
Elaine Shepard
Acting
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Elaine Elizabeth Shepard (April 2, 1913 – September 6, 1998) was a Broadway and film actress in the 1930s and 1940s. She was also the author of The Doom Pussy, a semi-fictional account of aviation in the Vietnam War. Shepard's first film appearance was in the 1936 Republic serial Darkest Africa, in which she played Valerie Tremaine, the heroine of the film. This was followed with a series of leading roles in other minor films, such as You Can't Fool Your Wife, a 1940 comedy starring Lucille Ball. She then had several minor roles in major films, including playing a secretary in Topper and uncredited roles in Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo and the 1946 Ziegfeld Follies. A more prominent role came in Seven Days Ashore, a musical in which she plays the principal love interest for the band of sailors on shore leave. Shepard also had some minor appearances on Broadway, including a part in the 1940 Cole Porter musical Panama Hattie. Shepard abandoned acting and turned to freelance journalism. She is best known in this role for her Vietnam War coverage, which became the basis for her 1967 book The Doom Pussy, recounting her experiences with aviators in the early part of the war. This book includes an early use of the phrase "the whole nine yards".

Bat Men of Africa
Valerie Tremaine

Fiamme sulla laguna
Patricia

Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo
Girl in Officers' Club (uncredited)

Seven Days Ashore
Annabelle Rogers

The Falcon in Danger
Nancy Palmer

You Can't Fool Your Wife
Peggy

There Goes My Heart
Customer (uncredited)

Professor Beware
Anebi

Night 'n' Gales
Mrs. Hood, Darla's mother

Topper
Secretary

The Fighting Texan
Judy Walton

Law of the Ranger
Evelyn Polk

I Cover Chinatown
Gloria Watkins

Darkest Africa
Valerie Tremaine







