Kelley Roos is the pseudonym used by the husband-and-wife writing team Audrey Roos (1912âÂÂ1982) and William Roos (1911âÂÂ1987). They wrote numerous crime novels from the 1940s onwards and lived in Martha's Vineyard.
William Roos and Audrey Kelley met in the 1930s while both taking a speech class in hopes of pursuing a career on the stage. They first performed on a showboat on the banks of the Ohio River before landing small roles in New York City. They married around this time.
During World War II, they adopted the pseudonym Kelley Roos to begin writing mystery novels. "Made Up to Kill" (1940), the first novel in the series featuring Jeff and Haila Troy, takes place backstage at a theater and is an immediate success. Jeff, a photographer, and Haila, a former actress, then find themselves mixed up in a dozen classic whodunits, mixed with comedy, delivered by Kelley Roos in the form of novels or long stories. The Troys' fame is such that they are embodied by Brian Aherne and Loretta Young in the 1942 film A Night to Remember, directed by Richard Wallace, and then, adapted for television, starring Robert Sterling and Virginia Gilmore.
The most famous title in the series, The Shadow of a Chance, was also adapted into a film, Scent of Mystery, directed by Jack Cardiff. The Troys were removed in writing the film and the setting was moved to Spain. After ending the Troy series in 1966, Kelley Roos wrote several detective novels with a focus on thrillers.
French-language editions appeared in the 1950s. German-language editions appeared in the 1960s, among others in the series Mitternachtsbücher (Verlag Kurt Desch) and Die schwarzen Kriminalromane (Scherz Verlag).