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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Early life  





2 Career  



2.1  Paramount  





2.2  Warner Bros.  





2.3  Oomph girl  





2.4  Stardom  





2.5  Freelance star  





2.6  Universal  





2.7  Later career  







3 Personal life  





4 Death  





5 Filmography  





6 Radio appearances  





7 References  





8 External links  














Ann Sheridan






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Ann Sheridan
Sheridan in 1934
Born

Clara Lou Sheridan


(1915-02-21)February 21, 1915
DiedJanuary 21, 1967(1967-01-21) (aged 51)
Resting placeHollywood Forever Cemetery
Occupations
  • Actress
  • singer
  • Years active1934–1967
    Spouses

    (m. 1936; div. 1938)

    (m. 1942; div. 1943)

    (m. 1966)

    Clara Lou "Ann" Sheridan (February 21, 1915 – January 21, 1967) was an American actress and singer. She is best known for her roles in the films San Quentin (1937) with Humphrey Bogart, Angels with Dirty Faces (1938) with James Cagney and Bogart, They Drive by Night (1940) with George Raft and Bogart, City for Conquest (1940) with Cagney and Elia Kazan, The Man Who Came to Dinner (1942) with Bette Davis, Kings Row (1942) with Ronald Reagan, Nora Prentiss (1947), and I Was a Male War Bride (1949) with Cary Grant.

    Early life

    [edit]

    Clara Lou Sheridan was born in Denton, Texas, on February 21, 1915, the youngest of five children (Kitty, Pauline, Mabel, and George) of garage mechanic[1][2] George W. Sheridan and Lula Stewart (née Warren).[3][4] According to Sheridan, her father was a grandnephew of Civil War Union general Philip Sheridan.[5][6]

    She was active in dramatics at Denton High School and at North Texas State Teachers College. She also sang with the college's stage band and played basketball on the North Texas women's basketball team.[7] Then, in 1933, Sheridan won the prize of a bit part in an upcoming Paramount film, Search for Beauty,[8] when her sister Kitty entered Sheridan's photograph into a beauty contest.[9]

    Career

    [edit]

    Paramount

    [edit]

    After the release of Search for Beauty in 1934, Paramount put the 19-year-old under contract at a starting salary of $75 a week (equivalent to $1,710 in 2023[citation needed]), where she played mostly uncredited bit parts for the next two years.[10] She can be glimpsed in the following 1934 films, and if credited, as Clara Lou Sheridan: Bolero, Come On Marines!, Murder at the Vanities, Shoot the Works, Kiss and Make-Up with Cary Grant, The Notorious Sophie Lang, College Rhythm (directed by Norman Taurog whom Sheridan admired), Ladies Should Listen with Cary Grant, You Belong to Me, Wagon Wheels, The Lemon Drop Kid with Lee Tracy, Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch, Ready for Love, Limehouse Blues with George Raft and Anna May Wong, and One Hour Late.

    Along with fellow contractees, Sheridan worked with Paramount's drama coach Nina Moise and performed on the studio lot in such plays as The Milky Way and The Pursuit of Happiness. While in The Milky Way, Paramount decided to change her first name from Clara Lou to the same as her character Ann.[11]

    Sheridan was then cast in the film Behold My Wife! (1934) at the behest of director and friend Mitchell Leisen. The role provided two standout scenes for the actress, including one in which her character commits suicide, to which she attributed Paramount's keeping her under contract.[12]

    She continued with bit parts in Enter Madame (1935) with Elissa Landi and Cary Grant, Home on the Range (1935) with Randolph Scott and Evelyn Brent, and Rumba (1935) with George Raft and Carole Lombard, until her first lead role in Car 99 (1935), with Fred MacMurray.[13] "No acting, it was just playing the lead, that's all", she later said.[12] She next had a support role as the romantic interest in Rocky Mountain Mystery (1935), a Randolph Scott Western.

    She then appeared in Mississippi (1935) with Bing Crosby and W. C. Fields, The Glass Key (1935) with George Raft in a brief speaking role for which she was billed as "Nurse" in the cast list at the end of the film, and (having one line) The Crusades (1935) with Loretta Young. In her last picture under her deal with Paramount, the studio loaned her out to Poverty Row production company Talisman to make The Red Blood of Courage (1935) with Kermit Maynard. After this, Paramount declined to renew her contract.[14] Sheridan made Fighting Youth (1935) at Universal and then signed a contract with Warner Bros. in 1936.

