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Mara Corday

 
Actor: Mara Corday
  • Born: Jan 03, 1932 in Santa Monica, California
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '50s
  • Major Genres: Action, Western
  • Career Highlights: Raw Edge, A Day of Fury, The Quiet Gun
  • First Major Screen Credit: Tarantula (1955)

Biography

Mara Corday's principal career in movies only lasted seven years, from 1951 until 1958, but as a result of a handful of those films -- coupled with her status as one of the most photographed models of her era -- she has maintained a fandom for 50 years. This is especially true among science fiction buffs, among whom Corday's three movies in the genre -- Tarantula, The Giant Claw, and The Black Scorpion -- remain beloved films of their era. She was born Marilyn Watts in Santa Monica, CA, and displayed an outgoing personality at an early age. Her modeling career began while she was still in her teens, and by the end of the 1940s, when she was 17, Corday was also working as a chorus girl at the Earl Carroll Theatre. Following Carroll's death, she joined the George White Scandals of 1950, and was part of the cast of a stage production of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. Corday was lucky enough in 1951 to appear in a small Los Angeles production of William Saroyan's The Time of Your Life, where she was seen by Paul Kohner, one of Hollywood's top agents. Kohner offered to represent her, and there followed a string of appearances for Corday in supporting roles on shows like Kit Carson, starring Bill Williams, as well as bit parts in movies such as Two Tickets to Broadway (1951) at RKO, Sea Tiger (1952) at Monogram, and Problem Girls at Columbia. Corday was also briefly signed up with legendary producer Hal Wallis -- this coincided with her appearance in the Wallis-produced Dean Martin/Jerry Lewis 3-D comedy Money From Home (1953) at Paramount. Unfortunately, her brief contractual link-up with Wallis yielded no further work in films of that prominence, and her next two films were with Republic Pictures. Her contact with Wallis, however, yielded a screen test that got Corday a spot as a contract player at Universal in 1954. This not only secured her a steady income and a series of small (but gradually larger) roles in various Universal features, among them the musical So This Is Paris (1954), but also training in the finer points of acting. The studio also featured young players like Corday, Grant Williams, and Clint Eastwood any place they could, such as their appearances as contract players in the 1955 network television special Allen in Movieland, hooked around the studio's upcoming release of The Benny Goodman Story. Corday was still pursuing her modeling career, and by 1955 was one of the most photographed women on the West Coast, a fact that wasn't lost on the studio -- Universal's management, in turn, began putting her into better movies, including the Kirk Douglas feature Man Without a Star (1955), directed by King Vidor. Ironically, even as she was getting bigger and better roles in movies aimed at mainstream audiences -- including Harmon Jones' A Day of Fury (1956), which arguably contains Corday's best work -- it was her work in a trio of genre films that would ensure Corday a devoted fandom for decades to come. Jack Arnold's Tarantula (1955) showed off the actress in a demure, intelligent role as a scientist's assistant, quite unlike the hardboiled girls from the wrong side of the tracks that she often played; and while the 200-foot-tall spider of the title attracted a lot of attention, Corday's good looks were impossible to ignore as well. In The Giant Claw (1957), which suffered from ludicrous special effects, she was the best thing to look at in the movie, even for filmgoers under age 13; and in The Black Scorpion (1957), she even supplied her wardrobe, and looked nothing less than stunning in virtually all of her scenes, and got to act the role of a full-blooded heroine, complete with acts of bravery of her own. Corday's modeling career had continued uninterrupted, culminating in October 1958 when she was the Playmate of the Month in Playboy magazine -- she would probably have been able to build on the momentum of the Playboy issue, but for the fact that she married actor Richard Long, who insisted that she stay at home to raise their family. Following Long's death in 1974, Corday resumed her career with help from the most successful of her fellow Universal contract players, Clint Eastwood, who got her roles in The Gauntlet (1977), Sudden Impact (1983), Pink Cadillac (1989), and The Rookie (1990). Corday has been working on various film-related writing projects, and has also been delighted to discover that she has a fandom. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Mara Corday
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Mara Corday
Playboy centerfold appearance
October 1958
Preceded by Teri Hope
Succeeded by Joan Staley
Personal details
Born Marilyn Joan Watts
January 3, 1930 (1930-01-03) (age 79)
Santa Monica, California, United States
Measurements Bust: 35"
Waist: 24"
Hips: 35"
Height 5 ft 5 in (1.65 m)
Weight 118 lb (54 kg; 8.4 st)
Official website

Mara Corday (born Marilyn Joan Watts on January 3, 1930 in Santa Monica, California) is a showgirl, model, actress, Playboy Playmate and a 1950s cult figure.

Wanting a career in films, Mara Corday came to Hollywood while still in her teens and found work as a showgirl at the Earl Carroll Theatre on Sunset Boulevard. Her physical beauty brought jobs as a photographer's model that led to a bit part as a showgirl in the 1951 film Two Tickets to Broadway. She signed on as a Universal International Pictures (UI) contract player where she met actor Clint Eastwood with whom she would remain lifelong friends. With UI, Corday was given small roles in various B-movies and television series. In 1954 on the set of Playgirl she met actor Richard Long. Following the death of Long's wife, the two began dating and married in 1957.

Her roles were small until 1955 when she was cast opposite John Agar in Tarantula, a Sci-Fi B-movie that proved a modest success. She had another successful co-starring role in that genre (The Black Scorpion) as well as in a number of Western films. Respected film critic Leonard Maltin said that Mara Corday had "more acting ability than she was permitted to exhibit."

Mara Corday appeared as a pinup girl in numerous men's magazines during the 1950s and was the Playmate of the October 1958 issue of Playboy, together with famous model and showgirl Pat Sheehan. In 1956, she had a recurring role in the ABC television series Combat Sergeant. From 1959 to early 1961, Corday worked exclusively doing guest spots on various television series. She then gave up her career to devote her time to raising a family. During her seventeen-year marriage to Richard Long she had three children.

A few years after her husband's passing in 1974, Corday's friend Clint Eastwood offered her a chance to return to filmmaking with a role in his 1977 film The Gauntlet. She acted with him again in Sudden Impact (1983), Pink Cadillac (1989), and in her last film, 1990s The Rookie.

Partial filmography

See also

External links


 
 
Learn More
Girls on the Loose (1958 Crime Film)
Raw Edge (1956 Western Film)
So This Is Paris (1954 Musical Film)

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