She came into the world as Lorraine Gourley on March 24, 1924, in Huntington Park—sunny California, where dreams sprout like weeds and wither just as fast. Hollywood looked at her and saw something bright enough to rename. Lorraine became Lois Andrews, because that’s how the town works: it puts a shine on you, scrubs off the birth certificate, and expects you to play along.
Lois didn’t argue. She had that kind of face—wide-eyed, glossy, the sort of beauty you couldn’t teach. When Fox pulled her into the orbit of a comic-strip adaptation in 1943, she ended up playing Dixie Dugan, the brassy, flirtatious newspaper heroine with ink in her veins. Lois fit the part like it had been written for her. Suddenly, she wasn’t just another hopeful blonde—she was the girl who leapt out of a cartoon and made it breathe.
Hollywood in the 1940s was a factory floor of beautiful faces, and Lois was good enough to stay employed even if she never climbed all the way to the marquee lights. She drifted through films the way smoke drifts through a backstage hallway—small roles, contract obligations, and the occasional push from someone who had the power to make things happen.
One of those someones was George Jessel.
Lois married Jessel in 1940 when she was sixteen—a teenager with a movie-star face and a producer husband old enough to know better. He cast her when he could, kept her orbiting his pictures like a decorative moon, and the town chalked it up to the usual arrangement: a powerful man, a young wife, a couple of roles, and a daughter, Jerilyn, born before Lois could even drink legally.
By 1943, the marriage was over.
That would become something of a pattern.
Lois had a way of falling into love like it was the next audition—sudden, hopeful, always a little doomed. In October 1945 she married David Street, an actor-singer with cheekbones sharp enough to cut paper. Six months later the marriage was annulled. Hollywood applauded politely and went back to ignoring them both.
But Lois didn’t stay single long.
She married actor Steve Brodie in 1946, and for a moment you could almost picture a steady life: two performers, a shared roof, quiet dinners between shoots. That illusion lasted until 1949, when the divorce headlines rolled out like stage directions—simple, clean, final.
Her last marriage came in 1952, to Ernest Brunner, a musician and actor who moved in the same soft-lit shadows she did. It wasn’t a Hollywood fairytale, but it lasted longer than the others, and maybe that’s something.
Her career followed the quiet arc so many actresses of that era faced. A strong debut, a handful of roles tied to the influence of men who liked having her nearby, and then the slow fade into smaller films, uncredited bits, and the eventual retreat from the screen altogether. The system was designed to replace women like Lois—fresh faces arriving every week, each one younger, hungrier, and easier to mold.
And Lois? She bowed out quietly, as if she understood the game better than most.
But life had one last rewrite waiting offstage.
Lois Andrews died of lung cancer on April 5, 1968.
Forty-four years old.
Too young for any of the exits she’d been handed.
Hollywood barely paused to note her passing. The town has a short memory and an even shorter attention span. But if you step back and look at the story—all that early promise, all those marriages, all the ways she kept finding a way forward—you see a woman who lived a compressed, volatile, incandescent life in the space most people take to just get started.
She was bright.
She was bruised.
She was very, very human.
And like so many Hollywood women of her era, she burned fast—
a brief, hot flare across the screen,
then gone before the projector even cooled.
