Background
Bishop was born Jacqueline Wells and used her birth name professionally through 1941.
Bishop was born Jacqueline Wells and used her birth name professionally through 1941.
She chose the name because it matched the monograms on her luggage (she had for a time been married to Walter Booth Brooks III, a writer).
She appeared in over 80 films between 1923 and 1957. She also appeared on stage (and in one film) as Diane Duval. She was a child actress, beginning her career in 1923.
Early on, she appeared in several Laurel and Hardy films (Any Old Portuguese! and The Bohemian Girl), and she settled on the name by which she is best remembered when offered a contract by Warner Brothers on the condition that she change her name, which was associated with her almost exclusively B-movie appearances through 1941 (amounting to nearly 50 films over 17 years).
By 1932, she was already a veteran film actress. Her filmography includes works billed under the names of Jacqueline Wells and Diane Duval.
As Jacqueline Wells she appeared in almost 50 B-movies for Universal – spanning the silent era and the talkies – including two comedies with Laurel and Hardy. She adopted the name Julie Bishop in 1941 when she signed with Warner Brothers, and she appeared in more than a dozen feature films including Sands of Iwo Jima (1949) with John Wayne.
She made 16 films at Warners, including a supporting role in Princess O"Rourke (1943), supporting Olivia de Havilland and Robert Cummings.
She was Humphrey Bogart"s leading lady in Action in the North Atlantic (1943), played Ira Gershwin"s wife in the biopic Rhapsody in Blue (1945), and closed out her Warners years in 1946"s Cinderella Jones. She was among several former Wayne co-stars (including Laraine Day, Ann Doran, January Sterling, and Claire Trevor) who joined the actor in 1954"s aviation drama, The High and the Mighty. Julie Bishop died of pneumonia on her 87th birthday, August 30, 2001, in Mendocino, California.