Margo Woode

She was signed by 20th Century Fox in 1942 as a member of the studio's stock company, under the professional name Margo Woode. Her film debut was in ''Springtime in the Rockies'' (1942), as a bit player. She left Fox when her one-year contract expired. One day after her release, she appeared on stage in a local production of the play ''Stage Door'', and Fox executive Joseph Schenck reinstated her at the studio. After a year with no films to her credit, her contract again lapsed, but studio chief Darryl F. Zanuck signed her once more in November 1944. Zanuck placed her immediately into the latest Fox production, which served as her screen test: the Laurel and Hardy comedy ''The Bullfighters'' (filmed 1944, released 1945). Her small role as a glamour girl (announced by Zanuck as "the feminine lead") is perhaps her most familiar film to today's audiences.
Fox renewed her contract in 1945, and she went on to play featured roles for the studio through 1947. She freelanced for various studios thereafter. Her most prominent roles were as Phyllis in ''Somewhere in the Night'' (1946) and as the other woman in the movie musical ''Bop Girl Goes Calypso'' (1957). She also appeared on television in the 1950s in such programs as ''Racket Squad'' and ''Dragnet''. Provided by Wikipedia