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Dorothy Dandridge
is the Oscar-nominated actress whose career as a leading lady was
curtailed by racism and personal problems in the 1950s. As teens she and
her sister Vivian were part of an act known as the Dandridge Sisters; they
were good enough to reach New York's famous Cotton Club, and from there
Dorothy worked her way into small movie parts in Hollywood. She married
dancer Harold Nicholas of the
Nicholas Brothers
in 1942, but it wasn't until they divorced in 1949 that Dandridge's career
really took off. A charismatic and striking beauty, she began touring as a
nightclub singer. Her big Hollywood break came when she starred as the
sultry heroine of the 1954 film Carmen Jones, an adaptation of the Bizet
opera Carmen. The film was a hit, and Dandridge became the first
African-American woman ever nominated for an Academy Award as best
actress. (Grace
Kelly won that year, for The Country
Girl.) Dandridge also began a stormy affair with the film's director, Otto
Preminger. Carmen Jones proved to be the high point of her career; leading
roles for black actresses were rare, and she refused to take the bit parts
and lesser roles that were offered. Her film career sputtered, though she
did star in the daring Island in the Sun (1957, with Dandridge sharing an
interracial romance with John Justin), and Porgy and Bess (1959, with
Dandridge and
Sidney Poitier in
the title roles). Her marriage to restaurant owner Jack Denison
(1959-1962) was troubled, and Dandridge declared bankruptcy in 1963. She
began to revive her nightclub career, but also began drinking heavily and
taking antidepressants. She died of an overdose of the antidepressant
Tofranil in 1965.
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