Name | Jayne Mansfield |
---|---|
Caption | in Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1957) |
Birth name | Vera Jayne Palmer |
Birth date | April 19, 1933 |
Birth place | Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, United States |
Death date | June 29, 1967 |
Death place | Slidell, Louisiana, United States |
Occupation | Actress, singer, model |
Years active | 1954–1967 |
Spouse | |
Children | Jayne Marie Mansfield (b. 1950)Miklós "Mickey" Hargitay, Jr. (b. 1958)Zolton Hargitay (b. 1960)Mariska Hargitay (b. 1964)Antonio "Tony" Cimber (b. 1966) |
Jayne Mansfield (April 19, 1933June 29, 1967) was an American actress working both on Broadway and in Hollywood. One of the leading blonde sex symbols of the 1950s, Mansfield starred in several popular Hollywood films that emphasized her platinum-blonde hair, hourglass figure and cleavage-revealing costumes.
While Mansfield's film career was short-lived, she had several box office successes. She won the Theatre World Award, a Golden Globe and a Golden Laurel.
Mansfield's well-remembered for her starring roles (as a blonde stereotype) in three 20th Century Fox films: The Girl Can't Help It (1956); Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1957); and, The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw (1958); however, Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? was the most successful of the three, fore, Mansfield starred in the play and the film version; therefore, this film is better known.
As the demand for blonde bombshells declined in the 1960s, Mansfield was relegated to low-budget film melodramas and comedies, but remained a popular celebrity. Her most noted film in the '60s was the romantic-comedy, Promises! Promises! (1963), in which she appeared nude in four scenes.
In her later career she continued to attract large crowds in foreign countries and in lucrative and successful nightclub tours. Mansfield had been a Playboy Playmate of the Month and appeared in the magazine several additional times. She died in an automobile accident at age 34.
She studied dramatics at the University of Dallas and the University of Texas at Austin, having only attended Highland Park High School until her junior year. Her acting aspirations were temporarily put on hold with the birth of her first child, Jayne Marie Mansfield, on November 8, 1950, when Mansfield was 17. She juggled motherhood and classes at the University of Texas, then spent a year at Camp Gordon, Georgia, while Paul Mansfield served in the United States Army. She entered the Miss California contest, hiding her marital status, and won in the local round before withdrawing. Her husband, Paul Mansfield, hoped the birth of their child would discourage her interest in acting. When it did not, he agreed to move to Los Angeles in late 1954 to help further her career. In 1954, they moved to Los Angeles and she studied dramatics at UCLA. Between a variety of odd jobs, including a stint as a candy vendor at a movie theatre, she attended UCLA during the summer, and then went back to Texas for fall quarter at Southern Methodist University. She posed nude for the February 1955 issue of Playboy, an event that helped to push the magazine's circulation and launch Mansfield's career. In 1964, Playboy reran that pictorial.
In Dallas, she became a student of actor Baruch Lumet, father of director Sidney Lumet and founder of the Dallas Institute of the Performing Arts. On October 22, 1953, she first appeared on stage in a production of Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman. Frequent references have been made to Mansfield's very high IQ, which she advertised as 163. She spoke five languages, and was a classically trained pianist and violinist. Mansfield admitted her public did not care about her brains. "They're more interested in 40-21-35," she said. While attending the University of Texas, she won several beauty contests, with titles that included "Miss Photoflash," "Miss Magnesium Lamp" and "Miss Fire Prevention Week." The only title she ever turned down was "Miss Roquefort Cheese", because she believed it "just didn't sound right." Early in her career, the prominence of her breasts was considered problematic, leading her to be cut from her first professional assignment, an advertising campaign for General Electric, which depicted several young women in bathing suits relaxing around a pool.
In 1955, Paul Wendkos offered her the dramatic role of Gladden in The Burglar (1957), his film adaptation of David Goodis' novel. The film was done in film noir style, and Mansfield appeared alongside Dan Duryea and Martha Vickers. The Burglar was released two years later, when Mansfield's fame was at its peak. She was successful in this straight dramatic role, though most of her subsequent film appearances would be either comedic in nature or capitalize on her sex appeal.
She made one more movie with Warner Bros., which gave her another small, but important role as Angel O'Hara, opposite Edward G. Robinson, in Illegal (1955). The film offered another rare serious performance by Mansfield. After leaving Warner Bros., Mansfield made an uncredited cameo appearance in Hell on Frisco Bay (1955), starring Alan Ladd.
