'Baby' Carmen De Rue was born on February 6, 1908 in Pueblo, Colorado, USA. She was an actress, known for The Squaw Man (1914), Cheerful Givers (1917) and Jack and the Beanstalk (1917). She was married to Fred Vincent Schrott. She died on September 28, 1986 in North Hollywood, California, USA.
Daughter of director Eugene De Rue, who was the first film-maker in
Hollywood to use sound dubbing in films and is widely credited as the
inventor of sound-dubbing.
She is sometimes confused with the similarly-named Carmen Laroux, who was active in the 1930s as an actor and dancer, and as Dolores Del Río's stand-in.
She attempted a comeback in pictures in 1925; at the time her theatrical manager was Ben H. Rothwell.