Anita Ellis (née Kert, later Shapiro; April 12, 1920 – October 28, 2015) was a Canadian-born American singer and actress. She famously dubbed Rita Hayworth's songs in Gilda.
Anita
Kert was born in Montreal, Quebec, the eldest of four children born to Orthodox
Jewish parents, Harry and Lillian "Libbie" Kert . She had a younger
sister and two younger brothers, one of whom, Lawrence Frederick Kert
(1930–1991), became an actor and singer best known for originating the role of
Tony in West Side Story. The family moved to Hollywood when she was nine years
old. She graduated from Hollywood High School in 1938, and attended the College
of Music in Cincinnati, Ohio. Ellis
became a naturalized United States citizen in 1950.
Ellis dubbed the singing voices of such actresses as Rita Hayworth (notably in Gilda, 1946), Vera-Ellen and Jeanne Crain. Twenty-eight years after Gilda was released, entertainment writer Rex Reed reminisced in print about Ellis's voice: "I fell in love with Anita Ellis when I was 8 years old ... Only I didn't know she was Anita Ellis, I thought she was Rita Hayworth ... That was the sexiest voice in 1946, and it kept turning people on for years ..."
For her work in Gilda, her role in the film was greatly underplayed and kept secret by the producers, who wanted fans to believe Hayworth was the singer. They went as far as to put Rita Hayworth's name in the credit of the soundtrack instead of Anita Ellis. Hayworth also bore some resentment towards the studio for not allowing her to sing her own parts and the embarrassment it caused when she was asked to sing by fans who thought she was the voice of Gilda. There were claims made that Hayworth had sung the acoustic guitar version of "Put the Blame on Mame" but this was untrue, as Ellis dubbed Hayworth's singing voice in all the film's songs.
In 1941, she joined WLW in Cincinnati, Ohio, as a singer. Billed as Anita Kurt, she was a regular on Open House (also known as The Ona Munson Show), The New Jack Carson Show, Tommy Riggs and Betty Lou. Billed as Anita Ellis, she was also a regular on The Charlie McCarthy Show and The Jack Carson Show. She was a regular guest on The Red Skelton Show.
Ellis married U.S. Army Lt. Frank Wilby Ellis Jr. on January 23, 1943, in Tucson, Arizona. They divorced in 1946. Lt. Ellis was killed in the crash of TB-47B "Stratojet" #50-0076 on December 18, 1957, while serving as pilot. She remarried, to neurologist Dr. Mortimer Fromberg Shapiro, an Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai faculty member on July 31, 1960; the couple remained together until Shapiro's death on June 6, 1995.
She "traveled through the wilderness of Africa and the Himalayas, and taught nature studies at the American Museum of Natural History." Ellis had a pilot's license and flew her own plane for pleasure. In the 1950s, Ellis stopped performing while she underwent psychoanalysis. She returned to professional singing with performances in nightclubs and a recording contract with Epic Records with which she recorded two albums: “I Wonder What become of Me”(1956) and “Hims” (1957) . That year, columnist Dorothy Kilgallen wrote: "Anita Ellis ... has surprised everyone with her new jazz singer style. She gives her analyst credit for the New Sound." She made one more album with Elektra in 1960 “The World in my Arms”, before quitting to become a full-time wife.
It wasn’t until 1974 that she was urged by a reporter to return to singing, which she did, starting at Michael’s Pub in New York for eight weeks. By 1979 she had released two more albums. A Kokomo Tribune newspaper article reported that many people who have heard Anita sing, think her career could have been as big as Ella Fitzgerald or Peggy Lee’s if she had pursued it. She didn’t because she had suffered from stage fright for more than 25 years. Ellis described her condition as "not just stage fright. It's more than that. It's really crippling. It's kept me from my own gifts. It just stops me cold. I don't sing." She eventually ended her career in 1987 due to her stage fright.
A widow, she lived in Manhattan and had suffered from Alzheimer's disease since 2000; she died on October 28, 2015, aged 95, from the disease. Mt. Sinai Hospital's department of neurology received a $1 million gift to support strategic priorities from her estate.
(Edited
from Wikipedia & The Kokomo Tribune)