Mansfield then played a dramatic role in The Wayward Bus in 1957. In this film, she attempted to move away from her "dumb blonde" image and establish herself as a serious actress. This film was adapted from John Steinbeck's novel, and the cast included Dan Dailey and Joan Collins. The film enjoyed reasonable success at the box office. She won a Golden Globe in 1957 for New Star Of The Year – Actress, beating Carroll Baker and Natalie Wood, for her performance as a "wistful derelict" in The Wayward Bus. It was "generally conceded to have been her best acting", according to The New York Times, in a fitful career hampered by her flamboyant image, distinctive voice ("a soft-voiced coo punctuated with squeals"), voluptuous figure, and limited acting range. Mansfield reprised her role of Rita Marlowe in the 1957 movie version of Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?, co-starring Tony Randall and Joan Blondell. The Girl Can't Help It and Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? were popular successes in their day and are considered classics. Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?'' is known as Mansfield's "signature film", because Jayne starred in both the play and film version.
(1957)]]
Mansfield's fourth starring role in a Hollywood film was in Kiss Them for Me (1957) in which she received prominent billing alongside Cary Grant. However, in the film itself, she is little more than comedy relief while Grant's character shows a preference for a sleek, demure redhead portrayed by fashion model Suzy Parker. Kiss Them for Me was a box office disappointment and would prove to be her final starring role in a mainstream Hollywood studio film. The movie was described as "vapid" and "ill-advised". It also marked one of the last attempts by 20th Century Fox to publicize her. The continuing publicity around her physical presence failed to sustain her career. Mansfield was then offered a part opposite James Stewart and Jack Lemmon in Bell, Book and Candle (1958), but had to turn it down due to pregnancy. Afterward, Mansfield got word that her rival Kim Novak would replace her in the film.
In 1958, Fox gave Mansfield the lead role as Kate opposite Kenneth More in the western spoof The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw. Despite being filmed in 1958, The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw, was not released in the United States until 1959. The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw required Jayne to sing three songs; she was not a trained singer, so the studio dubbed Mansfield's voice with singer/actress Connie Francis. When released in the United States, The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw was a success; it was her last mainstream successful film.
When she returned to Hollywood in mid-1960, 20th Century-Fox cast her in It Happened in Athens (1962). She received first billing above the title, but only appears in a supporting role. It Happened in Athens starred a handsome newcomer, Trax Colton, a "unknown" whom Fox was trying to mold into a big star. This Olympic Games-based film was shot in Greece, in the fall of 1960, but was not released until June 1962. It was a box-office flop, and Mansfield's 20th Century-Fox contract was dropped.
In 1961, Jayne signed on to play Lisa Lang in, The George Raft Story, starring Ray Danton as the actor. Jayne accepted the part mainly for the money, and because the film was going to be filmed in Hollywood, rather in Europe. Soon after the release of The George Raft Story, Jayne returned to European films to find work. Over the next few years, Mansfield mainly appeared in low-budgeted foreign films, such as Panic Button, Heimweh nach St. Pauli, Einer Frisst den anderen, and, L'Amore Primitivo.
, the first Hollywood motion picture with sound to feature a mainstream star in the nude]] In 1963, Tommy Noonan persuaded Mansfield to become the first mainstream American actress to appear nude with a starring role, in the film Promises! Promises!. Photographs of a naked Mansfield on the set were published in the June 1963 issue of Playboy, which resulted in obscenity charges being filed against Hugh Hefner in Chicago municipal court. Promises! Promises! was banned in Cleveland, but enjoyed box office success elsewhere. As a result of the film's success, Mansfield landed on the Top 10 list of Box Office Attractions for that year. The autobiographical book, Jayne Mansfield's Wild, Wild World, which she co-authored with her husband at the time, Mickey Hargitay, was published right after Promises! Promises! and contains 32 pages of black-and-white photographs from the film printed on glossy paper.
In 1966, Mansfield was cast opposite Mamie Van Doren and Ferlin Husky in The Las Vegas Hillbillys, a low-budget comedy released by Woolner Brothers. Despite her career setbacks, Mansfield remained a highly visible personality through the early 1960s through her publicity antics and stage performances. In early 1967, Fox cast Mansfield in a cameo appearance in A Guide for the Married Man a comedy starring Walter Matthau, Robert Morse, and Inger Stevens. Mansfield received seventh billing. For her last film Single Room Furnished, Mansfield acted without makeup and wore black wig to break out of the stereotype. This film was filmed in 1967, but was not released until mid 1968.
