Janet Warren
Janet Warren, also known as Elaine Morey, was an actress in the United States during the 1940s and 50s. She attended schools in the Los Angeles metropolitan area, including an acting school she started attending since the age of 13. After spending her late teen years as a drama coach for other child actors, she signed a contract with Universal Pictures in 1940 and began appearing in films, frequently in Abbott and Costello comedies, horror films, and teenage musicals.
Career
During her childhood, Warren attended Hollywood High School and Alexander [Hamilton High School |Alexander Hamilton High School]. She was also enrolled in a child acting school from the age of 13, with Jane Withers as one of her classmates. The school would also have a play written by the principal for Warren in particular that she acted in. Later living in Santa Ana, California in her late teens, she worked as a drama coach and ran a class for children that worked in theatre. She also performed at the Little Theatre in Los Angeles, California.Warren was cast in the film Buck Privates in December 1940. The casting occurred after approaching studio executives to ask for a role for one of her students, but was offered a role herself instead. She was also signed to a long-term contract for several future films. After appearing in several minor roles in early 1941, she was cast in a major female role in Moonlight in Hawaii. Her impressive performance resulted in her contract being renewed in June 1941.
Filmography
- Buck Privates
- Hello, Sucker as Receptionist
- Cracked Nuts
- Sing Another Chorus
- Keep 'Em Flying
- Moonlight in Hawaii as Doris
- Too Many Blondes as Sophie Deltz
- Double Date as Schoolgirl
- Law of the Range as Virginia O'Brien
- The Flame of New Orleans
- It Started with Eve
- Pardon My Sarong
- Broadway as Ruby
- Wild Horse Phantom as Marian Garnet
- The Jade Mask as Jean Kent
- The Shanghai Cobra as Record Machine Operator
- Winter Wonderland
- The Twonky as Carolyn West
Personal life
Warren married again, in 1949, to Barton Yarborough, a union that lasted until his death in 1951.