made her movie debut in a small, uncredited part in the drama Lady for a Night, playing a singer named Dolores; the film was released in early 1942.
Selected Discography