Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /home3/dodecasaurus/itopmovies.com/Library/NG/Autoloader.php on line 113

Notice: fwrite(): write of 8192 bytes failed with errno=122 Disk quota exceeded in /home3/dodecasaurus/itopmovies.com/Application/Model/Filecache.php on line 75
Lois January


Lois January

Birthday:

10/05/1912

Place of birth:

McAllen, Texas, USA:

Biography:

Lois January was an American actress who performed small roles in several B-movies during the 1930s. Lois also had a secondary part in the Wizard Of Oz, towards the end of the movie, holding a Siamese cat in her arms. Toto jumps out of the basket of the hot air balloon that was supposed to take him, Dorothy and the Wizard away from the Land of Oz. January's first credited role was in 1933, in the film UM-PA. Her most famous role, however, is probably as the Emerald City manicurist in The Wizard of Oz who sings to Dorothy that "we can make a dimpled smile out of a frown". Although the character was unnamed, many fans believe it to be an incarnation of novel character Jellia Jamb. During the 1930s she played in numerous westerns as the heroine, usually opposite Johnny Mack Brown, Bob Steele, Tim McCoy and Bob Baker, among others. In 1935 she starred opposite Reb Russell in Arizona Badman, and in 1936 she starred with Brown in Rogue of the Range, and alongside Tim McCoy in Border Caballero. While under contract with Universal Pictures she continued to play heroine roles in westerns, and in 1937 she starred opposite Bob Baker in Courage of the West. The reissuing of the 1935 exploitation film The Pace That Kills (under the title Cocaine Fiends) would eventually lend January even more exposure, however limited. January's Broadway credits include High Kickers (1941) and Yokel Boy (1939). By the mid-1940s, her starring roles had waned but she continued to act in non-starring parts. In 1942 she was the "poster girl" for Chesterfield cigarettes. From 1960 through 1987 she played numerous small roles on television, to include roles on My Three Sons and Marcus Welby, M.D. Her last acting role was in 1987, on the television movie Double Agent. During the 1980s she attended several western film festivals.



Credits

Double Agent (1987)
as Dowager
The Richard Pryor Special? (1977)
as Older Woman
My Darling Daughters' Anniversary (1973)
as Nurse
The Little Shepherd Of Kingdom Come (1961)
as Mrs. Dean
Three Cheers for the Girls (1943)
as Brunette in Dressing Room (uncredited)
Courage of the West (1937)
as Beth Andrews
The Red Rope (1937)
as Betty Duncan
Moonlight on the Range (1937)
as Wanda Brooks
The Trusted Outlaw (1937)
as Molly Clark
Bar-Z Bad Men (1937)
as Beth Harvey
Lightnin' Crandall (1937)
as Sheila Shannon
The Roaming Cowboy (1937)
as Jeannie Morgan
One Rainy Afternoon (1936)
as Mr. Perelin's Secretary
Rogue of the Range (1936)
as Stella Lamb
Lightnin' Bill Carson (1936)
as Dolores Costello
Border Caballero (1936)
as Goldie Harris
Skull and Crown (1935)
as Barbara Franklin
The Pace That Kills (1935)
as Jane Bradford
Society Fever (1935)
as Julie Prouty
Stolen Harmony (1935)
as Girl in Sextette (uncredited)
Arizona Bad Man (1935)
as Lucy Dunston
Life Returns (1935)
as Nurse
The Human Side (1934)
as High School Girl (uncredited)
Tripping Through the Tropics (1934)
as Sally
Susie's Affairs (1934)
as Susie's Brunette Roommate
Let's Talk It Over (1934)
as Alice
Let’s Be Ritzy (1934)
as Stenographer
Uncertain Lady (1934)
as Maid (uncredited)
School for Romance (1934)
as Student
By Candlelight (1933)
as Ann
Umpa (1933)
as Nurse
Show Business (1932)
as Showgirl on Train (uncredited)
Too Many Women (1932)
as Girl in White Wool Hat (uncredited)