Elizabeth Allen (actress)
Elizabeth Allen | |
---|---|
Allen and Paul Lynde in publicity photo for The Paul Lynde Show (1972) | |
Born |
Elizabeth Ellen Gillease January 25, 1929 Jersey City, New Jersey, USA |
Died |
September 19, 2006 77) Fishkill, New York, USA | (aged
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1955–1996 |
Spouse(s) | Baron Karl von Vietinghoff-Scheel (m. 1952–55) |
Elizabeth Allen (January 25, 1929 — September 19, 2006) was an American theatre, television and film actress and singer whose forty-year career lasted from the mid-1950s through the mid-1990s and included scores of TV episodes as well as six theatrical features, two of which (1963's Donovan's Reef, for which she received a 2nd place Golden Laurel Award as Top New Female Personality, and 1964's Cheyenne Autumn) were directed by John Ford.
She was a cast member in five TV series: The Jackie Gleason Show (1956–57), Bracken's World (1969–70), The Paul Lynde Show (1972–73), CPO Sharkey (1976–77) and the daytime drama Texas (1980–81) while also maintaining a thriving theatrical career as a musical comedy star and receiving two Tony nominations, in 1962 for The Gay Life and in 1965 for Do I Hear a Waltz?.
Early life and career
Born Elizabeth Ellen Gillease in the New Jersey city of Jersey City, across the Hudson River from Manhattan, she began her career as a Ford Agency high-fashion model before landing the television role of the “Away We Go!” girl on The Jackie Gleason Show in the 1950s. Thereafter, she honed her stage skills by joining and performing with the Helen Hayes Repertory Group before expanding into the big and small screens. Elizabeth made numerous television appearances in guest starring roles on such programs as The Fugitive, Kojak, and Buck Rogers in the 25th Century. She was also a regular cast member on TV's Bracken's World, The Paul Lynde Show, C.P.O. Sharkey, Another World and its spin-off, Texas. Her television, film and stage career spanned three decades.
She was featured with William Shatner in "The Hungry Glass", the 16th episode in the first season of Boris Karloff's Thriller in 1961.[1] In 1962, she played a leading role in the first season of Combat!, in the episode "No Hallelujahs for Glory" as a persistent war correspondent.
Allen is perhaps best known on TV for her role as the creepy saleslady in the first-season episode of Rod Serling's original version of The Twilight Zone, entitled "The After Hours", where actress Anne Francis (playing 'Miss Marsha White') finally realizes that she is a mannequin and that her month of freedom and living among the humans is over. Allen's saleslady character (seen by no one but Marsha) is the mannequin whose turn in the outside world is up next and has already been delayed by one full day, thus explaining her slightly peeved attitude.
In 1963, Allen starred with John Wayne, Dorothy Lamour and Lee Marvin in the John Ford film Donovan's Reef. She also starred in Diamond Head with Charlton Heston and Yvette Mimieux. Both movies were filmed on location in Hawaii. Allen also appeared with James Stewart in Cheyenne Autumn and won a Laurel Award in 1963 as the year's most promising film actress.
She was twice nominated for Tony Awards for her performances on Broadway in The Gay Life, as Best Featured Actress in a Musical and Do I Hear a Waltz?, as Best Actress in a Musical. She can be heard singing beautifully throughout the original cast album of Waltz, available on CD. Her other notable stage productions on the Great White Way and beyond included Romanoff and Juliet, Lend an Ear, Sherry!, California Suite, The Pajama Game, The Tender Trap, Show Boat, South Pacific, and culminating in the 1980s Broadway musical 42nd Street, as fading star Dorothy Brock. In 1983 she appeared as Dr. Gwen Harding on the CBS soap opera Guiding Light.
Allen quietly retired from show business in 1996, after touring numerous cities throughout the world for over a decade with her 42nd Street role from Broadway. This was her last, significant acting job after appearing in the 1980s TV series Texas for two seasons.
Personal life and death
She was married briefly to Baron Karl von Vietinghoff-Scheel, but they divorced and she never remarried.
Allen died from kidney disease, aged 77, in Fishkill, New York. She was predeceased by her only sibling, brother Joseph L. Gillease, and survived by her sister-in-law, Marion Gillease, her nephew and Godson, Patrick J. Gillease, her niece, Erin Gillease Phelan, and two grand-nieces, Alicia Phelan and Alexandria Phelan.[2][3]
Broadway credits
- 1957 Romanoff and Juliet as Juliet
- 1962 The Gay Life as Magda
- 1965 Do I Hear a Waltz? as Leona Samish
- 1967 Sherry! as Maggie Cutler
- 1983 42nd Street as Dorothy Brock (replacing Tammy Grimes)
Filmography
- 1960 From the Terrace as Sage Remmington
- 1963 Donovan's Reef as Ameilia Sarah Dedham. She developed a bond with John Ford, who directed that film and he later cast her as a beautiful (and comic) saloon lady, Guinevieve Plantagenet in Cheyenne Autumn.
- 1963 Diamond Head as Laura Beckett
- 1964 Cheyenne Autumn as Guinevere Plantagenet
- 1966 The Fugitive Episode 102
- 1971 Star Spangled Girl as Mrs. MacKaninee, the landlady
- 1972 The Carey Treatment as Evelyn Randall
- 1979 No Other Love as Jean Michaels
References
- ↑ "The Hungry Glass" IMDB Database
- ↑ "Elizabeth Allen". Social Security Death Index. New England Historic Genealogical Society. Retrieved September 5, 2011.
- ↑ Hevesi, Dennis (October 9, 2006). "Elizabeth Allen, 77, Stage Star Known for Memorable TV Line, Is Dead". The New York Times. Retrieved September 5, 2011.
External links
- Elizabeth Allen at the Internet Movie Database
- Elizabeth Allen at the Internet Broadway Database
- Elizabeth Allen at Internet Off-Broadway Database
- Elizabeth Allen at AllMovie
- Clips from Texas episodes
- Elizabeth Allen at Find a Grave
|