Stand by · pulling the latest frames
Stand by · pulling the latest frames

This relatively obscure, sweet-faced "B" level ingénue of the post-war 40s and 50s was born Beverly Jean Saul of modest beginnings in Scranton, Pennsylvania, on July 5, 1927. Her mother was a secretary who secured piano and music lessons for her young daughter. Her father was employed with a typewriter company. As a teenager Beverly made her singing debut on radio. Moving to Hollywood with her mother, she was groomed by MGM at the ripe old age of 14 and made her first picture with a bit part in The Youngest Profession (1943) using her real name. She was given the more attractive marquee name of "Beverly Tyler" before the ink had barely dried on her contract. Her career showed some signs of improvement after appearing opposite Tom Drake in The Green Years (1946) and Peter Lawford in the lightweight comedy My Brother Talks to Horses (1947), but then she was forced to wait out a lull. Strangely enough, other than for a brief singing bit in Best Foot Forward (1943), Beverly was never promoted in musicals by MGM, or any other studio for that matter -- although she did test once for the Kathryn Grayson part in That Midnight Kiss (1949) starring Mario Lanza. She did, however, appear in the short-lived Kurt Weill musical "The Firebrand of Florence" on Broadway in 1945, and performed in the musical "Miss Liberty" in Los Angeles in 1950. Beverly also sang on TV on such variety shows as "Cavalcade of Stars" and "Shower of Stars."
5.9Bathing Beauty
1944
5.0Chicago Confidential
1957
6.0The Fireball
1950
6.4The Green Years
1946
6.5The Battle at Apache Pass
1952
6.1The Cimarron Kid
1952
4.6Voodoo Island
1957
6.5The Toughest Gun in Tombstone
1958
5.8Night Without Sleep
1952
5.0The Youngest Profession
1943
6.4The Beginning or the End
1947
5.9Hong Kong Confidential
1958
10.0The Palomino
1950
6.8Best Foot Forward
1943
7.5My Brother Talks to Horses
1947