Doris Carson(1912-1995)
- Actress
One of the bright lights of the 1930s musical stage, actress/singer
Doris Carson was the granddaughter of "The Ravels," a popular 19th
century vaudeville team, and was the daughter of character actor James
B. Carson. Her career started when she understudied Ruby Keeler in
Florenz Ziegfeld Jr's musical "Show Girl" (1929) with music by the
Gershwins. A two-week substitution for Miss Keeler led to important
roles in Gershwin's "Strike Up the Band" (1930), Kern & Harbach's "The
Cat and the Fiddle" (1931) and Rodgers & Hart's "On Your Toes" (1936)
in which she played Frankie Frayne. In London's West end she appeared
in Cole Porter's "Nymph Errant" (1933). In 1940 Carson appeared with
Edward Everett Horton in "Springtime for Henry," directed by Henry
Levin at the Bass Rocks Theatre in Gloucester, Massachusetts. Although
she was a favorite on Broadway, she never succeeded in the film
industry.