Career
She then acted on Broadway and in other stage works, as well as in films and on television Green was cast in such conventional juvenile parts as Becky Thatcher in and opposite Jackie Coogan and Jackie Searl. She also starred in the title role of Little Orphan Annie.
At the age of 14, she played a soubrette role in.
This film closed out the first stage of her Hollywood career. She went on to Broadway, where she starred in the original production of Rodgers and Hart"s Babes in Arms (1937).
Two of Green"s numbers in the musical were "My Funny Valentine," which would ultimately become a jazz standard in many cover recordings and performances, and "The Lady is a Tramp". Green made one more film in 1940, then went back to stage and nightclub work, including Walk With Music by Hoagy Carmichael and Johnny Mercer and the Betty Comden and Adolph Green musical Billion Dollar Baby.
Green married Broadway (and later movie and television) director Joseph Pevney and retired to raise a family.
In 1951, she returned briefly to the screen opposite Abbott and Costello in Lost in Alaska (1951) and in, co-starring another Mitzi--Mitzi Gaynor. In 1955, she starred with Virginia Gibson and Gordon Jones in the short-lived television sitcom So This Is Hollywood, in the role of Queenie Dugan, a high-spirited stuntwoman. After a brief stint on the nightclub circuit, Green retired again, although she did appear in summer stock and dinner theater around the Los Angeles area thereafter, and she appeared occasionally as a guest on talk shows.
Babes In Arms (1937) Walk With Music (1940) Let Freedom Sing (1942) Billion Dollar Baby (1945).