
Actor
Trudy Marshall
Born 1922 · Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
Gertrude Madeline "Trudy" Marshall was an American actress and model. A popular magazine cigarette girl during her modeling days for Harry Conover, Marshall was at different times "The Old Gold Girl", "The Chesterfield Girl", and "The Lucky Strike Girl". Marshall was signed by 20th Century-Fox in 1942 and groomed in bit parts. She played a featured role in the World War II war drama The Fighting Sullivans, the true story of a family that lost all five enlisted sons in the sinking of the USS Juneau off Guadalcanal in November 1942. Marshall played the surviving sister Genevieve. Taking roles as a decorative ingenue for a time, Marshall later played the "other woman" in a few features. Semi-retired by the 1960s, she returned very infrequently to Hollywood. She appeared in the movie Once Is Not Enough with her daughter Deborah Raffin. Marshall was the hostess of her own radio and TV show in the 1980s in which she interviewed stars who attended special Hollywood event.
Acting

Heaven Can Wait
Jane Van Cleve - Jack's Wife (uncredited) · 1943

Dragonwyck
Elizabeth Van Borden · 1946

The Dancing Masters
Trudy Harlan · 1943

Crash Dive
Telephone Operator · 1943

The Fighting Sullivans
Genevieve 'Gen' Sullivan · 1944

Springtime in the Rockies
Marilyn Crothers (uncredited) · 1942

Beyond Our Own
Ann Rogers · 1947

Joe Palooka in the Knockout
Nina · 1947

The Purple Heart
Mrs. Ross · 1944

Coney Island
Girl Friend · 1943

Boston Blackie and the Law
Irene · 1946

Roger Touhy, Gangster
Gloria · 1944

Sentimental Journey
Ruth · 1946

The Fuller Brush Man
Sara Franzen · 1948

The Dolly Sisters
Lenora Baldwin · 1945

Once Is Not Enough
Myrna · 1975

Ladies of Washington
Carol Northrup · 1944

Alias Mr. Twilight
Corky Corcoran · 1946

Barbary Pirate
Anne Ridgeway · 1949

Too Many Winners
Phyllis Hamilton · 1947

I'll See You in My Dreams
Frankie Mason (uncredited) · 1951

Key Witness
Marge Andrews · 1947

Circumstantial Evidence
Agnes Hannon · 1945

Disaster
Jerry Hansford · 1948