Dissatisfied with her film roles, Mansfield and Hargitay headlined at the Dunes in Las Vegas in an act called The House of Love, for which the actress earned $35,000 a week. It proved to be such a hit that she extended her stay, and 20th Century Fox Records subsequently recorded the show for an album called Jayne Mansfield Busts Up Las Vegas, in 1962. With her film career floundering, she still commanded a salary of $8,000-$25,000 per week for her nightclub act. She traveled all over the world with it. In 1967, the year she died, Mansfield's time was split between nightclub performances and the production of her last film, Single Room Furnished, a low-budget production directed by then-husband Matt Cimber.
Jimi Hendrix played bass and lead guitar for Mansfield in 1965 on two songs, "As The Clouds Drift By" and "Suey", released together on two sides. According to Hendrix historian Steven Roby (Black Gold: The Lost Archives Of Jimi Hendrix, Billboard Books) this collaboration happened because they shared the same manager.
Mansfield starred in film The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw and her character sang three songs on the film: "In The valley Of Love", "Strolling Down The Lane With Billy", and "If The San Francisco Hills Could Only Talk". These were only lip-synced by Mansfield. The singing voice was provided by Connie Francis. Of these three, only "In The Valley Of love" was released on record, albeit only in the United Kingdom and Japan.
Mansfield toured with Bob Hope for the USO. She appeared in numerous television programs, including The Ed Sullivan Show and The Jack Benny Program (where she played the violin), The Steve Allen Show, Down You Go, The Match Game (one rare episode exists with her as a team captain), and The Jackie Gleason Show (in the mid-1960s when the show was the second highest rated in the US). Mansfield's television roles included appearances in Burke's Law and Alfred Hitchcock Presents.
On returning from New York to Hollywood, she made several television appearances, including several spots as a featured guest star on game shows. In 1962, Mansfield appeared with Brian Keith in ABC's Follow the Sun dramatic series in an acclaimed episode entitled "The Dumbest Blonde" in which her character "Scottie" is a beautiful blonde who feels insecure in the high society of her older boyfriend, played by Keith. The plot was based on the film of Born Yesterday.
Mansfield and Hargitay married on January 13, 1958 at the Wayfarers Chapel in Rancho Palos Verdes, California. The unique glass chapel made public and press viewing of the wedding much easier. Jayne herself wore a transparent wedding gown, adding to the occasion's publicity aspect. The couple divorced in Juarez, Mexico in May 1963. After the divorce, Mansfield discovered she was pregnant. Since being an unwed mother would have killed her career, Mansfield and Hargitay announced they were still married.
After the birth of the child, Mansfield sued for the Juarez divorce to be declared legal and won. The divorce was recognized in the United States on August 26, 1964. She had previously filed for divorce on May 4, 1962, but told reporters, "I'm sure we will make it up." Their acrimonious divorce had the actress accusing Hargitay of kidnapping one of her children to force a more favorable financial settlement. During this marriage she had two children – Miklós Jeffrey Palmer Hargitay (born December 21, 1958), Zoltán Anthony Hargitay (born August 1, 1960). A third child Mariska Magdolna Hargitay (born January 23, 1964), an actress best known for her role as Olivia Benson in , was born after the actual divorce but before California ruled it valid.
In November 1957 (shortly before her marriage to Hargitay), Mansfield bought a 40-room Mediterranean-style mansion formerly owned by Rudy Vallée at 10100 Sunset Boulevard in Beverly Hills. Mansfield had the house painted pink, with cupids surrounded by pink fluorescent lights, pink furs in the bathrooms, a pink heart-shaped bathtub, and a fountain spurting pink champagne, and then dubbed it the Pink Palace. Hargitay, a plumber and carpenter before getting into bodybuilding, built a pink heart-shaped swimming pool. Mansfield decorated the Pink Palace by writing to furniture and building suppliers requesting free samples. She received over $150,000 worth of free merchandise while paying only $76,000 for the mansion itself (a large sum nonetheless when the average house cost under $7,500 at the time).
(left) and Jayne Mansfield (right), at Romanoff's in Beverly Hills]] In April 1957, her bosom was the feature of a notorious publicity stunt intended to deflect attention from Sophia Loren during a dinner party in the Italian star's honor. Photographs of the encounter were published around the world. The most famous image showed Loren's gaze falling upon the cleavage of the American actress who, sitting between Loren and her dinner companion, Clifton Webb, had leaned over the table, allowing her breasts to spill over her low neckline and exposing one nipple. The image was one of several taken in the same minutes as the image visible left. A similar incident, resulting in the full exposure of both breasts, occurred during a film festival in West Berlin, when Mansfield was wearing a low-cut dress and her second husband, Mickey Hargitay, picked her up so she could bite a bunch of grapes hanging overhead at a party; the movement caused her breasts to erupt out of the dress. The photograph of that episode was a UPI sensation, appearing in newspapers and magazines with the word "censored" hiding the actress's exposed bosom.
