
Known to classic film fans by various nicknames--including Miss Deadpan, Frozen Face, and Miss Ice Glacier--this statuesque, dark-haired singer/actress carved a unique niche for herself on stage and screen by the hilarious Sphinx-like way she delivered a song. The daughter of the captain of detectives of the Los Angeles Police Department, Virginia Lee O'Brien became interested in music and dance at an early age (it didn't hurt her career chances that her uncle was noted film director Lloyd Bacon). Her big show-business break came in 1939 after she secured a singing role in the L.A. production of the musical/comedy "Meet the People". On opening night, when time came for her solo number, Virginia became so paralyzed with fright that she sang her song with a wide-eyed motionless stare that sent the audience (which thought her performance a gag) into convulsions. Demoralized, Virginia left …
movieGus
1976 · Reporter
movieFrancis in the Navy
1955 · Nurse Kittredge
movieMartin Block's Musical Merry-Go-Round No. 4
1948 · Self
movieMerton of the Movies
1947 · Phyllis Montague
movieTill the Clouds Roll By
1946 · Ellie May Shipley / Virginia O'Brien
movieThe Show-Off
1946 · Hortense
movieThe Harvey Girls
1946 · Alma from Ohio
movieZiegfeld Follies
1945 · Virginia O'Brien (segment "Here's to the Ladies")
movieThe Great Morgan
1945 · Film Character (archive footage)
movieTwo Girls and a Sailor
1944 · Virginia O'Brien
movieMeet the People
1944 · 'Woodpecker' Peg
movieThousands Cheer
1943 · Virginia O’Brien
movieDu Barry Was a Lady
1943 · Ginny
moviePanama Hattie
1942 · Flo Foster
movieShip Ahoy
1942 · Fran Evans
movieLady Be Good
1941 · Lull
movieScreen Snapshots Series 21 No. 1
1941 · Self
movieRingside Maisie
1941 · Herself - Singer
movieThe Big Store
1941 · Kitty
movieHullabaloo
1940 · Virginia Ferris
movieSky Murder
1940 · Lucille LaVonne