Lyda Roberti
Biography
Lyda's father was German clown Roberti, her mother a Polish trick rider. As a child performer, she toured Europe and Asia with the Circus in which she was born, leaving it (and her reportedly abusive father) in Shanghai, China. In this truly international city, Lyda became a child cafe entertainer and learned the fractured English that became her trademark. Around 1927, she emigrated to California, finding work in vaudeville, where she was "discovered" in 1930 by Broadway producer Lou Holtz and became an overnight star in his 1931 show 'You Said It'. Lyda's unforgettable stage and screen character was a sexy blonde whose charming accent and uninhibited man-chasing were played for hilarious laughs. From 1932-35 she made 8 comedy and musical films mainly at Paramount, with Fields, Cantor, and other great comedians; her unique singing style was also popular on the radio and records. Her health declining from premature heart disease, she briefly replaced the late Thelma Todd in Hal Roach comedy shorts with Patsy Kelly and appeared in 3 features for MGM and Columbia, then retired from film work a few months before her fatal heart attack at age 31.
Date of Birth 20 May 1906, Warsaw, Poland, Russian Empire [now Warsaw, Mazowieckie, Poland]
Date of Death 12 March 1938, Los Angeles, California, USA  (heart attack)
Filmography
Pick a Star
as Dagmar 1937
The Big Broadcast of 1936
as Countess Ysobel de Naigila 1935
Torch Singer
as Dora Nichols 1933
The Kid from Spain
as Rosalie 1932
Three Cornered Moon
as Jenny 1933
Dancers in the Dark
as Fanny Zabowolski 1932
Meet the Baron
as College Girl (uncredited) 1933
College Rhythm
as Mimi 1934
Nobody's Baby
as Lena Marchetti 1937
Wide Open Faces
as Kitty Fredericks 1938
George White's 1935 Scandals
as Manya 1935The Roof Garden Revue
as Herself 1929Hill-Tillies
as Lyda Roberti 1936