Marjorie Reynolds


As a child actress, Marjorie Goodspeed was featured in such silent films as Scaramouche (1923). As a preteen, she acted and danced under the name Marjorie Moore in #92;musicals like Collegiate (1935). Billed as Marjorie Reynolds from 1937 onward, she played bits in A-pictures like Gone With the Wind (1939) and co-starred in several bread-and-butter epics produced by such minor studios as Monogram and Republic. Her first leading role of consequence was as the dauntless girl reporter in Monogram's Mr. Wong series. Lightening her hair to blonde, Reynolds was signed by Paramount in 1942, getting off to a good start in Holiday Inn as the girl to whom Bing Crosby sings "White Christmas." She was also shown to good advantage in the Fritz Lang #92;thriller Ministry of Fear (1944) before Paramount dropped her option in 1946. Her oddest assignment in her immediate post-Paramount years was as a Revolutionary-era ghost in Abbott and Costello's The Time of Their Lives (1946). In 1953, she replaced Rosemary DeCamp in the role of Mrs. Riley in the popular #92;sitcom The Life of Riley, remaining with the series until its cancellation in 1958. After this lengthy engagement, Marjorie Reynolds was seen in character parts in such TV series as Leave It to Beaver and Our Man Higgins. Reynolds died of congestive heart failure in Manhattan Beach, CA, at the age of 76. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

  • Also Credited As:
    Majorie Goodspeed, Marjorie Moore
  • Born:
    August 12, 1921 in Buhl, Idaho
  • Died:
    February 1, 1997.
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Dancer
Milestones
  • 1923 Film debut as child in "Trilby"
  • 1924 Made last film as a child performer, "Revelation"
  • 1929 Stage debut as a dancer in "Rose of Pixieland"
  • 1933 Appeared as a dancer in the feature "College Humour"
  • 1937 Changed her name to Marjorie Reynolds
  • 1942 Career breakthrough performance in "Holiday Inn" opposite Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire
  • 1953 Played Peg Riley on the NBC comedy TV series "The Life of Riley"
  • Moved to Los Angeles, California, as a child
  • Performed as a dancer-actress under the name Marjorie Moore during the 1930s
  • Performed in several silent films in the early 1920s

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