Dona Drake was an American singer, dancer and film actress in the 1930s and 1940s.
Background
She was born Eunice Westmoreland in Miami, Florida, in 1914 to Joseph Andrew Westmoreland of Arkansas and his wife, Novella Smith of Alabama. Studio publicity during her heyday incorrectly stated that Drake was of Mexican origin and was born Rita Novella.
Career
She also toured in an all-girl orchestra in the early 1940s. Entering show business in the 1930s, she used the names Una Velon, Rita Rio and Rita Shaw. She settled on the stage name Dona Drake in the early 1940s.
Because of her features and dark curly hair, film makers often cast her when they needed to fill the role of an ethnic character that looked native, gypsy, or middle eastern.
. She is perhaps best known for playing the American Indian maid of Bette Davis in Beyond the Forest. She also appeared as an Arab girl opposite Bob Hope in Road to Morocco in 1942.
In 1944 she appeared in a B-movie titled Hot Rhythm as one of the leading characters, a big band singer. This movie featured Irene Ryan (Granny from The Beverly Hillbillies) as the ditsy secretary.
She had a notable "non-ethnic" role as the second female lead in the 1949 comedy The Girl from Jones Beach, playing opposite Eddie Bracken.
The year before she gave a memorable comic performance as the fortune hunting sister in So This Is New New York In the early 1940s, Drake toured with an all-girl orchestra called "The Girl Friends" throughout the United States. Fellow actresses Marie Wilson, Toby Wing, and Faith Bacon were also part of the orchestra.
Drake died in Los Angeles, California on June 20, 1989 at the age of 74 of pneumonia and respiratory failure.
She was cremated and her ashes scattered at sea.