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Rosella Towne
Rosella Towne
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Rosella Towne (January 20, 1918 – August 29, 2014) was an American film actress. She was born in Youngstown, Ohio. Her film career began in 1937, after making a screen test for Warner Bros. and signing a contract for the studio. At first she made minor appearances in motion pictures such as Varsity Show, It's Love I'm After and Submarine D-1. She studied with Neely Dickson at the Hollywood Community Theater.[1] In 1939, she got her first leading role when she was chosen to play the part of comic-strip character Jane Arden in a film adaption.[2] While touted by critics as a future star,[3] Towne retired from showbusiness after marrying Harry Kronman, a Hollywood producer, in 1942.[4][5] She died on August 29, 2014, aged 96.[6][7][8] Towne was cremated.[9]

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Filmography

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from Grokipedia
Rosella Towne is an American actress known for her brief but notable career in Warner Bros. films during the late 1930s and early 1940s, where she appeared in supporting and leading roles alongside stars including Ronald Reagan, Bette Davis, and George Brent. She is particularly remembered for her starring role as Jane Arden in The Adventures of Jane Arden (1939), as well as her appearances opposite Ronald Reagan in Sergeant Murphy (1938), Secret Service of the Air (1939), and Code of the Secret Service (1939). Born Rosella Townsend in Youngstown, Ohio, Towne relocated to Los Angeles with her family in the late 1920s and was discovered at age 19 after participating in a department store fashion show attended by studio head Jack Warner, which launched her Hollywood career in 1937 with uncredited roles before she earned speaking parts starting in 1938. Her work primarily consisted of B-pictures and adventure films at Warner Bros., reflecting the studio's output of that era. She retired from acting after her 1942 marriage to screenwriter Harry Kronman, with whom she had two sons. Towne lived in later years in Hamden, Connecticut, where she passed away on August 29, 2014.

Early life

Birth and family background

Rosella Towne, born Rosella Townsend, was born on January 20, 1918, in Youngstown, Ohio, USA. She was the second of three daughters of Frank and Viola Townsend. Towne stood 5 feet 6 inches (1.68 m) tall.

Entry into acting

As a teenager, Rosella Towne was invited by a friend to participate in a department store dress show in her hometown, an event attended by Jack Warner and his wife. This encounter led to her being brought to Hollywood at age 19 in 1937, where she embarked on her film career. She made her screen debut that same year in a series of uncredited roles, marking her initial professional engagements in the industry as a contract player associated with Warner Bros. No records indicate prior formal acting training, stage experience, or other pursuits such as modeling before this discovery. Her early uncredited appearances transitioned to speaking parts by 1938, laying the foundation for her subsequent roles in the studio system.

Film career

Early roles and Warner Bros beginnings (1937–1938)

Rosella Towne began her film career in 1937 after signing a contract with Warner Bros., having been discovered by Jack Warner and his wife at a department store fashion show in Youngstown, Ohio. Her early work consisted primarily of uncredited bit parts and minor supporting roles in Warner Bros. productions, where she often appeared as passersby, autograph seekers, receptionists, or similar background characters. Her screen debut came in Varsity Show (1937) as a passerby (uncredited), followed by an uncredited appearance as an autograph seeker in It's Love I'm After (1937). She also had a role as Mary in Submarine D-1 (1937) and appeared as Brenner's receptionist in Expensive Husbands (1937). In 1938, she continued with similar small parts, including an uncredited role as a golddigger in Gold Diggers in Paris (1938). Towne's appearance in Sergeant Murphy (1938) opposite Ronald Reagan marked one of her early speaking roles and her first collaboration with the actor. These formative years at Warner Bros. established her as a contract player in the studio's busy production slate of the late 1930s, though her parts remained modest during this initial period.

Leading and supporting roles (1939)

In 1939, Rosella Towne had the most active and prominent year of her film career, transitioning from bit parts to both leading and featured supporting roles in Warner Bros. productions. She received her first starring role as Jane Arden in The Adventures of Jane Arden, playing a spirited newspaper reporter who goes undercover to expose a jewel smuggling operation, earning top billing as the central protagonist in this comedy-drama adapted from the popular comic strip. That same year, Towne appeared opposite Ronald Reagan in Secret Service of the Air as Zelma Warren and in Code of the Secret Service as Elaine, the latter portraying the primary romantic interest and female lead to Reagan's Secret Service agent Lt. Brass Bancroft in the second installment of Warner Bros.' short-lived series about the agent's adventures combating counterfeiting and crime. These marked her second and third on-screen pairings with Reagan after Sergeant Murphy in 1938. Towne also appeared in small or uncredited supporting roles in several major Warner Bros. releases, including a minor part in the acclaimed drama Dark Victory starring Bette Davis, a lady of the court in the historical epic The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex starring Bette Davis and Errol Flynn, and a bit role in the family comedy Yes, My Darling Daughter. These appearances alongside established stars highlighted her presence within the studio's busy slate during her peak period of activity.

Later films and retirement (1940–1943)

In 1940, Towne appeared in three films, primarily in supporting or minor capacities. She played a student (uncredited) in the aviation drama Flight Angels, a stewardess (uncredited) in the musical comedy No, No, Nanette, and Doris Manners in the Western Rocky Mountain Rangers. In 1941, she had an uncredited role as a girl in the musical There's Magic in Music (also released as The Hard-Boiled Canary). Following a one-year absence from screens, Towne made her final film appearance in 1943 as Helen Barton in A Gentle Gangster. Towne retired from acting after marrying screenwriter Harry Kronman in 1942.

Personal life

Marriages and family

Rosella Towne married screenwriter Harry Kronman in 1942. The marriage prompted her immediate retirement from acting, after which she became known as Rosella Kronman. They had two sons. The marriage lasted until Kronman's death in 1979.

Later years and death

Post-acting life and passing

After retiring from acting in the early 1940s following her marriage to screenwriter Harry Kronman, Rosella Towne moved to Connecticut in the late 1940s, where she opened her own clothing store and lived privately outside the public eye. Limited details are available about her activities during these decades, as she maintained a low profile after leaving Hollywood. In her later years, Towne resided at the Whitney Center in Hamden, Connecticut. She died of natural causes on August 29, 2014, at the age of 96 in Hamden, Connecticut. Towne was cremated, with her ashes given to family or friends.

Legacy and remembrance

Rosella Towne remains a largely obscure figure in film history, remembered principally for her supporting roles opposite Ronald Reagan in Warner Bros. films during the late 1930s, including Secret Service of the Air (1939) and Code of the Secret Service (1939), as well as her leading performance in The Adventures of Jane Arden (1939). These appearances represent the core of her recognized contributions, with the Reagan collaborations often cited in discussions of his early screen career, though Towne herself received limited individual attention even at the time. In the decades following her retirement from acting in 1942, Towne attracted virtually no sustained public or critical interest, reflecting the broader fate of many contract players from Warner Bros.' B-picture era whose work was overshadowed by larger stars and productions. Documentation beyond basic film credits and studio records remains sparse, leaving significant gaps in coverage of her personal life, post-retirement activities in Connecticut where she operated a clothing store, and the specific reasons for her early exit from Hollywood. Her legacy rests almost entirely on primary industry sources such as filmographies and archival cast listings, with little secondary analysis, tributes, or historical reevaluation available in reputable outlets. This limited footprint underscores the incomplete historical record surrounding many minor performers of the period, where much of Towne's life and career continues to be undocumented publicly.
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