Betty Bartley

Betty Bartley Nannariello (November 12, 1922 September 10, 2013), known professionally as Betty Bartley, was an American television and film actor. She began her career as a child actor and continued in film, television, and stage performances including appearances in early talkies,[1] including The Laughing Lady.[2] Illustrator McClelland Barclay chose her in 1941 as the Ideal Streamlined Ziegfeld Girl.[3]

Betty Bartley
BornNovember 12, 1922
DiedSeptember 10, 2013
OccupationActress

Early life

Betty Bartley was born on November 12, 1922.[4] Her mother, Elenor Marie McGraw (1892–1956), was the daughter of Thomas and Elizabeth McGraw of Seneca, New York.[5][6] Her mother first married Hugh Bartley and lived in Belle Harbor, Queens,[7] and then married Charles Devaney in 1933.[5][6][8] She lived her married life in Belle Harbor and the Rockaways, New York until her death in October 1956.[5][6] Bartley began acting as a child,[1] appearing in the talkie film The Laughing Lady in 1929.[2]

Career

In 1939 and 1940, she appeared in the Broadway musical revue The Streets of Paris.[9] Bartley was then a dancer in an Ed Wynn Broadway production in 1941.[3] She starred in a production of Three Men on a Horse at the Westchester Playhouse in 1946.[10] Her television performances before 1951 were on the shows Studio One, Man Against Crime, and Sure As Fate. In 1951, she was in the Broadway play Twentieth Century.[11] She was among the cast of the traveling production of Twin Beds in 1954.[12] In 1959, she starred in Bert Lahr's stage production of DuBarry Was a Lady.[13]

Over the course of her career, she had appeared in films and stage productions with Maurice Chevalier, Fredric March, Ed Wynn, Nancy Carroll, and Abbott and Costello.[14]

Personal life

In 1946, Bartley married MGM stage and story editor Howard Hoyt,[15] with whom she had a son, William B. Hoyt.[1] Her second husband was director Walter Futter in 1955. The following year, Bartley gave birth to a baby who lived only eight hours. Their marriage ended in 1956,[16] and they began divorce proceedings in 1957.[17] Walter Futter died in 1958, while the couple was still separated.[18] In 1959 Bartley was said to lead a firm that made cinemascope lenses. She married advertising executive Edgar Krass in September 1959,[5] and they had a son in June 1960.[19][20] Their sons are Edgar B. Krass and Richard B. Krass.[1] By 1985,[20] she married John Nannariello, who died in 1993.[21]

Betty Bartley died in St. Petersburg, Florida in 2013.[22]

References

  1. "Obituaries: Betty Bartley Nannariello". Tampa Bay Times. September 15, 2013. p. B5. Retrieved May 23, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
  2. "Ruth Catterton in Brilliant Start of Rivoli Talkie". The Central New Jersey Home News. March 28, 1930. p. 31. Retrieved May 23, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
  3. "Broadway". The Pittsburgh Press at Newspapers.com. January 30, 1941. p. 15. Retrieved May 23, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
  4. "Betty B. Nannariello", Voter Registration Lists, Public Record Filings, Historical Residential Records, and Other Household Database Listings, St. Petersburg, Florida, 1993
  5. "Comedienne Weds Adman". Daily News. September 18, 1959. p. 536. Retrieved May 23, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
  6. "Obituaries: Mrs. Charles Devaney" (PDF). The Wave. Rockaway Beach. October 11, 1956. Retrieved May 23, 2018.
  7. "Neponsit-Belle Harbor Rockaway Park" (PDF). The Wave. Rockaway Beach. March 20, 1958. Retrieved May 23, 2018.
  8. "Marie McGraw married Charles Devaney on February 14, 1933", Index to New York City Marriages, 1866-1937
  9. Dan Dietz (29 March 2018). The Complete Book of 1930s Broadway Musicals. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 579. ISBN 978-1-5381-0277-0.
  10. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. (August 10, 1946). "On the Silo Circuit". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. p. 47.
  11. "Radio and Television". The Pittsburgh Press. January 23, 1951. p. 35. Retrieved May 23, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
  12. "Farce Revival of 'Twin Beds' at the American Next Week". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. January 17, 1954. p. 87. Retrieved May 23, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
  13. "Siren". Daily News. New York, New York. August 19, 1959. p. 15. Retrieved May 23, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
  14. "'A Tree Grows in Brookln' to be staged at Corning". Elmira Advertiser. July 3, 1952. p. 2. Retrieved May 23, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
  15. "Howard Hoyt, MGM'a stage and story editor (in the East) and actress Betty Bartley are honeymooning". newspapers.com. Wilkes-Barre Times. March 4, 1946. Retrieved 20 May 2018.
  16. "Walter Winchell Says: Broadway Spotlight". Clarion-Ledger. June 8, 1956. p. 8. Retrieved May 23, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
  17. "Walter Winchell". The Cincinnati Enquirer. May 15, 1957. p. 25. Retrieved May 23, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
  18. "Death in Mystery Ends Marital Row". Daily News. March 5, 1958. p. 3. Retrieved May 23, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
  19. "Big Towners Are Talking About". The Greenville News. June 16, 1960. p. 4. Retrieved May 23, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
  20. "Krass-Salvador". Tampa Bay Times. September 9, 1985. p. 35. Retrieved May 23, 2018 via Newspapers.com.
  21. "John Nannariello". Tampa Bay Times. April 27, 1993. p. 126. Retrieved May 23, 2018n via Newspapers.com.
  22. "Betty Bartley Nannariello - Obituary". Saint Petersburg Times. September 15, 2013.
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