    Warner Bros.

    [edit]
    Sheridan and James CagneyinAngels with Dirty Faces (1938)

    Sheridan's career prospects began to improve at her new studio. Her early films for Warner Bros. included Sing Me a Love Song (1936); Black Legion (1937) with Humphrey Bogart; The Great O'Malley (1937) with Pat O'Brien and Bogart, her first real break;[15] San Quentin (1937), with O'Brien and Bogart, singing for the first time in a film; and Wine, Women and Horses (1937) with Barton MacLane.[16]

    Sheridan moved into B picture leads: The Footloose Heiress (1937); Alcatraz Island (1937) with John Litel; and She Loved a Fireman (1937) with Dick Foran for director John Farrow. She was a lead in The Patient in Room 18 (1937) and its sequel Mystery House (1938). Sheridan was in Little Miss Thoroughbred (1938) with Litel for Farrow and supported Dick PowellinCowboy from Brooklyn (1938).[17]

    Universal borrowed her for a support role in Letter of Introduction (1938) at the behest of director John M. Stahl. For Farrow, she was in Broadway Musketeers (1938), a remake of Three on a Match (1932).

    Sheridan's notices in Letter of Introduction impressed Warner Bros. executives and she began to get roles in better quality pictures at her own studio starting with Angels with Dirty Faces (1938), wherein she played James Cagney's love interest; Bogart, O'Brien and the Dead End Kids had supporting roles. The film was a big hit and critically acclaimed.

    Sheridan was reunited with the Dead End Kids in They Made Me a Criminal (1938) starring John Garfield. She was third-billed in the Western Dodge City (1939), playing a saloon owner opposite Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland. The film was another success.

    Oomph girl

    [edit]
    Sheridan in 1940

    In March 1939, Warner Bros. announced Sheridan had been voted by a committee of 25 men as the actress with the most "oomph" in America.[18] "Oomph" was described as "a certain indefinable something that commands male interest".[18]

    She received as many as 250 marriage proposals from fans in a single week.[19] Sheridan reportedly loathed the sobriquet that made her a popular pin-up girl in the early 1940s.[20][21][22] However, she expressed in a February 25, 1940, news story distributed by the Associated Press that she no longer "bemoaned the "oomph" tag."[23] She continued, "But I'm sorry now. I know if it hadn't been for 'oomph' I'd probably still be in the chorus."[23]

    This was later referenced and spoofed on the 1941 animated short Hollywood Steps Out.[24]

    Stardom

    [edit]

    Sheridan co-starred with Dick Powell in Naughty but Nice (1939) and played a wacky heiress in Winter Carnival (1939).

    She was top billed in Indianapolis Speedway (1939) with O'Brien and Angels Wash Their Faces (1939) with the Dead End Kids and Ronald Reagan. Castle on the Hudson (1940) put her opposite Garfield and O'Brien.

    Magazine ad for The Doughgirls (1944)

    Sheridan's first real starring vehicle was It All Came True (1940), a musical comedy costarring Bogart and Jeffrey Lynn. She introduced the song "Angel in Disguise".

    Sheridan and Cagney were reunited in Torrid Zone (1940) with O'Brien in support. She was with George Raft, Bogart and Ida LupinoinThey Drive by Night (1940), a smash-hit trucking melodrama. Sheridan was back with Cagney for City for Conquest (1941) and then made Honeymoon for Three (1941), a comedy with George Brent.

    Sheridan in 1950

    Sheridan did two lighter films: Navy Blues (1941), a musical comedy, and The Man Who Came to Dinner (1942) with Bette Davis, wherein she played a character modeled on Gertrude Lawrence. She then made Kings Row (1942), in which she received top billing playing opposite Ronald Reagan, Robert Cummings, and Betty Field. It was a major success and one of Sheridan's most memorable films.

    Sheridan and Reagan were reunited for Juke Girl (1942) released about six weeks after Kings Row. She was in the war film Wings for the Eagle (1942) and made a comedy with Jack Benny, George Washington Slept Here (1943). She played a Norwegian resistance fighter in Edge of Darkness (1943) with Errol Flynn and was one of the many Warner Bros. stars who had cameos in Thank Your Lucky Stars (1943).

