Lois Hall Movies
The star of Republic Pictures' notoriously bad
Daughter of the Jungle (1949), and, she claims, a second cousin to both
Charles Lindbergh and
Gig Young,
Lois Hall was discovered by an agent while performing with the famed Pasadena Playhouse. She had a walk-on in the
Cary Grant comedy
Every Girl Should be Married (1948) and then settled into a long stint as a leading lady to such B-Western stars as
Charles Starrett,
Johnny Mack Brown, and
Whip Wilson.
Hall also did the inevitable serials,
The Adventures of Sir Galahad (1949) and
Pirates of the High Seas (1950), and was frequently seen on television's
The Range Rider series until semi-retiring in 1958 to care for her family. Widowed in 1995,
Hall works as an ambassador for the Baha'i One World Faith but has returned to acting on such television shows as Profiler (2000) and in the feature films
Gone in Sixty Seconds (2000) and
Bad Boy (2002). ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide