Home Movies Series
Genres
Year
Episodes Most Viewed Movies Most Viewed TV People
Jean Rogers

Jean Rogers

11 titles Acting Mar 25, 1916 Died: Feb 24, 1991 Belmont, Massachusetts, USA

Jean Rogers, originally named Eleanor Dorothy Lovegren, was a prominent American actress celebrated for her roles in serial films during the 1930s and low-budget features in the 1940s. She gained significant recognition for her portrayal of Dale Arden in the iconic science fiction serials, Flash Gordon and Flash Gordon's Trip to Mars.

Rogers completed her education at Belmont High School with aspirations to pursue art. However, in 1933, her win in a Paramount Pictures beauty contest propelled her into the Hollywood spotlight. Between 1935 and 1938, she starred in a variety of serials for Universal Studios, including notable titles like Ace Drummond and Flash Gordon. Among a selection of 2,700 women, she was one of seven chosen for the film Eight Girls in a Boat, ultimately becoming the only one of that group to continue a successful acting career.

In Flash Gordon, Rogers captivated audiences as the delicate Dale Arden, who frequently found herself in peril, needing her heroic counterpart, played by Buster Crabbe, to rescue her from the clutches of the villain Ming the Merciless. A dramatic incident occurred on set in 1937 when her costume caught fire, resulting in burns that Crabbe bravely extinguished with a blanket.

Despite her success in serials, Rogers aspired to transition to feature films. She starred alongside John Wayne in the 1936 film Conflict and shared the screen with Boris Karloff in Night Key the following year. Throughout the 1940s, she appeared in various films, including The Man Who Wouldn't Talk and Design for Scandal. However, feeling confined to B-movies and unsatisfied with her earnings, she chose to freelance, working with studios like 20th Century Fox and MGM. Her final role came in the 1950 suspense thriller The Second Woman. Rogers passed away in Sherman Oaks in 1991 at the age of 74, leaving behind a legacy of cinematic contributions.

Filmography