    She was the heroine of a novel, Ann Sheridan and the Sign of the Sphinx, written by Kathryn Heisenfelt and published by Whitman Publishing Company in 1943. While the heroine of the story was identified as a famous actress, the stories were entirely fictitious. The story was probably written for a young teenaged audience and is reminiscent of the adventures of Nancy Drew. It is part of a series known as "Whitman Authorized Editions", 16 books published between 1941 and 1947 that always featured a film actress as heroine.[25]

    Sheridan was given the lead in the musical Shine On, Harvest Moon (1944), playing Nora Bayes, opposite Dennis Morgan.[26] She was in a comedy, The Doughgirls (1944).

    Sheridan was absent from screens for over a year, touring with the USO to perform in front of the troops as far afield as China.[27] She returned in One More Tomorrow (1946) with Morgan. She had an excellent role in the noir Nora Prentiss (1947), which was a hit. It was followed by The Unfaithful (1948), a remake of The Letter, and Silver River (1948), a Western melodrama with Errol Flynn.

    Leo McCarey borrowed her to support Gary CooperinGood Sam (1948). She was meant to star in Flamingo Road.[28] She then left Warner Bros., saying: "I wasn't at all satisfied with the scripts they offered me."[29]

    Freelance star

    [edit]

    Her role in I Was a Male War Bride (1949), directed by Howard Hawks and starring Cary Grant, was another success. In 1950, she appeared on the ABC musical television series Stop the Music.

    She made Stella (1950), a comedy with Victor Mature at Fox.

    In April 1949, she announced she wanted to produce Second Lady, a film based on a story by Eleanore Griffin.[29][30] She was going to make My Forbidden Past (originally titled Carriage Entrance) at RKO.[29] They fired her and Sheridan sued for $250,000 (equivalent to $3.2 million today)[31] The New York Times reported the amount as $350,000 ($4.5 million today).[32] Sheridan ultimately won $55,162 ($710,000 today).[33]

    Universal

    [edit]

    Sheridan made Woman on the Run (1950), a noir also starring Dennis O'Keefe which she produced. She wanted to make a film called Her Secret Diary.[34]

    Woman on the Run was distributed by Universal, and Sheridan signed a contract with that studio. While there, she made Steel Town (1952), Just Across the Street (1952), and Take Me to Town (1953), a comedy with Sterling Hayden that was the first film directed by Douglas Sirk in the United States.

    Later career

    [edit]
    Wagon Train in 1962
    Pistols 'n' Petticoats

    Sheridan starred with Glenn FordinAppointment in Honduras (1953), directed by Jacques Tourneur. She appeared opposite Steve CochraninCome Next Spring (1956) and was one of several stars in MGM's The Opposite Sex (1956), a remake of The Women starring June Allyson, Joan Collins, Dolores Gray, Sheridan and Ann Miller. Her last film, Woman and the Hunter (1957), was shot in Africa.[35]

    She performed in stage tours of Kind Sir (1958) and Odd Man In (1959), and The Time of Your Life at the Brussels World Fair in 1958. In all three shows, she acted with Scott McKay, whom she later married.[36][37]

    In 1962, she played the lead in the Western series Wagon Train episode titled "The Mavis Grant Story".

    In the mid-1960s, Sheridan appeared on the NBC soap opera Another World.[35]

    Her final role was as Henrietta Hanks in the television comedy Western series Pistols 'n' Petticoats, which was filmed while she became increasingly ill in 1966, and was broadcast on CBS on Saturday nights.[38] The 19th episode of the series, "Beware the Hangman", aired as scheduled on the same day that she died in 1967.[39]

    For her contributions to the motion picture industry, Ann Sheridan has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7024 Hollywood Boulevard.[40]

    Personal life

    [edit]

    Sheridan married actor Edward Norris August 16, 1936, in Ensenada, Mexico.[41] They separated a year later and divorced in 1939. On January 5, 1942, she married fellow Warner Bros. star George Brent, who co-starred with her in Honeymoon for Three (1941); they divorced exactly one year later. Following her divorce from Brent, she had a long-term relationship with publicist Steve Hannagan that lasted until his death in 1953. Hannagan bequeathed Sheridan $218,399 (equivalent to $2.5 million today).[42]

    Sheridan engaged in a romantic affair with Mexican actor Rodolfo Acosta, with whom she appeared in 1953's Appointment in Honduras. She and the married Acosta shared an apartment in Mexico City for several years, and Sheridan was charged with criminal adultery in Mexican federal court in October, 1956, following an accusation by Acosta's wife, Jeanine Cohen Acosta. Mexican authorities issued a warrant for Sheridan's arrest.[43][44] Nothing came of the criminal charges, and the relationship ended c. 1958.[citation needed]

