Fay Spain

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Fay Spain
File:Fay Spain 1960.JPG
Spain in 1960
Born (1932-10-06)October 6, 1932
Phoenix, Arizona, USA[1]
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Los Angeles, California, USA
Cause of death Lymphatic cancer
Occupation Film/TV actress
Years active 1955–1977
Spouse(s) Philip Fulmer Westbrook (1968–1983) (her death)
Imo Ughini (1965-1966)
John Altoon (1959–1962)
John Falvo (1949-1954) (divorced) (1 child)
Children Jock Falvo (b. 1954)

Fay Spain (October 6, 1932 – May 8, 1983) was an American actress in motion pictures and television.

Theater apprentice

She began living alone in her English teacher's attic at the age of 14.[citation needed] The teacher had a daughter who was affiliated with an acting stock company in Maryland. She gave Spain a job which combined the duties of acting apprentice and babysitting. At sixteen, Miss Spain was in New York City, residing in an $8-a-week room on the Upper West Side. She worked in a tie shop where she became acquainted with an associate of Walter Winchell. The gossip writer mentioned her name in a column and Spain received a call from Columbia Pictures. She was not extended a contract because she "wasn't pretty enough for Hollywood".[citation needed]

Within two months she found work with a stock company in the Catskill Mountains. She obtained an Equity Card which enabled her to continue working as an actress. Spain eschewed a college scholarship after attending high school in White Salmon, Washington. She chose instead to pursue a stock company apprenticeship.

Film actress

As a film aspirant her first screen test was made with James Garner. The test was unfavorable and she was not considered photogenic. She continued to pursue acting, unimpeded by rejection. She accepted any parts which came along, learning the techniques of the acting trade.

Spain first came to prominence with movie audiences in the late 1950s. In 1957, she appeared as Carol Smith with John Smith as Tommy Kelly in the dramatic film The Crooked Circle in which a young boxer is pressured to throw a fight. In 1958, she was cast as "Darlin Jill" in the film version of God's Little Acre, based on Erskine Caldwell's novel. The film marked the screen debut of Tina Louise and also starred Robert Ryan, Jack Lord, Buddy Hackett, Aldo Ray, and Vic Morrow. Spain followed this success by playing Maureen Flannery in the film Al Capone (1959), and appeared in such films as The Beat Generation (1959), The Private Lives of Adam and Eve (1960), Hercules and the Conquest of Atlantis (1961), Black Gold (1962), Thunder Island (1963), Flight to Fury (1964), The Gentle Rain (1966), Welcome to Hard Times (1967) and The Todd Killings (1971). Her final appearance as a film actress came in 1974, when she portrayed the wife of mobster Hyman Roth (Lee Strasberg) in The Godfather Part II (1974).

Marriages

In 1959 the actress married west coast abstract painter John Altoon. They spent their honeymoon in Reno, Nevada. Both led busy lives and enjoyed their time away from work by relaxing in a home they remodeled in the San Fernando Valley of California. Altoon was an art instructor in Los Angeles. He contributed art for a series of record album covers. Spain had a five-year-old son from a previous marriage who lived with her in California.

Television

Spain made an appearance as a contestant in a 1950 episode of the Groucho Marx game show You Bet Your Life (episode #56-02, October 4, 1956, Secret Word 'Hand'). By the middle and late 1950s and 1960s, Spain appeared in Bonanza, Cheyenne, Rawhide, Whirlybirds, Perry Mason (Charlotte Lynch in "The Case of the Fiery Fingers"), Tombstone Territory (episode "Pick up the Gun"), The Millionaire, M Squad, Adventures in Paradise, The Texan, Riverboat, The Rat Patrol, Gomer Pyle, USMC, Gunsmoke (1957 episode "Mavis McCloud" and episode "A Man a Day" (1961)), Playhouse 90, 77 Sunset Strip, Have Gun - Will Travel (1958), Alfred Hitchcock Presents (episode: "The Last Dark Step" (1959) and "The Cuckoo Clock" (1960)), Maverick (episode: "the Goose-Downer" (1959), Pony Express, The Restless Gun, Maverick ("The Cactus Switch" with Roger Moore in 1961), The Fugitive, Bat Masterson and as Angela in Steve McQueen's Wanted: Dead or Alive, (TV Series) Season 2, Episode 8.

Spain also appeared on the NBC interview program Here's Hollywood. In the 1950s and 1960s she continued to be seen frequently on television series such as Rawhide episodes, "Incident of the Valley in Shadow" (1959) and "Incident in the Middle of Nowhere" (1961) and "Incident of the Lost Woman" (1962), as well as Stoney Burke, Hogan's Heroes, and The Fugitive.

In 1966, she was cast as Calamity Jane in the episode "A Calamity Called Jane" of the syndicated series, Death Valley Days, hosted by Robert Taylor. Rhodes Reason played Wild Bill Hickok in this episode.[2]

Death

Fay Spain died of lymphatic cancer in Los Angeles in 1983, aged 50.

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  • The Fremont Argus, "Fay Spain", May 17, 1975, Page 40.
  • Reno Evening Gazette, "Fay Spain Comes Back To Reno", Friday, February 6, 1959, Page 22.

External links