Gwen Gaze

Gwen Gaze

Known for: Acting
Biography: 1909-08-30
Deathday: 2010-08-29 (100 years old)

Biography

Hollywood actress of the Thirties and Forties who played Pamela Armitage opposite John Wayne in I Cover the War (1937) and enjoyed starring roles in a series of Westerns with the likes of William “Hopalong Cassidy” Boyd. Born in Melbourne, Australia, she emigrated to America, where she studied at Pasadena College. Then moved to London to study at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts. Starred in The Women (1938) on Broadway before heading to Hollywood’s Paramount Pictures, where she featured in The Secret of Treasure Island (1938), House of Errors (1942), with comedian Harry Langdon, and with Brenda Joyce in Thumbs Up (1943). Later had a part-time radio show and appeared on stage and television.

Gwen GazeGwen Gaze

Information

Known For
Acting

Gender
Female

Birthday
1909-08-30

Deathday
2010-08-29 (100 years old)

Birth Place
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Citizenships
Australia

Also Known As
Gwen Steinhart, Alta Gwendolyn Gaze

This article uses material from Wikipedia.

Last updated:

Robert E. Cline
Gwen Gaze,
Robert E. Cline worked together with Gwen Gaze in:
4 Movies
George W. Weeks
Gwen Gaze,
George W. Weeks worked together with Gwen Gaze in:
4 Movies
S. Roy Luby
Gwen Gaze,
S. Roy Luby worked together with Gwen Gaze in:
4 Movies
Elmer
Gwen Gaze,
Elmer worked together with Gwen Gaze in:
4 Movies
Max Terhune
Gwen Gaze,
Max Terhune worked together with Gwen Gaze in:
4 Movies
John 'Dusty' King
Gwen Gaze,
John 'Dusty' King worked together with Gwen Gaze in:
4 Movies
Carl Mathews
Gwen Gaze,
Carl Mathews worked together with Gwen Gaze in:
3 Movies
George Chesebro
Gwen Gaze,
George Chesebro worked together with Gwen Gaze in:
3 Movies
Ray Corrigan
Gwen Gaze,
Ray Corrigan worked together with Gwen Gaze in:
3 Movies
  • Gwen Gaze
    Gwen Gaze
  • Filmography
  • Information
  • Related Persons
Social Media
X
Facebook
Telegram
Download
iOS Application
Made in Ukraine 🇺🇦
Copyright © MovieFit 2018 – 2024
All external content remains the property of its respective owner.