Baby Rose Marie ~ Singing: "Don't Be Like That" ~ 1929 ~ Vitaphone div of Warner Brothers Pictures

  • 6 years ago
Baby Boys, Don't Be Like That - sung by 6-year-old Baby Rose Marie.
aka Rose Marie, an American Performer & Actress whose career spanned nine decades and included working in vaudeville, film, radio, records, theater, nightclubs and television.
Best known for playing comedy writer Sally Rogers on The Dick Van Dyke Show, on CBS TV network 1961 to 1966.

Born Rose Marie Mazzetta in Manhattan, New York on August 15, 1923, she died December 28, 2017, at aged 94 in Van Nuys, California.
Rose Marie Mazzetta was the daughter of Frank Mazzetta, an Italian-American vaudeville actor who went by the name of Frank Curley, and Polish-American Stella Gluszcak.

By the age of three, she was performing as "Baby Rose Marie." When she was 5 years old she had her own radio show on NBC. And by age 6 she started appearing in films for Paramount and Warner Brothers Films using the Vitaphone system.

Between 1930 and 1938, she made at least 17 records, often accompanied by Fletcher Henderson's band, one of the leading African African jazz orchestras of the day.

Rose Marie was the last surviving entertainer to have charted a hit before World War II.

As an adult, Rose Marie became a nightclub and lounge performer. According to her autobiography, Hold the Roses, she was assisted in her career by members of organized crime, including Al Capone and Bugsy Siegel. Rose worked at the Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada, which was built by Siegel. Because of her ties, she always sought permission when she performed at other casinos and remained loyal to "the boys" at the Flamingo for the rest of her life.

She worked in TV and Theatre from the 1960's until 2012.

Rose Marie married to trumpeter Bobby Guy from 1946 until his death in 1994, they had one daughter, Georgiana.

Rose developed a following on Twitter, where she offered support for women who have been sexually harassed, having suffered her whole life from such.

Rose Marie Mazzetta died on December 28, 2017. Her contemporaries and modern performers offered their condolences and remembrances, calling her "the patron saint of female comedy writers."

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