Dale Evans(1912-2001)
- Actress
- Soundtrack
American leading lady of musical westerns of the 1940s. Born Frances
Octavia Smith in Uvalde, Texas. She was raised in Texas and Arkansas.
Married at 14 and a mother at 15, she was divorced at 17 (some sources
say widowed). Intent on a singing career, she moved to Memphis,
Tennessee, and worked in an insurance company while taking occasional
radio singing jobs. After another unhappy marriage, she went to
Louisville, Kentucky, and became a popular singer on a local radio
station. There she took the stage name Dale Evans (from her third
husband, Robert Dale Butts, and actress Madge Evans). Divorced in 1936, she
moved to Dallas, Texas, and again found local success as a radio
singer. She married Butts and they moved to Chicago, where she began to
attract increasing attention from both radio audiences and film
industry executives. She signed with Fox Pictures and made a few small
film appearances, then was cast as leading lady to rising cowboy star
Roy Rogers. She and Rogers clicked and she became his steady on-screen
companion. In 1946, Rogers' wife died and Evans' marriage to Butts
ended about the same time. Rogers and Evans had been close onscreen in
a string of successful westerns, and now became close off-screen as
well. A year later she married Rogers and the two become icons of
American pop culture. Their marriage was dogged by tragedy, including
the loss of three children before adulthood, but Evans was able not
only to find inspiration in the midst of tragedy but to provide
inspiration as well, authoring several books on her life and spiritual
growth through difficulty. She and Rogers starred during the 1950s on
the popular TV program bearing his name, and even after retirement
continued to make occasional appearances and to run their Roy Rogers
and Dale Evans Museum in Victorville, California. Following Dale's
death, the Roy Rogers and Dale Evans Museum moved to Branson,
Missouri.