Background
Born Dorothy Jean LeVake, her name was legally changed to Jean Darling when she was five months old, a few days after her mother and father separated.
Born Dorothy Jean LeVake, her name was legally changed to Jean Darling when she was five months old, a few days after her mother and father separated.
Prior to her death, she was one of four surviving cast members from the silent era cast of Our Gang (Lassie Lou Ahern, Mildred Kornman and Dorothy Morrison being the others). At the time of her death in 2015, Darling was, along with Baby Peggy, one of the last surviving actors who worked in the silent film era. She began in movies at six months old as a freelance baby.
She got her break in 1926 when she passed a screen test and was accepted for a part in Hal Roach"s Our Gang series.
Darling appeared in 46 silents and six talkies with Our Gang during this period. She continued to appear in films after leaving the gang, including an appearance in Laurel & Hardy"s adaptation of Babes in Toyland (uncredited) and as the young Jane in Jane Eyre (both 1934).
A round of stage and radio shows followed. Stage shows involved up to seven performances a day.
lieutenant was a punishing schedule for a fourteen-year-old, and that was not taking into account her educational studies.
Darling began to study singing, and in 1940 she was given a scholarship by the New York Municipal Opera Association. She turned down an offer to appear alongside Mickey Rooney in one of the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Andy Hardy movies, and went on Broadway, making her debut in the musical Count Maine In in 1942. Darling"s stage career hit a real high when she landed the role of Carrie Pipperidge in the original Broadway production of Carousel in 1945.
She appeared in 850 consecutive performances.
Her role as Carrie Pipperidge helped her with parts for radio and television in the 1950s. She hosted her own television show for National Broadcasting Company in New York City, A Date with Jean Darling.
Her daily television show for women, The Singing Knit-Witch, was aired on KHJ-television in Hollywood. Her last work was a humorous silent comedy short, The Butler"s Tale, a 2013 short silent comedy film styled after the ones Darling starred in as a child.
In 1974, Darling moved to Dublin, Ireland, where she wrote mystery stories and had over 50 short stories published in the Alfred Hitchcock"s Mystery Magazine and Whispers.
As "Aunty Poppy", she read stories, which she wrote herself, on RTÉ radio and television She also wrote plays for radio and worked as a journalist.