Phyllis Brooks

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Phyllis Brooks (July 18, 1915 – August 1, 1995) was an American actress and model.[1] She was born Phyllis Seiler in Boise, Idaho.[2] Some sources have also inaccurately cited 1914 as her year of birth, but 1915 is the correct year according to Social Security records.

Career

Modeling

File:Phyllis Brooks wearing a fur-lined coat and fedora.jpg
Brooks wearing a coat and fedora (1937)

Brooks was a model for two years before progressing to a career in film. She stated, "I started posing for photographers as a lark, and it was a lot of fun."[3]

She had been known as the "Ipana Toothpaste Girl", due to her work for that product.[4]

Film

Initially known as Mary Brooks, she began her career in films in 1934[4] at age 20, in I've Been Around.[5] Brooks, who had about 30 performances in films, was a B-movie leading lady during the 1930s and 1940s, with roles in such films as In Old Chicago (1937), Little Miss Broadway (1938) and The Shanghai Gesture (1941).

File:Cesar Romero and Phyllis Brooks.jpg
Phyllis Brooks with actor Cesar Romero, c. 1940

She appeared in Sidney Toler's Charlie Chan series, in the Shirley Temple films Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm and in Little Miss Broadway.[6]

Stage

On Broadway, Brooks appeared in Stage Door (1936–37), Panama Hattie (1940–42), The Night Before Christmas (1941), and Round Trip (1945).[7]

Wartime activities

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File:Robert Lowery-Phyllis Brooks in High Powered.jpg
Robert Lowery and Brooks on High Powered (1945)
File:Gary Cooper Phyllis Brooks Una Merkel, Brisbane 1943 (1).jpg
Phyllis Brooks (middle) with Gary Cooper and Una Merkel at a Brisbane press conference on their way to entertain the troops (1943)

Brooks was reported (UK Sunday Telegraph December 1942) as being president of Parties Unlimited Inc. in an article about Hollywood at war. Along with actress Una Merkel and accompanied by film star Gary Cooper, Brooks was the first civilian woman to travel to the Pacific theater of war during World War II on a USO tour.

Personal life

Brooks was engaged at one time to Cary Grant.[8] She married Torbert Macdonald on June 23, 1945, in Tarrytown, New York.[9]

Brooks moved east to Cambridge, Massachusetts with her new husband in 1945 so that he could complete his studies at Harvard Law School. He had been a Harvard football captain and a decorated PT boat captain in World War II. Macdonald died in office in 1976.[10][11] they had 4 children

Death

Brooks died on August 1, 1995, in Cape Neddick, Maine, aged 80.[5]

Partial filmography

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References

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  4. a b Katz, Ephraim (1979). The Film Encyclopedia: The Most Comprehensive Encyclopedia of World Cinema in a Single Volume. Perigee Books; Template:ISBN, pg. 170.
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External links

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