    On June 5, 1966, Sheridan married actor Scott McKay, who was with her when she died, seven months later.[45][9]

    Sheridan supported Thomas E. Dewey in the 1948 presidential elections.[46]

    Death

    [edit]

    In 1966, Sheridan began starring in a new television series, a Western-themed comedy called Pistols 'n' Petticoats. She became ill during the filming and died of esophageal cancer[47] with massive liver metastases at age 51 on January 21, 1967, in Los Angeles. She was cremated and her ashes were in the private vault at Chapel of the Pines CrematoryinLos Angeles until they were reinterned in a niche in the Chapel Columbarium at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in 2005.[48]

    Filmography

    [edit]
    Year Film Role Notes
    1934 Search for Beauty Dallas Beauty Winner uncredited
    1934 Bolero Minor Role uncredited
    1934 Come On Marines! Loretta
    1934 Murder at the Vanities Earl Carroll Girl uncredited
    1934 Many Happy Returns Chorine uncredited
    1934 Shoot the Works Hanratty's Secretary uncredited
    1934 Kiss and Make Up Beautician
    1934 The Notorious Sophie Lang Mannequin uncredited
    1934 Ladies Should Listen Adele
    1934 You Belong to Me Wedding Party Guest uncredited
    1934 Wagon Wheels Young Lady uncredited
    1934 The Lemon Drop Kid Minor Role uncredited
    1934 Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch Town Girl uncredited
    1934 College Rhythm Chorine / Gloves Salesgirl uncredited
    1934 Ready for Love Priscilla at Basket Social uncredited
    1934 Star Night at the Cocoanut Grove Sands of the Desert Model Short; uncredited
    1934 Behold My Wife Mary White
    1934 Limehouse Blues Minor Role uncredited
    1934 One Hour Late Girl uncredited
    1935 Enter Madame Flora's Shipboard Friend
    1935 Home on the Range Singer
    1935 Rumba Chorus Girl uncredited
    1935 Car 99 Mary Adams
    1935 Rocky Mountain Mystery Rita Ballard
    1935 Mississippi Schoolgirl uncredited
    1935 Red Blood of Courage Elizabeth Henry
    1935 The Glass Key Nurse
    1935 The Crusades Christian Slave Girl uncredited
    1935 Hollywood Extra Girl Genevieve Documentary short
    1935 Fighting Youth Carol Arlington
    1937 Sing Me a Love Song
    1937 Black Legion Betty Grogan
    1937 The Great O'Malley Judy Nolan
    1937 San Quentin May Kennedy aka May De Villiers
    1937 The Footloose Heiress Kay Allyn
    1937 Wine, Women and Horses Valerie
    1937 Alcatraz Island Flo Allen
    1937 She Loved a Fireman Marjorie "Margie" Shannon
    1938 The Patient in Room 18 Sarah Keate
    1938 Mystery House Sarah Keate
    1938 Out Where the Stars Begin Herself Short; uncredited
    1938 Little Miss Thoroughbred Madge Perry Morgan
    1938 Cowboy from Brooklyn Maxine Chadwick
    1938 Letter of Introduction Lydia Hoyt
    1938 Broadway Musketeers Fay Reynolds Dowling
    1938 Angels with Dirty Faces Laury Martin
    1939 They Made Me a Criminal Goldie
    1939 Dodge City Ruby Gilman
    1939 Naughty but Nice Zelda Manion
    1939 Indianapolis Speedway "Frankie" Merrick
    1939 Winter Carnival Jill Baxter
    1939 The Angels Wash Their Faces Joy Ryan
    1940 Castle on the Hudson Kay
    1940 It All Came True Sarah Jane Ryan
    1940 Torrid Zone Lee Donley
    1940 They Drive by Night Cassie Hartley
    1940 City for Conquest Peggy Nash
    1941 Honeymoon for Three Anne Rogers
    1941 Navy Blues Marge Jordan
    1942 The Man Who Came to Dinner Lorraine Sheldon
    1942 Kings Row Randy Monaghan
    1942 Juke Girl Lola Mears
    1942 Wings for the Eagle Roma Maple
    1942 George Washington Slept Here Connie Fuller
    1943 Edge of Darkness Karen Stensgard
    1943 Thank Your Lucky Stars Ann Sheridan
    1944 Shine On, Harvest Moon Nora Bayes
    1944 The Doughgirls Edna Stokes Cadman
    1946 Cinderella Jones Red Cross Nurse uncredited
    1946 One More Tomorrow Christie Sage
    1947 The Unfaithful Chris Hunter
    1947 Nora Prentiss Nora Prentiss
    1948 Silver River Georgia Moore
    1948 Good Sam Lu Clayton
    1949 I Was a Male War Bride 1st Lt. Catherine Gates
    1950 Stella Stella Bevans
    1950 Woman on the Run Eleanor Johnson also co-producer
    1952 Steel Town "Red" McNamara
    1952 Just Across the Street Henrietta Smith
    1953 Take Me to Town Vermilion O'Toole aka Mae Madison
    1953 Appointment in Honduras Sylvia Sheppard
    1956 Come Next Spring Bess Ballot
    1956 Sneak Preview Terry Conway TV series
    Episode: "Calling Terry Conway"
    1956 The Opposite Sex Amanda Penrose
    1957 Woman and the Hunter Laura Dodds
    1962 Wagon Train Mavis Grant TV series
    Episode: "The Mavis Grant Story"
    1967 The Far Out West Henrietta "Hank" Hanks archive footage

