Quick Facts
- NAME: Yvonne DeCarlo
- OCCUPATION: Film Actress, Television Actress, Pin-up
- BIRTH DATE: September 01, 1922
- DEATH DATE: January 08, 2007
- PLACE OF BIRTH: Point Gray, Canada
- PLACE OF DEATH: Woodland Hills, California
Best Known For
Actress Yvonne DeCarlo was Moses' wife in DeMille's The Ten Commandments, but is better known for playing the matriarch on TV's The Munsters.
Yvonne DeCarlo. (2012). Biography.com. Retrieved 11:13, Feb 08, 2012 from http://www.biography.com/people/yvonne-decarlo-9542333
Yvonne DeCarlo [Internet]. 2012. http://www.biography.com/people/yvonne-decarlo-9542333, February 08
" Yvonne DeCarlo." 2012. Biography.com 08 Feb 2012, 11:13 http://www.biography.com/people/yvonne-decarlo-9542333
' Yvonne DeCarlo', Biography.com,(2012) http://www.biography.com/people/yvonne-decarlo-9542333 [accessed Feb 08, 2012]
" Yvonne DeCarlo," Biography.com, http://www.biography.com/people/yvonne-decarlo-9542333 (accessed Feb 08, 2012).
Yvonne DeCarlo [Internet]. Biography.com; 2012 [cited 2012 Feb 08]. Available from: http://www.biography.com/people/yvonne-decarlo-9542333.
Yvonne DeCarlo, http://www.biography.com/people/yvonne-decarlo-9542333 (last visited Feb 08, 2012).
Yvonne DeCarlo, http://www.biography.com/people/yvonne-decarlo-9542333 (last visited Feb 08, 2012).
Synopsis
To help her single mother, Yvonne DeCarlo (born September 1, 1922) performed in nightclubs around Vancouver. She soon made the move to Hollywood, where she was typecast as an exotic vixen before appearing in Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments.
Contents
Early Life
Actress. Born Peggy Yvonne Middleton, on September 1, 1922, in Point Gray, British Columbia, Canada. Yvonne was the sole child born to Marie Middleton, who was only 17 when her husband deserted her and their daughter. Marie supported Yvonne’s decision to drop out of high school and pursue a career as an entertainer.
In order to alleviate her family’s financial troubles, Yvonne spent most of her teens performing in nightclubs and on stage. Needing a new name to accompany her budding career, she used her mother’s maiden name, and was thereafter billed as Yvonne DeCarlo.
DeCarlo and her mother sought greater opportunities in the United States and, in 1940, they settled in Los Angeles, California. A year later, the ambitious actress caught the attention of Paramount Studios, who signed her to a weekly contract. Like many newcomers, she found herself in a number of minor (and sometimes uncredited) roles in the films Road to Morocco (1942), as well as For Whom the Bell Tolls and The Deerslayer (both 1943).
Lead Roles
In 1945, Universal took notice of the alluring actress and cast her as the lead in Salome, Where She Danced, a Technicolor Western. The film was forgettable, but DeCarlo’s performance as an exotic dancer turned spy earned her the recognition she sought. Similar seductive roles followed in the Song of Scheherazade and Slave Girl (both 1947). DeCarlo’s projects during the ‘40s bolstered her visibility, but at the same time, limited her roles to that of a sultry screen vixen.
Following a few disappointing features with Universal, the studio failed to see a future for DeCarlo. They terminated her contract, after which her work consisted mainly of unremarkable Westerns, including Scarlet Angel (1952) with Rock Hudson, and Shotgun (1955). However, she surprisingly turned in good comedic performances in the British-made Hotel Sahara (1951) and The Captain’s Paradise (1953), costarring Sir Alec Guinness.
The year 1956 defined a turning point in DeCarlo’s career when she was cast in Cecil B. DeMille’s landmark production of The Ten Commandments. DeCarlo’s performance as Moses’ wife Sephora, opposite Hollywood icons Charlton Heston and Yul Brynner, marked a place for her in films. Her next project paired her with Clark Gable and Sidney
GetGlue
-
Celebrate Black History with BIO and GetGlue
All February, check in daily to BIO Black History on GetGlue to unlock stickers, videos, and more!
profile name: Yvonne DeCarlo profile occupation:
Your Connections
Sign in with Facebook to see how you and your friends are connected to famous icons.
Profile Connections
Included In These Groups
-
TV Moms: 1960s
View groupAs traditional family structures changed in America, so did the women of 1960s television. Mary Tyler Moore began wearing the pants in the family, when she traded in her housedress for capris on The Dick Van Dyke Show. Florence Henderson played the head of a blended family on The Brady Bunch, and Lucille Ball starred as a widow with big career aspirations on The Lucy Show. These shows, and others like them, reflected the burgeoning 1960s feminist movement. Their popularity among female viewers also proved a growing national interest in women's equality.
TV Moms: 1960s 5 people in this group
-
Creepy Actors
View groupThey can be chainsaw wielding maniacs, creatures from another dimension, or supernatural presences. Horror film monsters frighten, haunt and shock us. They personify our biggest nightmares. And the actors that truly make those characters come to life on the big screen often give performances so convincing that—for just a minute—you forget they’re only imaginary. Here are some of the actors and actresses who gave performances that felt so real, you thought twice about turning off the lights at night.
Creepy Actors 18 people in this group
-
Famous Virgoans 481 people in this group

Barack Obama
Black History
African-American Firsts: Athletes
Don Cornelius
I Survived...
I Survived... Beyond and Back
Jamie Foxx
Magic Johnson
Tina Turner
I Survived



