Winston and Weston Doty (February 18, 1914 – January 1, 1934)[1] were twin child actors active for several years during the silent film era. They were known for playing child twins in Our Gang and Peter Pan during the silent era. They also started cheerleading in the University of Southern California.
Winston and Weston Doty | |
---|---|
Born | Winston and Wilson Doty February 18, 1914 |
Died | January 1, 1934 Montrose, California, U.S. | (aged 19)
Occupation | Film actors |
Years active | 1922–1924 |
The Doty twins were among the casualties of the Crescenta Valley flood (the "New Year Flood of 1934") .
Biography
editWinston and Weston – originally Winston and Wilson, though the latter was later changed after the two began appearing in silent films – were born in Malta, Ohio, sons of Lawrence "Jack" and Olive Doty. Their father was a stage and radio actor who had separated from his wife when the boys were fairly young.[2][3]
Careers
editThe brothers lived with their mother in Chicago, Los Angeles, and later in Venice, California. Between 1922 and 1924 Winston and Weston Doty appeared in a handful of silent film shorts, among them "Our Gang," 1922 with Anna Mae Bilson and Jackie Condon, One Terrible Day, and one full-length feature, Peter Pan (1924). In 1930 Olive Doty was employed in Los Angeles as an investment manager while her boys clerked at a local grocery store after school hours.[2] Later the twins enrolled together at the University of Southern California where they became popular members of the USC cheerleading squad.
Death and legacy
editIn late 1933, wildfires burned many of the trees and much of the grass in the Crescenta Valley in Los Angeles County, California. In the final week of 1933, rain inundated communities in the Crescenta Valley including La Crescenta, Montrose, La Cañada, and Tujunga.[4] On the night of December 31, 1933, the Doty brothers attended a party at a friend's house in Montrose with their dates: Mary Janet Cox (from the Venice neighborhood of Los Angeles) and Gladys Isabel Fisher (from Santa Monica). At midnight, the brothers called their mother to wish her a Happy New Year. At some point during the drive home, the Doty brothers and Weston's date (Gladys Isabel Fisher) perished when a deluge of water caused by heavy rains swept through the Crescenta Valley. The resulting flood killed scores of people, and destroyed hundreds of homes. Of the four in the Doty brothers' car, the only one to survive was Winston's date: Mary Janet Cox.[5][6] The Montrose Flood, as it came to be known, was memorialized by Woody Guthrie in his song "Los Angeles New Year's Flood."
Winston and Weston were interred together at the Woodlawn Memorial Cemetery in Santa Monica.[1]
In April 1935, the brothers' father Jack Doty died alone in his hotel room in Chicago at the age of forty-two.[3]
Sources
edit- ^ a b Woodlawn Memorial Cemetery, Santa Monica - records
- ^ a b US Census Records 1920–1930
- ^ a b "Stage Radio Actor Found Dead in Bed" – The Oakland Tribune, April 14, 1935 pg.46
- ^ Cobery, Art (2012). The Great Crescenta Valley flood: New Year's Day, 1934. Charleston, SC: The History Press. ISBN 978-1-60949-449-0.
- ^ "Trojan's Famous Twin Cheer Leaders Drown" - San Antonio Light (San Antonio, Texas) January 3, 1934 pg. 8
- ^ San Antonio Light (San Antonio, Texas) January 20, 1934 pg. 3