The world's media were quick to condemn Mansfield's stunts, and one editorial columnist wrote, "We are amused when Miss Mansfield strains to pull in her stomach to fill out her bikini better. But we get angry when career-seeking women, shady ladies, and certain starlets and actresses ... use every opportunity to display their anatomy unasked." By the late 1950s, Mansfield began to generate a great deal of negative publicity because of her repeated successful attempts to expose her breasts in carefully staged public "accidents".
Mansfield's most celebrated physical attributes would fluctuate in size as a result of her pregnancies and breast feeding five children. Her smallest measurement was 40D (102 cm) (which she was throughout the 1950s), and largest at 46DD (117 cm), when measured by the press in 1967. According to Playboy, her measurement was 40D-21-36 (102-53-91 cm) and her height was 5'6" (1.68 m). According to her autopsy report, she was 5'8" (1.73 m). Her bosom was so much a part of her public persona that talk-show host Jack Paar once welcomed the actress to The Tonight Show by saying, "Here they are, Jayne Mansfield", a line that was written for Paar by Dick Cavett and became the title of her biography by Raymond Strait.
Rumors that Mansfield was decapitated are untrue, though she did suffer severe head trauma. This urban legend was spawned by the appearance in police photographs of a crashed automobile with its top virtually sheared off, and what resembles a blonde-haired head tangled in the car's smashed windshield. It is believed this was either a wig Mansfield was wearing or was her actual hair and scalp. The death certificate stated the immediate cause of Mansfield's death was a "crushed skull with avulsion of cranium and brain." Following her death, the NHTSA began requiring an underride guard, a strong bar made of steel tubing, to be installed on all tractor-trailers. This bar is also known as a Mansfield bar, and on occasions as a DOT bar.
Mansfield's funeral was held on July 3, in Pen Argyl, Pennsylvania. The ceremony was conducted by a Methodist minister, though Mansfield, who long tried to convert to Catholicism, had become interested in Judaism at the end of her life through her relationship with Sam Brody. She is interred in Fairview Cemetery, southeast of Pen Argyl. Her gravestone reads "We Live to Love You More Each Day". A memorial cenotaph, showing an incorrect birth year, was erected in the Hollywood Forever Cemetery, Hollywood, California. The cenotaph was placed by The Jayne Mansfield Fan Club and has the incorrect birth year because Mansfield herself tended to provide incorrect information about her age.
In 1980, The Jayne Mansfield Story aired on CBS starring Loni Anderson in the title role and Arnold Schwarzenegger as Mickey Hargitay. It was nominated for three Emmy Awards.
! Year | ! Movie Title | ! Role | ! Co-actors | ! Director | ! Producer | ! Notes |
Female Jungle | Candy Price | Burt Kaiser, Kathleen Crowley | Bruno VeSota | Burt Kaiser, Kathleen Crowley | Alternative title: The Hangover | |
1955 | Cigarette Girl | Jack Webb, Janet Leigh, Edmond O'Brien, Peggy Lee | Jack Webb | Warner Bros. | Uncredited | |
1955 | Underwater! | Girl in Bikini by Pool | John Sturges | RKO | Uncredited | |
1955 | Angel O'Hara | Edward G. Robinson, Nina Foch, Hugh Marlowe | Warner Bros. | |||
1955 | Hell on Frisco Bay | Mario's dance partner in nightclub | Alan Ladd, Fay Wray | Frank Tuttle | Jaguar Productions | Uncredited |
The Girl Can't Help It | Jerri Jordan | Tom Ewell, Edmond O'Brien, Julie London, Ray Anthony | Frank Tashlin | 20th Century Fox | Jayne's first starring role; considered a classic. | |
The Burglar | Gladden | Dan Duryea, Martha Vickers, Peter Capell, Mickey Shaughnessy | Paul Wendkos | Columbia Pictures | Filmed in 1955 | |
1957 | Camille Oakes | Joan Collins, Dan Dailey | Victor Vicas | 20th Century Fox | ||
1957 | Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? | Rita Marlowe | Frank Tashlin | 20th Century Fox | Alternative title: Oh! For a Man! (UK); considered a classic.Known as Mansfield's "signature film". | |
