There’s no business like her business
Costa Mesa’s Elizabeth Van Dreel is 78, but she hardly looks the
part.
Van Dreel has led what some would consider a glamorous life. She
has worked as a showgirl, an actress, a model, a dancing and modeling
instructor, and she even dabbled in home decor and real estate.
After leaving her small town in the Midwest at age 17, she headed
for Chicago where she started modeling in fashion shows and took
dance lessons at the Arthur Murray studio. This quickly led to a
dancing career that brought her to California.
Van Dreel worked with some of the biggest names in show business
in the ‘50s, such as Johnny Carson, Jimmy Durante and Mickey Rooney.
She decided to retire from show business several years ago, and
she has spent the past 25 years as a caregiver to sick friends and
family members.
The Daily Pilot’s Lindsay Sandham recently sat down with Van Dreel
to hear about her adventures in show business.
So you grew up in Wisconsin and then moved to Chicago ...
I started modeling. I went to a modeling school and started doing
fashion shows. Then I went to Arthur Murray’s studio when he started
teaching dancing. I had a couple of titles -- one was “Miss $10 a
minute.” Two photographers sued one another over my services.
What do you mean two photographers sued one another over your
services?
One said [the other] monopolized my services and he wanted to use
me, and they were suing one another for $500,000. So it made a lot of
front-page publicity.
So how did you wind up in California?
Well, I worked at Chez Paree in Chicago. That’s when they added
showgirls and I was the first showgirl that Dorothy Dorben put on. We
were called the Dorothy Dorben Adorables. And so I worked for her --
that was in the early ‘50s -- then she transferred to California, and
she asked me to go with her. We went to the Biltmore Bowl, which was
the Biltmore Hotel in downtown L.A. So I worked for her as a line
captain. That means you train the girls for the routines. You learn
and then you train them.
So you must have some pretty crazy stories from that time you
spent as a showgirl in the ‘50s?
It was an interesting time in my life. It was hectic. We never
made a lot of money because people didn’t in those days.
And you did some movie work?
I joined SAG [the Screen Actors Guild] and SEG [the Screen Extras
Guild], and I did a lot of stand-in work also. You stand in for them
[actors] for all the lighting and everything before they take the
shots -- you know, while they’re in make-up -- and you do all the
rehearsing for them and then when they come on the set you show them
where their moves are.
So Ellessa was your stage name?
Ellessa and Betty I also used. For acting, I used Ellessa, and
Betty I used for standing-in and for extra work and for dancing.
Elizabeth, I used for teaching modeling, because it sounds more
formal. I taught all of the different types of classes including
dancing at the modeling studios.
How long have you been in Costa Mesa?
I’ve been here now two years. I tried to retire here about 20
years ago, and for the last 25 years, I’ve been taking care of my
family and they’re all gone now. I was their caregiver. I have had
friends that have been ill, and I have gone to stay with them.
Have you been able to officially retire?
I’m retired, but I still do volunteer work.
What was the last show business work you did?
The last one was working in “[The] Towering Inferno.” I played a
San Francisco socialite.
Out of all the work you’ve done, what was your favorite?
I think working in nightclubs and in movies because it was such a
vast experience working in so many different pictures. One of the
funniest things, I was working at Universal Studios on the back lot.
I had time in between, so I lay down under a tree. And suddenly I was
getting so hot and I couldn’t imagine why, so I opened my eyes and
someone had moved the tree -- it was a prop. I thought that was
amusing at the time.
What are some of the differences you’ve noticed between Hollywood
when you got started and the way it is now?
It was much more proper. We could not show cleavage at all. We
would have to put a scarf on our neckline because it just wasn’t
acceptable. It was very structured and in very good taste, and I
thought it was a wonderful time to actually be in the business. I
wouldn’t enjoy working in it now.
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