DeHaven, who made her screen debut in Charlie Chaplin's "Modern Times" (1936), died on Saturday while in hospice care in Las Vegas, her daughter, Faith Fincher-Finkelstein, told The Hollywood Reporter.
DeHaven suffered a stroke about three months ago, she said.
DeHaven, a studio player at MGM, appeared in a number of top films with leading stars, including "Thousands Cheer" (1943) with Gene Kelly; "Two Girls and a Sailor" with June Allyson and Van Johnson; "Step Lively" with Frank Sinatra; "Summer Holiday" with Mickey Rooney; "The Doctor and the Girl" with Glenn Ford and Nancy Reagan; "Two Tickets to Broadway" with Janet Leigh and Tony Martin; and "The Girl Rush" with Rosalind Russell.
Her last movie appearance came as a lovely widow and romantic interest of Jack Lemmon's character on the cruise-ship set "Out to Sea" in 1997.
DeHaven was married four times, including once to actor John Payne and twice to businessman Richard Fincher. All her marriages ended in divorce.
