Adrienne Dore
Adrienne Dore was born on May 23, 1910, in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, and later relocated to the Los Angeles area before 1925. That year, she gained recognition by winning the title of Miss Los Angeles and securing the position of first runner-up in the Miss America Pageant.
Dore's cinematic journey began with an uncredited role in the 1928 western film The Valley of Hunted Men, produced by Action Pictures. She quickly transitioned to a leading role in Beyond London Lights, also released in 1928. In 1929, she appeared in Paramount’s The Wild Party, starring alongside Clara Bow as part of her lively ensemble of college girls. Following a series of comedy shorts, she made a brief appearance in the early musical Pointed Heels, which featured notable actors such as William Powell, Helen Kane, and Fay Wray.
Dore's career took a significant turn when she signed with Warner Bros. Her debut with the studio was a minor role in the 1932 film Union Depot, featuring Douglas Fairbanks Jr. and Joan Blondell. She soon secured the second female lead in Alias the Doctor (1932) and appeared in a total of six films for Warner Bros. that year, including The Rich Are Always with Us, where she played a significant role, as well as The Expert, Play Girl, The Famous Ferguson Case, Two Seconds, and Street of Women.
After leaving Warner Bros., Dore's film appearances dwindled, with only four more credits to her name, including uncredited roles in The Thirteenth Guest and The Girl from Calgary, a small part in 1933's Love, Honor and Oh, Baby!, and the lead role in the 1934 B-crime film Undercover Men, produced by Booth Productions. Adrienne Dore passed away on November 26, 1992, in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California.