The early 1930s Kelly made her screen debut in a
Vitaphone short subject filmed there in Brooklyn,
The Grand Dame (1931), where she plays a rich
gun moll. In 1933, reputedly after seeing her in
Flying Colors, producer
Hal Roach hired Kelly to team up with
Thelma Todd in a series of short-subject comedies, and to replace her then-current co-star
ZaSu Pitts after a contract dispute, beginning with
Beauty and the Bus (1933). Pitts had demanded a salary hike of $8000 per script, so Roach terminated her services. Before making the move to
Hollywood, Kelly intimated that "I'll be a flop in movies. Besides, I don't like 'em, and I never did believe there was a place called Hollywood. Somebody made it up!" She once confided to
Motion Picture that, "I tried it for a few days and thought it was the silliest fool business in the world. I had to get up about five in the morning and get a lantern to light my way to the studio. I'd get there and there'd be no audience, no applause. It was like talking to myself. Someone was always hollering, 'Quiet!' or 'Hush!' My voice was always too loud or not loud enough. You had to knock yourself out with a powder puff in this business. Make up every minute. I was always hanging out a window, off the edge of a cliff, or from the side of a car going ninety miles an hour. Or I was being knocked on the bean with a pot or a pan. First day I was yelling, 'Say, where are those doubles I've heard about?' After a few days of it, I packed my duds and took a train back east." Kelly, therefore, was quite reluctant to make the transition to films at first, but Thelma Todd encouraged her to remain in Hollywood, and so she did. Todd even drove to
Pasadena to stop Kelly from returning on the
train bound for New York. She also helped Kelly with her finances and
tax trouble during the first few stages of her move out west. Already in
debt, Todd suggested to her not to file for
bankruptcy; that it would damage her
credit rating. “Those were the happiest days I had in pictures,” Patsy said in 1937, “I have made more money since, but the fun Thelma and I had making those silly two-reel comedies is something that comes only once in a lifetime. Thelma was better than any tonic and taught me a lot about comedy.” Shortly after filming wrapped on
Beauty and the Bus, in August 1933, Kelly was injured as a passenger in a car driven by
Gene Malin, the prominent drag performer. Malin apparently confused the gears and reversed off a pier into the water, after performing at the Ship Cafe, a club in
Venice, Los Angeles. Malin was killed; Kelly and fellow passenger Jimmy Forlenza suffered serious injuries. She was told by the doctors that she had only ten years left to live based on the amount of sandy water that got into her lungs, but actually survived for decades after the accident. Kelly once said that "I overheard a jury of grave-faced doctors nodding their heads over my supposedly unconscious body. They were giving me a maximum of ten years to live. Maybe they're right. When I heard that scientific verdict, I was plenty scared. But I pulled myself together and said, ‘Kelly, there’s only one way to beat this rap: don’t worry — and have fun out of the remaining years.’" Todd was eventually replaced by the bubbly
Pert Kelton for one short,
Pan Handlers (1936), but Kelton was quickly replaced by
Lyda Roberti, a Polish-born comedienne with a thick foreign accent. Together, they starred in the cute Hal Roach comedy ''
Nobody's Baby'' (1937) just before Roberti's untimely death. According to Kelly, Roberti died of heart failure in 1938 while bending over to tie a shoelace. It was incidents like these that further perpetuated Kelly's reputation as a jinx in Hollywood. And though some considered her bad luck, her performances were never hampered by this. "You see, something, darned if I know what it is, has happened to me since I came to this crazy town. Everyone I loved, turned to, needed, has gone, just like Thelma. It was Jean Malin, that swell New York actor and impersonator, first. I'd been a friend of Jean and his wife for years in New York. Then I went down to the Ship Café that night of Jean's disappearance. I glanced up at the flashing sign over the door that said, ‘Jean Malin’s last night,’ and as clearly as I'm hearing you, a voice said, ‘Be careful, it is his last night.’ He backed the car into the ocean off the end of the pier just one hour later. We were all submerged in the water. Adrenalin worked with me. It didn't with Jean." Her feature-length debut was playing the role of Jill Barker in
MGM’s
Going Hollywood (1933) and shared screen time with the likes of
Marion Davies,
Bing Crosby,
Fifi D’Orsay, and
Ned Sparks. The part was a little more than a mere walk-on, and she didn't have a chance to show off her musical talents in it, although the picture does contain several delightful musical moments supplied by entertainers like Crosby and The Radio Rogues. Kelly's various film roles in the 1930s ranged from the deadpan,