    Radio appearances

    [edit]
    Year Program Episode Ref
    1943 Screen Guild Players Love Is News [49]
    1952 Stars in the Air Good Sam [50]

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ The Women of Warner Brothers, Daniel Bubbeo, McFarland, Inc. Publishers, 2010, p. 191
  • ^ Life, vol. 7, issue 4, 24 July 1939, p. 66
  • ^ Bubbeo, Daniel (2010). The Women of Warner Brothers: The Lives and Careers of 15 Leading Ladies, with Filmographies for Each. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-6236-0.
  • ^ "Miss Pauline Sheridan Weds in Oklahoma". Denton Record-Chronicle. Denton, Texas. March 27, 1931. p. 5. Retrieved June 17, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  • ^ "Ann Sheridan Is Still a Favorite After Years as a Successful Star". Albuquerque Journal. New Mexico, Albuquerque. March 30, 1952. p. 29. Retrieved June 18, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  • ^ Life. Time Inc. July 24, 1939.
  • ^ "Miss Sheridan Is Winner in Screen Contest". Denton Record-Chronicle. Denton, Texas. July 19, 1933. p. 8. Retrieved June 17, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  • ^ "Denton Girl Wins World Contest; to be Given Part in Paramount Movie". Denton Record-Chronicle. Texas, Denton. September 9, 1933. p. 1. Retrieved June 17, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  • ^ a b Houston, Paul (January 22, 1967). "Ann Sheridan, Film 'Oomph Girl,' Dies at 51". Los Angeles Times.
  • ^ "Ann Sheridan, film star, dies". Chicago Tribune. January 22, 1967. ProQuest 179108425.
  • ^ Hagen, Ray (2004). Killer Tomatoes: Fifteen Tough Film Dames. McFarland. p. 171. ISBN 978-0786418831.
  • ^ a b Hagen p. 172
  • ^ "Clara Lou "Ann" Sheridan". Denton Record-Chronicle. January 25, 1935. p. 5. Retrieved August 24, 2020.
  • ^ "Ann Sheridan Reveals 'Love at Sight' Wedding". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 30, 1936. p. 18.
  • ^ "Star of the Week: Ann Sheridan Martinee". Chicago Daily Tribune. July 18, 1948. p. c23.
  • ^ "Ann Sheridan dead". The Guardian. January 23, 1967. p. 9.
  • ^ "Ann Sheridan, Ex-Film Queen" The Washington Post and Times-Herald 23 Jan 1967: B3.
  • ^ a b "Ann sheridan voted leading "oomph" girl by jury of 25 men". Chicago Daily Tribune. March 18, 1939. ProQuest 175248402.
  • ^ "Everybody Wants to Marry Annie", AP, May 25, 1941. Accessed June 2, 2009.
  • ^ "Ann Sheridan, Actress, Born Clara Lou Sheridan on Feb. 21, 1915 in Denton, Texas, Died Jan. 21, 1967 of cancer in Los Angeles, California", by Paul Houston, Los Angeles Times, January 22, 1967
  • ^ "When a Woman Could Be an Oomph Girl", by Art Rogoff, The New York Times, September 12, 1988.
  • ^ "The Oomph Girl" Archived June 3, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, Classic Cinema Gold, February 21, 2012
  • ^ a b "'Oomph Girl' Is Happy Now". The Ogden Standard-Examiner. Utah. Associated Press. February 25, 1940. p. 11. Retrieved June 17, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  • ^ The 90 Best Classic "Looney Tunes " Cartoons - Vulture
  • ^ Whitman Authorized Editions for Girls