1957 | Alice Kratzner | Cary Grant, Leif Erickson, Suzy Parker | Stanley Donen | Sol C. Siegel | Mansfield's last starring role in a mainstream Hollywood studio film. | |
The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw | Kate | Kenneth More, Henry Hull, Bruce Cabot | Raoul Walsh | 20th Century Fox | Not released in the United States until 1959. | |
Billy | Anthony Quayle, Carl Möhner, Peter Reynolds | John Gilling | Alexandra | Alternative title: It Takes a Thief (US); not released in the United States until 1963. | ||
1960 | Midnight Franklin | Leo Genn, Karlheinz Böhm, Christopher Lee | Wigmore Productions | Alternative title: Playgirl After Dark (US); not released in the United States until 1961. | ||
The Loves of Hercules | Queen Dianira/ Hippolyta | Mickey Hargitay, Massimo Serato | Carlo Ludovico Bragaglia | Contact Organisation | Alternative titles Gli Amori di Ercole (Italy), Les Amours d'Hercule (France), Hercules vs. the Hydra (TV title); not released to US movie theaters. | |
1961 | Lisa Lang | Ray Danton, Julie London, Barrie Chase | Joseph M. Newman | Allied Artists Pictures | Alternative title: Spin of a Coin (UK). | |
It Happened in Athens | Eleni Costa | Trax Colton, Nico Minardos, Bob Mathias | Andrew Marton | 20th Century Fox | Filmed in the fall of 1960; in Greece. | |
Heimweh nach St. Pauli | Evelyne | Werner Jacobs | Rapid Film | Alternative title: Homesick for St. Pauli (US); never released in the United States. | ||
1963 | Promises! Promises! | Sandy Brooks | Marie McDonald, Tommy Noonan, Mickey Hargitay | King Donovan | Tommy Noonan-Donald F. Taylor | Aka: Promise Her Anything (some releases) |
L'Amore Primitivo | Dr. Jane | Franco Franchi, Ciccio Ingrassia, Mickey Hargitay | Luigi Scattini | G.L.M. | Alternative title: Primitive Love (US); not released in the United States until 1966. | |
1964 | Angela | Maurice Chevalier, Eleanor Parker, Mike Connors | George Sherman, Giuliano Carnimeo | Gordon Films | Alternative title: Let's Go Bust (US), filmed in 1962; in Italy. | |
1964 | Einer Frisst den anderen | Darlene/ Mrs. Smithopolis | Richard E. Cunha, Gustav Gavrin | Dubrava Film | Alternative title: Dog Eat Dog! (US); not released in the United States until 1966. | |
The Fat Spy | Junior Wellington | Phyllis Diller, Jack E. Leonard | Joseph Cates | Woolner Brothers | ||
1966 | The Las Vegas Hillbillys | Tawny | Phyllis Diller, Jack E. Leonard, Brian Donlevy | Arthur Pierson | Woolner Brothers | Alternative title: Country Music. |
A Guide for the Married Man | Technical Adviser (Girl with Harold) | Walter Matthau, Inger Stevens | Gene Kelly | 20th Century Fox | Cameo appearance. | |
Single Room Furnished | Johnnie/ Mae/ Eileen | Dorothy Keller, Fabian Dean, Billy M. Greene | Matt Cimber | Empire Film Studios | Posthumous release. |
! Year | ! Title | ! Role | ! Notes |
1956 | Reflets de Cannes | Herself | TV documentary |
1957 | Screen Snapshots: The Walter Winchell Party | Herself | Documentary short |
1958 | Screen Snapshots: Salute to Hollywood | Herself | Documentary short |
1962 | Lykke og krone | Herself | Feature length |
1964 | Cinépanorama | Herself | TV documentary |
1967 | Spree | Herself | Feature length |
1967 | Mondo Hollywood | Herself | Feature length |
1968 | The Wild, Wild World of Jayne Mansfield | Herself (archive footage) | Feature length |
Category:1933 births Category:1967 deaths Category:American film actors Category:American stage actors Category:American television actors Category:Road accident deaths in Louisiana Category:New Star of the Year (Actress) Golden Globe winners Category:People from Lower Merion Township, Pennsylvania Category:People from Phillipsburg, New Jersey Category:University of Dallas alumni Category:University of Texas at Austin alumni Category:American people of English descent Category:American people of Cornish descent Category:American people of German descent Category:Playboy Playmates (1953–1959)
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