Carol Adams (born Lurline Uller; March 15, 1918 – April 9, 2012), was an American actress and dancer. She began her career performing under her birth name at the age of five in the short film Navy Blues (1923). In the 1920s she made appearances in the short film series Our Gang, Buster Brown, and Mickey McGuire, and also appeared in minor uncredited film roles. From 1936-1939 she was under contract with 20th Century Fox with she whom appeared in dance parts and uncredited roles. She first drew critical notice for her work as a tap dancer in the Fox film Sally, Irene and Mary (1938). In 1940 she joined Paramount Pictures at which time her perfomance name was changed to Caroline Adams. Beginning with the film Dancing on a Dime (1940) she worked as a leading actress in Hollywood until her retirement in 1944 at the time of her marriage to studio executive Richard J. Pearl.
Description above from the Wikipedia article Carol Adams (actress), licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Acting
32
Female
1918-03-15
Los Angeles, California, USA
Lurline Uller
Off to the Races
Bad Man of Deadwood
Ridin' on a Rainbow
Seventh Heaven
Dancing on a Dime
Sally, Irene and Mary
While New York Sleeps
The Life of the Party
Love and Hisses
Josette
New Faces of 1937
Jesse James
Mr. Moto's Last Warning
The Three Musketeers
Rose of Washington Square
Mr. Moto Takes a Vacation
Kentucky
The Gay Vagabond
Broadway Melody of 1940
Gateway
The House Across the Bay
Behind the News
Love Thy Neighbor
Dick Tracy vs. Crime Inc.
Johnny Apollo
Champagne Waltz
Blondie Goes to College
Straight, Place and Show
Ice-Capades
The Joint's Jumping at Juke Box Joe's
Gypsy
The Quarterback