Gloria Metzner (August 25, 1922 – March 18, 2023), better known by the stage name of Gloria Dea/ˈdeɪ/DAY,[1] was an American actress, dancer, artist, and magician. Dea is noted for being the first magician to have performed on Las Vegas Strip,[2] as well as appearing in films during the Golden Age of Hollywood.
Life and career
Early life and work as magician
Gloria Metzner was born in Oakland, California, United States, on August 25, 1922,[3][4][5] to Martha (née Heyman) and Leo Metzner.[6] In World War I, Leo Metzner served in the 363rd Infantry Regiment of the 91st Division, then returned home to become a paint salesman and owner of a chain of paint stores.[6] He had also performed as a magician in local circles under the stage name of "The Great Leo".[7]
Gloria Metzner started performing tricks at the age of four[5] and, by the age of seven, was noted as being "the youngest working magician in the world".[8] She specialized in the hat trick, from which she pulled her two pet guinea pigs and a pigeon.[9] At the age of 11, she was one of the youngest members of the Pacific Coast Association of Magicians,[9] and at age 12 won an award from the association for best work with livestock in competition.[10] Metzner performed as a magician at El Rancho Vegas on May 14, 1941, making her the first magician to have performed on the Las Vegas Strip.[5]
Film and art career
As her career in show magic came to an end, she moved to Southern California and became an actress in Hollywood films from the mid-1940s to late 1950s, adopting the stage name Gloria Dea.[3] For much of this time, Dea was contracted with Columbia Pictures.[11] During the filming of 1944's Delightfully Dangerous, in which Dea performed as a dancer, producer Charles R. Rogers paused filming for twenty minutes so that Dea could marry her fiancé, orchestra leader Jack Statham. The couple had been unable to marry previously due to time clashes with their work schedules.[12] By March 1945, Dea and Statham had separated.[13] Dea's second marriage was to Hal Borne, noted for being the rehearsal pianist of Fred Astaire.[14] They were married in Los Angeles in April 1946.[15] In 1952, Dea took on her most prominent role, playing the lead of native girl Princess Pha in the 1952 film King of the Congo, in which she starred opposite Buster Crabbe.[16] Her other film credits include Mexicana (1945) and Plan 9 from Outer Space (1957).[5]
The couple lived in Burbank, California, in a house which Dea decorated with Greek gods which she drew using charcoal, oil paint, and gold leaf,[19] and curtains that she had received national coverage for, decorated with drawings and glued-on beads.[20][21] Besides labor and art, Dea was active in Burbank community organizations, being chair of the Hobby Show, and member of the Women's Council, B'nai Brith, Beautiful Committee, and Hadassah, often accompanying her mother.[19] Dea was elected president of the Burbank Hadassah in 1957,[22] and won a Women's Council service award in 1964.[23]
Later life
After leaving the entertainment industry, Dea sold insurance, and then new and used cars for a Chevrolet dealership in the San Fernando Valley. She later moved back to Las Vegas in 1980, residing in the Paradise Palms community with her husband, Sam Anzalone, a fellow auto dealer she met at the Chevrolet dealership. Anzalone died in January 2022,[5] and Dea turned 100 in August.[24] She celebrated the event at the Westgate Las Vegas with other magicians, including David Copperfield.[5] Dea occasionally performed magic tricks at the assisted-living residence in Las Vegas where she lived.[24]