Developing post-childbirth complications, Preer died of
pneumonia on November 17, 1932, in Los Angeles at the age of 36. Evelyn Preer was only sick for 48 hours, but it was fatal. She was feeling ill and thought it was just a cold, but she soon went unconscious. She was in a coma and only woke up to say, “Where is my baby?” Many friends tried to visit her but were not allowed. Her husband was only allowed at her bedside for two minutes as they were trying to save her. The Associated Press sent the news of her death to the whole world because of how famous she was. At her funeral, they had a curtain made from blossoms to act as a theater curtain in its last act of closing. They had people close to her acting as people who worked at a theater, and many people were present at her funeral.
Etta Moten sang the spiritual that Evelyn would sing in “Porgy.” The hundreds of people ended the funeral by going to look at her face one more time. Her husband continued as a popular leading man and "heavy" in numerous
race films throughout the 1930s and 1940s, and died in 1960. Their daughter Edeve Thompson converted to Catholicism as a teenager. She later entered the
Sisters of St. Francis of Oldenburg, Indiana, where she became known as Sister
Francesca Thompson, O.S.F., and became an academic, teaching at both
Marian University in Indiana and
Fordham University in New York City. ==Filmography==