  • ^ Wilkinson, L. A. (February 6, 1944). "Nothing But Oomph?". Los Angeles Times. ProQuest 165486550.
  • ^ "Ann Sheridan Back From Tour". New York Times. September 7, 1944. p. 21.
  • ^ "Ann Sheridan Has Crowded Schedule". Los Angeles Times. July 6, 1947. p. C2.
  • ^ a b c Scheuer, Philip K. (May 22, 1949). "Ann Sheridan to Risk Oomph on Own Movie: Ann Sheridan Carries on to Finish That Jinx Film". Los Angeles Times. p. D1.
  • ^ "Ann Sheridan's Indie". Variety. April 20, 1949. p. 2 – via Archive.org.
  • ^ "Ann Sheridan Tells Dispute Over Male Star". Chicago Daily Tribune. January 31, 1951. p. a9.
  • ^ Brady, Thomas F. (November 22, 1949). "Ann Sheridan Sues R.K.O. for $350,000; Alleges Breach of Contract and Bad Faith by Studio in Deal on "Carriage Entrance"". The New York Times. Retrieved March 23, 2022.
  • ^ Brady, Thomas F. (February 7, 1951). "$55,162 Won in Suit by Ann Sheridan; Federal Jury on Coast Gives Actress Damages for Claim Against R.K.O. Studios of Local Origin". The New York Times. Retrieved March 23, 2022.
  • ^ Hopper, Hedda. (May 9, 1949). "Ann Sheridan Gets 'Her Secret Diary'". Los Angeles Times. p. B6.
  • ^ a b Crawford, Linda. (January 30, 1966). "Ann Sheridan Slips Into TV Soap Opera". Chicago Tribune. p. m4.
  • ^ "Douglas, Ann Sheridan Join Roster at Edgeswater Beach". Chicago Daily Tribune. May 25, 1958. p. e9.
  • ^ "Actor Denies Affair With Ann Sheridan". Los Angeles Times. February 25, 1960. p. 13.
  • ^ Humphrey, H. (January 22, 1967). "Ann Sheridan hits the mark with pistols it's about time tries a new format". Los Angeles Times. ProQuest 155643644.
  • ^ "Pistols and Petticoats", in Single Season Sitcoms, 1948–1979: A Complete Guide, by Bob Leszczak (McFarland, 2012) p. 155
  • ^ "Ann Sheridan". Hollywood Walk of Fame. October 25, 2019. Archived from the original on January 30, 2023. Retrieved May 29, 2023.
  • ^ "Ann Sheridan and Edward Norris Wed". Denton Record-Chronicle. Texas, Denton. August 31, 1936. p. 4. Retrieved June 17, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  • ^ May 7, 1956; Stephen J Hannagan Will; File No. P 440/1953; Surrogates Court in the County of New York; Hall of Records.
  • ^ "Actress Named in Adultery Action," San Pedro News-Pilot, November 1, 1956, p. 1.
  • ^ "Vet Actress Charged in Affair," Durham Sun, December 13, 1956, p. 23
  • ^ "Ann Sheridan Biography". Remembering Ann Sheridan. Retrieved December 23, 2016.
  • ^ Thomas, Bob (October 24, 1948). "Hollywood Is Pitching Into Political Race". Sarasota Herald-Tribune. Retrieved August 27, 2015.
  • ^ "Why the Forgotten Ann Sheridan Deserves to Be Remembered". Best Movies by Farr. Retrieved August 10, 2020.
  • ^ "Film Star Ann Sheridan's Cremains Interred 38 Years After Her Death". Archived from the original on February 9, 2006. Retrieved February 19, 2006.
  • ^ "Those Were the Days". Nostalgia Digest. 39 (1): 32–41. Winter 2013.
  • ^ Kirby, Walter (March 9, 1952). "Better Radio Programs for the Week". The Decatur Daily Review. p. 42. Retrieved May 23, 2015 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  • [edit]
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