Career Highlights: Seven Men from Now, Night Has a Thousand Eyes, Angel and the Badman
First Major Screen Credit: Our Hearts Were Young and Gay (1944)
Biography
Sad-eyed actress Gail Russell was attending Santa Monica High School when she was spotted by a Paramount talent scout. Signed by the studio in 1942, Russell made her feature debut in Henry Aldrich Gets Glamour (1942). Her haunting, melancholy beauty was ideally suited for the ingénue role in the lavish Paramount supernatural yarn The Uninvited (1944). She also displayed a natural comic sense as Emily Kimbrough in Our Hearts Were Young and Gay (1944) and Our Hearts Were Growing Up (1946). In 1947, she was romantically involved with no fewer than three men: John Wayne, with whom she starred in Angel and the Badman (1947); director John Farrow, who guided her through Calcutta (1947); and actor Guy Madison, her first husband. After several well-publicized arrests for drunken driving, Russell became a virtual recluse, making only a handful of TV and movie appearances in her last years. On August 27, 1961, Gail Russell was found dead in her Brentwood apartment. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
She was born Elizabeth L. Russell to George and Gladys (Barnet) Russell in Chicago, Illinois, and then moved to the Los Angeles, California area when she was a teenager. Russell's extraordinary beauty brought her to the attention of Paramount Pictures in 1942. Although she was almost clinically shy and had no acting experience, Paramount had great expectations for her and employed an acting coach to work with her.
She continued working after 1947, and married actor Guy Madison in 1949, but by 1950, it was well known that she had become a victim of alcoholism, and Paramount did not renew her contract. She started drinking on the set of The Uninvited to ease her paralyzing stage fright and lack of self-confidence.[1] Alcohol made a shambles of her career and personal life. She was divorced by Madison in 1954,[2] and after a five-year absence, returned to work in a co-starring role with Randolph Scott in the western Seven Men from Now (1956), produced by her friend Wayne, and had a substantial role in The Tattered Dress (1957).
On July 5, 1957, she was photographed by a Los Angeles Times photographer after she drove her convertible into the front of Jan's coffee shop at 8424 Beverly Blvd. Russell was driving under the influence.[3]
She appeared in two more films after that, but was not able to control her addiction, and on August 26, 1961, Russell was found dead in her apartment in Brentwood, Los Angeles, California at the age of 36. She died from liver damage attributed to alcohol. She was found to have been suffering from malnutrition at the time of her death.[4] She was buried in Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery in North Hollywood, California.