screwball comedic to the impressively and powerfully dramatic. There was very little she couldn't handle on screen. On the comedic side of things, she showed up in such light-hearted Americana as
Pick a Star (1937) with
Rosina Lawrence,
Jack Haley and
Laurel and Hardy, in the knee-slapping boxing comedy
Kelly the Second (1936) with
Guinn Williams and
Charley Chase, and in the biting political satire
Thanks A Million (1935) with
Dick Powell,
Ann Dvorak, and famed radio personality
Fred Allen. As far as drama, she showed off her more serious side in films such as the politically flavored
Jean Harlow vehicle
The Girl From Missouri (1934) with
Franchot Tone and
Lionel Barrymore, and in
Private Number (1936) starring
Loretta Young and
Basil Rathbone. In 1935, before Todd's death, and after
Stan Laurel had a falling out with Hal Roach over a contract disagreement, there was talk of Kelly joining
Oliver Hardy to play his wife and
Spanky McFarland’s mother in a series called
The Hardy Family, but the project was jettisoned when Laurel returned to the fold. A pilot entitled
Their Night Out was announced, with
James W. Horne slated to direct, but it never got past the talking stage. She was in the running to play Laurel's wife in
Sons of the Desert (1933), but her part was eventually filled in by
Dorothy Christy. During the 1930s, Kelly also appeared in musicals like
Going Hollywood (1933), the college football extravaganza
Pigskin Parade (1936) with
Stuart Erwin and
Judy Garland (in her first film role), playing second banana in
Sing, Baby, Sing (1936) with
Gregory Ratoff,
Adolphe Menjou, and
Ted Healy, and in
Paramount Pictures'
Every Night at Eight (1935), playing one of a trio of hopeful singers (the other two played by
Alice Faye and
Frances Langford) who are discovered by an ambitious, blue-collar bandleader by the name of Tops Cardona sympathetically played by
George Raft who christens them "The Swanee Sisters". In the film, Kelly gets to showcase her singing talents by crooning out
Jimmy McHugh-
Dorothy Fields melodies such as the light and breezy "I Feel a Song Coming On" and "Speaking Confidentially". The movie introduced the world to the song "
I'm in the Mood for Love", which is sung by Langford. The tap-dancing she learned when she was young was put to good use in films like
20th Century Fox's
Thanks a Million and
Warner Bros.'
Go Into Your Dance (1935) starring Ruby Keeler and Al Jolson in their only screen pairing together. According to columnist Ruth White: "Wherever you find a laughing group on a sound stage, you will find Patsy in the center of it. She's everybody's friend, as kindly to the prop boys as she is with the most famous stars... This jolly picture thief... makes picture work such play that not until the film is previewed do her co-stars realize she has stolen the show." In 1937, she was sent to a sanitarium to go on a diet and she lost fifty pounds. Though the new, slimmer Kelly didn't last too long, she was quite proud of her accomplishment. "Look! I can almost hide behind Gary Cooper sideways!" By the end of the decade, she appeared as shopgirl Peggy O' Brien in Hal Roach's
There Goes My Heart (1938) starring
Fredric March and
Virginia Bruce playing
Alan Mowbray's love interest, and as Kitty in
The Gorilla (1939) featuring a creepy
Bela Lugosi and the always delightfully zany and offbeat
Ritz Brothers, a performance she once cited as the favorite performance of her own. In the early 1940s, her proficient acting and comedic talents got her to rub elbows and share the screen with big-named stars such as
John Barrymore (in his final film role),
Gary Cooper,
Merle Oberon,
Walter Brennan,
John Wayne,
Bert Lahr,
Lupe Velez,
Eddie Albert,
Victor McLaglen, and even
Phil Silvers and
Ann Miller in their big-screen debut,
Hit Parade of 1941. She also co-starred with her predecessor ZaSu Pitts in Roach's train comedy
Broadway Limited (1941) around this period. Familiar faces that appear frequently in her films include Si Jenks,
Douglas Fowley,
Charlie Hall, Marion Davies,
Don Barclay, and
Arthur Housman. In her films, one could find her often playing a sassy maid or an assistant, as she did in features like
Page Miss Glory,
The Gorilla,
Topper Returns, and
Merrily We Live. Subsequently, these comic supporting roles were a harbinger of things to come for Kelly. She jested that she was often cast as a maid, "...because I had a maid's costume that fit. They didn’t have to get me a new outfit. They lent it from one studio to another." After appearing in a film or two for
RKO, she then began starring in low-budget fare such as
My Son, The Hero (1943) with
Roscoe Karns and
Maxie Rosenbloom, and
Danger! Women at Work (1943), pictures released by
Producers Releasing Corporation. ==Later career==