Janet Blair

Actress

Popular As Martha Jane Lafferty

Birthday April 23, 1921

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Altoona, Pennsylvania, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2007-2-19, Los Angeles, California, U.S. (86 years old)

Nationality United States

Height 5' 4" (1.63 m)

#47217 Most Popular

1921

Janet Blair (born Martha Janet Lafferty; April 23, 1921 – February 19, 2007) was an American big-band singer who later became a popular film and television actress.

Janet Blair was born Martha Janet Lafferty on April 23, 1921 in Altoona, Pennsylvania, the daughter of musically oriented parents.

Her father led the choir and sang solos in his church, and her mother played both piano and organ.

She had a brother, Fred Jr., and a sister, Louise.

Blair's showbusiness career began as a featured singer in the Hal Kemp Orchestra.

1940

In the late 1940s, she had star billing in the crime drama I Love Trouble and the comedy The Fuller Brush Man (both 1948).

1941

She began her film career in 1941 under contract to Columbia Pictures.

1942

She appeared in a series of successful films, although she may be best remembered for playing Rosalind Russell's sister in My Sister Eileen (1942) and Rita Hayworth's friend in Tonight and Every Night (1945).

On radio, Blair costarred with George Raft in "Broadway," a 1942 episode of Lux Radio Theatre on CBS.

Blair recorded an album of standards entitled Flame Out! for the Dico label, which included ballads such as "Don't Explain" and "Then You've Never Been Blue".

1943

Blair married musical arranger and conductor Louis Ferdinand Busch on July 12, 1943 in Lake Arrowhead, California.

They had met four years earlier when Blair sang for Hal Kemp's band and Busch was Kemp's pianist and arranger.

1944

During World War II, she appeared as the pin-up girl in the March 1944 issue of Yank, the Army Weekly magazine.

Blair was a Republican and campaigned for Thomas Dewey in the 1944 presidential election.

1947

In the 1947 film The Fabulous Dorseys, Blair returned to her musical roots, portraying a singer.

She was dropped by Columbia in 1947 and did not return to film for several years.

"I gave up Hollywood and I gave up pictures" she explained.

"All I got were princess parts. A girl gets tired of being a princess all of the time."

1950

In 1950, Blair took the lead role of Nellie Forbush in the American touring production of the stage musical South Pacific, with more than 1,200 performances in three years.

During the tour, she married her second husband, producer-director Nick Mayo, and they later had two children.

They divorced in March 1950.

Two years later, Blair wed television producer Nick Mayo, with whom she later had two children, Andrew and Amanda.

1953

Blair also starred in the Broadway comedy A Girl Can Tell in 1953.

1955

In 1955, Blair starred as Venus in a live production of One Touch of Venus on NBC.

1956

She was a cast member during the 1956–1957 season on Caesar's Hour, a comedy-variety series starring Sid Caesar.

1957

She appeared as a guest panelist on the June 9, 1957 episode of What's My Line?.

Blair costarred with Henry Fonda in The Smith Family, an ABC comedy-drama series.

1958

Blair appeared on television in various variety-show guest appearances and served as Dinah Shore's summer replacement on the Dinah Shore Chevy Show in 1958.

1962

In 1962, she appeared in a rare dramatic role in the British horror film Night of the Eagle and played the wife of Tony Randall in the comedy Boys' Night Out with James Garner and Kim Novak.

1971

The couple remained together for 19 years until their divorce in 1971.

1991

Her last performance on television was in a 1991 episode of Murder, She Wrote.

2007

On February 19, 2007, Blair died at the age of 85 at St. John's Health Center in Santa Monica, California from complications of pneumonia.

She was cremated.