Actress Jane Adams Has Died
She was Not on the list.
Betty Jane Bierce, better known by her stage name Jane "Poni" Adams (August 7, 1918 – May 21, 2014), was an American actress in radio, film, and television in the 1940s and 1950s.
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mason Bierce, Adams was born in San Antonio, Texas, but her family moved to California when she was two. During her high school years, she studied violin and drama, and she was selected to be a concert mistress of the all-city high school orchestra of Los Angeles. She received a full scholarship to Juilliard, which she turned down to spend years studying at the Pasadena Playhouse.
After the Playhouse, she got her start on Lux Radio Theatre and then with the Harry Conover Modeling Agency. In the book Westerns Women: Interviews with 50 Leading Ladies of Movie and Television Westerns from the 1930s to the 1960s, Adams said: "I was given that name at the Harry Conover Modeling Agency. Why, I don't know!" She returned to using her real name in 1945.
Military personnel played a role in her change of names from Poni Adams to Jane Adams. A photograph printed in newspapers in 1946 carried the caption: "GI JANE — Jane Adams — formerly Poni Adams — holds some of 32,851 letters her press agent said came from GIs after she appealed for aid in choosing a new name."
Adams' first screen appearance was in So You Want to Give Up Smoking, a short film in 1942.
A photograph of her in Esquire led to Walter Wanger wanting her to do a screen test for Salome, Where She Danced (1945) that led to her being given a contract with Universal Pictures and a small role as a dancer in the film.
She may be best known for her role as Nina in House of Dracula (1945), but she also has the distinction of acting in early adaptations of both major DC Comics franchises: Batman, where she played Vicki Vale in the second Batman serial, Batman and Robin, and also a character in the first Superman television series.
On July 27, 1940, Adams married Ensign J.C.H. Smith, a United States Navy officer, in Norfolk, Virginia. He was declared dead on September 15, 1943, in Hawaii, after becoming missing in action during World War II when his ship sank a year earlier.
On July 14, 1945, in Hollywood, California, she married Thomas K. Turnage, an Army lieutenant who went on to become a decorated major general. Turnage served in the Korean War and earned the Distinguished Service Medal and Bronze Star. He later served as the last administrator of the Veterans Administration before the VA became a cabinet department during Ronald Reagan's presidential term. Adams and Turnage had two children.
On May 21, 2014, Adams died in Bellingham, Washington, at the age of 95.
Filmography
Short subjects
So You Want to Give Up Smoking (Joe McDoakes) (1942)
Feature films
Salome, Where She Danced (1945) Salome Girl (as Poni Adams)
Lady on a Train (1945) Circus Club Photographer (uncredited)
Code of the Lawless (1945) Julie Randall (as Poni Adams)
This Love of Ours (1945) Chorus Girl (uncredited)
Trail to Vengeance (1945) Dorothy Jackson (as Poni Adams)
House of Dracula (1945) Nina
Smooth as Silk (1946) Susan Marlowe
Night in Paradise (1946) Lotus (uncredited)
The Runaround (1946) Miss Webster (uncredited)
Rustler's Round-Up (1946) Josephine 'Jo' Fremont (as Poni
Adams)
Lawless Breed (1946) Marjorie Bradley
Gunman's Code (1946) Laura Burton
The Brute Man (1946) Helen Paige
He Walked by Night (1948) Nurse Scanion (uncredited)
Tarzan's Magic Fountain (1949) Villager (uncredited)
Gun Law Justice (1949) Jane Darnton
Angels in Disguise (1949) First Nurse
Western Renegades (1949) Judy Gordon
Master Minds (1949) Nancy Marlowe
The Girl from San Lorenzo (1950) Nora Malloy
Law of the Panhandle (1950) Margie Kendal
Outlaw Gold (1950) Kathy Martin
Street Bandits (1951) Jane Phillips
Serials
Lost City of the Jungle (1946) Marjorie Elmore
Batman and Robin Vicki Vale
TV Series
Dangerous Assignment (1950) Maria Delgada
The Cisco Kid (1950) Nora Malloy
The Adventures of Kit Carson (1951)/(1952) Meg
Owens/Marguerita Bolton
Adventures of Wild Bill Hickok (1951) Peggy
Adventures of Superman (1953) Babette DuLoque
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