Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • American stage and film actress

      • Mary Josephine Dunn (May 1, 1906 – February 3, 1983) was an American stage and film actress of the 1920s and 1930s.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josephine_Dunn
  1. People also ask

  2. Mary Josephine Dunn[1] (May 1, 1906 – February 3, 1983) was an American stage and film actress of the 1920s and 1930s. [2] Early years. Dunn was born in New York City [3] and educated at Holy Cross convent school. [4] Career. At age 14 and a 5'5" tall blonde, Dunn started out as a member of the chorus at the Winter Garden Theatre.

  3. Jo Beverley, born Mary Josephine Dunn, was born on the twenty second of September in 1947, in Blackpool, England. Jo loved to write ever since she could start writing; she just never thought of it as a career until later in life.

  4. Actress: Murder at Dawn. Convent-educated Mary Josephine Dunn got her start in the chorus line of 'Good Morning, Dearie' at the age of 15. She was briefly in the Ziegfeld Follies and, in 1924, had a walk-on in 'Dear Sir' on Broadway.

    • May 1, 1906
    • February 3, 1983
  5. Born September 22, 1947, in Morecambe, Lancashire, England; immigrated to Canada with her husband, 1976; daughter of John (a hotel owner) and Mildred (a hotel owner) Dunn; married Kenneth Beverley (a research scientist), June 24, 1971; children: Jonathan, Philip.

    • (78.7K)
    • May 23, 2016
    • September 22, 1947
    • An Arranged Marriage (Company of Rogues, #1)
    • An Unwilling Bride (Company of Rogues, #2)
    • My Lady Notorious (Malloren, #1)
    • Christmas Angel (Company of Rogues, #3)
  6. Jo Beverley (born Mary Josephine Dunn) was a British-Canadian author of popular romance novels set in her native England during the Regency, Georgian, and medieval periods.

  7. Feb 1, 1992 · Mary Josephine Dunn was born 22 September 1947 in Lancashire, England, UK. At the age of eleven she went to an all-girls boarding school, Layton Hill Convent, Blackpool. At sixteen, she wrote her first romance, with a medieval setting, completed in installments in an exercise book.