Ann Dvorak (born Anna McKim; August 2, 1911 – December 10, 1979) was an American stage and film actress.
Asked how to pronounce her adopted surname, she told Literary Digest in 1936: "My fake name is properly pronounced vor'shack. The D remains silent. I have had quite a time with the name, having been called practically everything from Balzac to Bickelsrock."
She made her film debut when she was five years old in the silent film version of Ramona (1916), credited as "Baby Anna Lehr." She continued in children's roles in The Man Hater (1917) and Five Dollar Plate (1920), but then stopped acting in films. Her parents separated in 1916 and divorced in 1920; she did not see her father again until 13 years later, when she made a public plea to the press to help her find him.
At age 19, Dvorak eloped with Leslie Fenton, her English co-star from The Strange Love of Molly Louvain (1932), and they married on March 17, 1932. They left for a year-long honeymoon in spite of her contractual obligations to the studio, which led to a period of litigation and pay disputes during which she discovered she was making the same amount of money as the boy who played her son in Three on a Match.
Dvorak filed a lawsuit against Warner Bros. concerning their suspension of her contract. Leslie Fenton and Dvorak struggled to afford life without Ann's weekly income of $1,500 therefore by December 1935 the pair had engaged with legal attorneys who had met with Warner Bros. legal department. By December 17, 1935, the official complaint for declaration relief was sent. It charged that the studios had "repeatedly refused to permit said actress to further perform any services whatsover" and has "wholly failed, neglected and refused to pay said artists any sums whatsoever." Warner Bros. officially lifted her suspension on January 27, 1936 however the first court hearing was on 14 February 1936 and what followed was a series of questions surrounding her health and fitness to work. The court released her defeat on the conclusion that no breach of contract was committed.
She appeared as secretary Della Street to Donald Woods' Perry Mason in The Case of the Stuttering Bishop (1937). With her then-husband, Leslie Fenton, Dvorak traveled to England where she supported the war effort by working as an ambulance driver and acted in several British films. She appeared as a saloon singer in Abilene Town with Randolph Scott and Edgar Buchanan, released in 1946. The following year she adeptly handled comedy by giving an assured performance in Out of the Blue (1947). In 1948, Dvorak gave her only performance on Broadway theatre in The Respectful Prostitute.
Dvorak retired from the screen in 1952, when she married her final husband, Nicholas Wade, to whom she remained married until his death in 1975. She had no children. In 1959, she and her husband moved to Hawaii, which she had always loved.
Several weeks before her death, she suffered severe stomach pains. She was diagnosed with terminal cancer. She died on December 10, 1979, aged 68, in Honolulu. She was cremated and her ashes scattered off Waikiki.
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