
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dorothy Appleby (January 6, 1906 – August 9, 1990) was an American film actress. She appeared in over 50 films between 1931 and 1943. Appleby gained early acting experience as an understudy and a chorus member in plays in New York City. A newspaper article reported that Appleby "came to New York fresh from winning a Maine beauty contest."
Appleby was seen in many supporting roles, almost always in short subjects or low-budget feature films. She never progressed to leading roles in important pictures because of her height, which made her difficult to cast The trim brunette stood just over five feet tall, and her early leading men (like comedian Charley Chase) towered over her.
She soon found steady if not prestigious work in Columbia Pictures' two-reel comedies. She appeared frequently with The Three Stooges, who were only a few inches taller than she was, and in 1940 she became Buster Keaton's leading lady, for the same reason: her height complemented his. She worked with Columbia comics Andy Clyde, El Brendel, and Hugh Herbert, and she had an uncredited part in John Ford's Stagecoach.
Some of her Stooge comedies were Loco Boy Makes Good, So Long Mr. Chumps, and In the Sweet Pie and Pie. One memorable appearance was as Mexican brunette Rosita in 1940's Cookoo Cavaliers. In the film, Appleby gets clobbered by the Stooges when a facial "mud pack" made of cement dries on her face. Her petite figure belied her age, and she continued to play "younger" roles into the 1940s. One of her last screen roles was a one-line bit (playing a college co-ed at age 35) in the 1941 Jane Withers feature Small Town Deb.

Stagecoach
1939 · as Girl in Saloon (uncredited)

The Women
1939 · as Treatment Girl (uncredited)

High Sierra
1941 · as Margie (uncredited)

School for Girls
1934 · as Florence Burns

When Tomorrow Comes
1939 · as Waitress (uncredited)

Square Crooks
1928 · as Kay Ellison

Cookoo Cavaliers
1940 · as Rosita (uncredited)

Convicted Woman
1940 · as Daisy

Charlie Chan in Paris
1935 · as Nardi

Pitchin' in the Kitchen
1943 · as Dagmar Spiggott, the wife

Live, Love and Learn
1937 · as Lou - Bob's Model (uncredited)

Manpower
1941 · as Wilma

Fate's Fathead
1934 · as Dorothy Chase

Under Eighteen
1932 · as Elsie

Make a Wish
1937 · as Telephone Girl

Let 'em Have It
1935 · as Lola McArdle

Gold Rush Maisie
1940 · as Hatcheck Girl (Uncredited)

As the Earth Turns
1934 · as Doris