Mary Ella Dees (June 3, 1911 – August 4, 2005) was an American stage and screen actress whose name rarely appears in the bold type—because her most famous job required her not to be noticed. For a brief, strange moment in MGM history, she became a primary stand-in double for Jean Harlow, stepping into the brightest spotlight in Hollywood only to imitate its glare.
Syracuse beginnings, Southern interlude
Dees was born in Syracuse, New York, the daughter of a successful lawyer, and spent part of her youth in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Before Hollywood got its hands on her, she worked briefly as a typist—the kind of detail that always feels like a plot point in old studio-era biographies: a “real job” that vanishes the moment the camera decides you belong to it.
Hollywood, 1932: a title, a bit part, and a fateful friendship
In 1932, Dees moved to Hollywood, where she was named “Miss America in Hollywood.” The title—more promotional fuel than crown—helped her land a small part in Red-Headed Woman, directed by Jack Conway and starring Jean Harlow. The important thing wasn’t the size of the role; it was the proximity.
Harlow befriended her and, by Dees’s accounts, offered a kind of mentorship that reads like tough-love generosity: encouraging her to study dancing, steering her toward the “right clothes,” and even helping pay for gowns. It’s an unusually intimate detail for the studio era, where friendships could be real but careers were often transactional. In Dees’s story, it sounds like both: warmth mixed with professional calibration.
The job nobody wants: standing in for Jean Harlow
Dees was a dancer, and that matters, because dancers understand replication—timing, posture, light, rhythm, the angle of a shoulder. In 1937, after Harlow’s sudden death, MGM faced a nightmare: Harlow’s final film, Saratoga, was still in production, and she was playing opposite Clark Gable. The studio needed a solution that would allow them to finish the film without re-casting the role entirely.
Dees was selected by MGM boss Louis B. Mayer to serve as a stand-in double for Harlow—reportedly for about four minutes of footage. That number sounds small until you picture what it implies: sets locked down, crews tense, the lead actor trying to play through a loss, and a woman being asked to become a ghost with perfect hair and matching light. It’s not just acting; it’s stagecraft plus nerve.
Screen work: quick flashes in famous worlds
Dees continued appearing in films through the 1930s and 1940s, including The Last Gangster (1937) and The Women(1939). She also turned up in Three Stooges shorts (including Hoi Polloi), and she was associated with the comedy factory of the era, including work connected to the Marx Brothers—the kind of credits that, on paper, look like a joyride through classic Hollywood even if the actual work was often long hours, small parts, and fast turnaround.
Last film, long stage life
Her final film appearance came in 1946 in the Marx Brothers’ A Night in Casablanca. After that, she kept working—but mostly where the camera doesn’t preserve you forever. Dees continued acting on stage, performing in repertory theatre until 1985, which is a quiet flex: she outlasted trends, studios, and the old system itself, staying in front of live audiences long after the film roles dried up.
Death and the strange permanence of being “the double”
Dees died on August 4, 2005, in Lake Worth, Florida, at 94, after a long illness. Her biography is one of those Hollywood side corridors that end up feeling more human than the main hallway: a performer who worked, adapted, and endured—yet is remembered most for the day the industry asked her to wear someone else’s shadow.
