Background
According to the United States Censuses for 1920, 1930 and 1940, Frances Grant was born in 1911 in Colorado, to Fannie Hale Grant and Ernest V. Grant, a mining engineer, and was their only child.
According to the United States Censuses for 1920, 1930 and 1940, Frances Grant was born in 1911 in Colorado, to Fannie Hale Grant and Ernest V. Grant, a mining engineer, and was their only child.
She appeared as the leading lady of Gene Autry in Red River Valley (1936) and (1936) and other b-films. They had moved to Los Angeles, California, by 1920 (where the census identifies her as "Donna" Grant), at which time she was already a dancer. In 1934, she began her film career with uncredited roles as a dancer in the Kentucky Kernels (1934) and The Nitwits (1935).
Grant appeared in her first major film role in the 1935 Western film Thunder Mountain opposite George O"Brien.
In the following year she appeared as the leading lady of Gene Autry in Red River Valley (1936) and (1936). In the latter film, Grant sings a duet with Autry on the song "Water Wheel" with Autry accompanying them on guitar.
That same year she had leading roles in Born to Fight with Frankie Darro, The Traitor with Tim McCoy, and Cavalry opposite Bob Steele. Grant"s last leading role was in Rich Relations (1937).
She appeared in three additional films as a dancer uncredited.
In the 1940s and 1950s, Grant worked as a dance director in films such as Masquerade in Mexico (1945), Mistress Mike (1949), and Fancy Pants (1950). Frances Grant died in Lexington, Massachusetts on February 20, 1982 at the age of 73.