Marcy McGuire

    Known For

    Acting

    Birthday

    February 22, 1926

    Day of Death

    August 7, 2021 (95 years old)

    Place of Birth

    Kansas City, Kansas, USA

    Marcy McGuire

    Biography

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Marilyn Jeanne McGuire (February 22, 1926 – August 7, 2021), known professionally as Marcy McGuire, was an American actress and contralto singer who was active in the 1940s. She was born to James Joseph McGuire, a film projectionist, and Annona (née Crowley) McGuire. Her parents divorced in the early 1930s while McGuire was still a child. McGuire signed a contract with RKO Pictures and was subsequently cast in her first film at the age of sixteen, Seven Days' Leave (1942), which starred Lucille Ball. Her other films include Higher and Higher (1944, starring Frank Sinatra), Career Girl (1944), Seven Days Ashore (1944), It Happened in Brooklyn (1947) and You Gotta Stay Happy (1948). Her penultimate film before retiring from Hollywood was Jumping Jacks (1952), with Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. She also had a minor uncredited role in Disney's Summer Magic (1963) as a young Irish maid named Ellen before she permanently retired. McGuire was married to actor Wally Cassell from 1947 until his death in 2015. The couple had two children. She died in Palm Desert, California on August 7, 2021, at the age of 95. News of her death was only made public in August 2022 by film historians Austin and Howard Mutti-Mewse.

    Known For

    • Summer Magic

      Summer Magic

      1963

    • Jumping Jacks

      Jumping Jacks

      1952

    • It Happened in Brooklyn

      It Happened in Brooklyn

      1947

    • You Gotta Stay Happy

      You Gotta Stay Happy

      1948

    • Higher and Higher

      Higher and Higher

      1943

    • Seven Days Ashore

      Seven Days Ashore

      1944

    • Career Girl

      Career Girl

      1944

    • Sing Your Way Home

      Sing Your Way Home

      1945

    • Around the World

      Around the World

      1943

    • Seven Days' Leave

      Seven Days' Leave

      1942

    • Ding Dong Williams

      Ding Dong Williams

      1946