Dorothy Malone Dies at 93; Star of TV’s ‘Peyton Place’
She was not on the list.
Dorothy Malone, the sultry blond actress who won an Academy
Award for playing an unapologetically bad girl in “Written on the Wind” and
found television stardom as a repentant one on “Peyton Place,” died on Friday
in Dallas. She was 93.
Her daughter Mimi Vanderstraaten confirmed the death, at an
assisted living facility, where Ms. Malone had lived for the last 10 years.
Ms. Malone was 31 and had been in Hollywood for 13 years when
she was cast as Marylee Hadley, a spoiled, sex-crazed young Texas oil heiress,
in “Written on the Wind” (1956). The film, directed by Douglas Sirk,
Hollywood’s master of glossy melodrama, also starred Rock Hudson and Robert
Stack.
The three starred again together two years later in Sirk’s
drama “Tarnished Angels,” in which a reporter (Mr. Hudson) falls for the sultry
wife (Ms. Malone) of a barnstorming pilot (Mr. Stack).
But Ms. Malone’s career appeared to succumb to what some call
the Oscar curse. After winning the award, for best supporting actress, she
never had as juicy a role again. Seemingly well-chosen follow-up parts — among
them the suicidal first wife of Lon Chaney (James Cagney) in “Man of a Thousand
Faces” (1957) and the self-destructive daughter of John Barrymore (Errol Flynn)
in “Too Much Too Soon” (1958) — did little to advance her career.
By 1963 she was starring as one of the adults on the
sidelines in “Beach Party,” with Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello.
The next year she won the role of Constance McKenzie, a sexy
but seemingly repressed small-town New England mother with a dark secret, on
the ABC series “Peyton Place.” Based on the film based on Grace Metalious’s
best-selling novel, it was television’s first nighttime soap opera and a solid
ratings hit.
Ms. Malone almost died in the fall of 1965, as the second
season began, undergoing emergency surgery to remove blood clots from her lungs.
She was in critical condition for almost two weeks but returned to the show in
January 1966 and played the role for a total of four seasons. She was written
out of the show’s final season after she complained that her character’s story
lines were lackluster. Ms. Malone sued the producers, and the matter was
settled out of court.
Dorothy Eloise Maloney was born on Jan. 30, 1924, in Chicago
and grew up in Dallas, one of five children of Robert Ignatius Maloney and the
former Esther Smith. Two of her sisters died of polio in childhood, and a
brother was fatally struck by lightning in his teens.
Ms. Malone attended Southern Methodist University, where an
RKO talent agent saw her in a 1943 school production and soon whisked her away
to Hollywood. She was accompanied by her mother.
Ms. Malone’s first credited feature-film role was in “Too
Young to Know” (1945), a war drama with Joan Leslie and Robert Hutton. But she
was first noticed, by audiences and the film industry alike, in “The Big Sleep”
(1946), in which she played a seductive bookstore clerk who took off her
glasses, loosened her brown hair (Ms. Malone’s natural hair color) and invited
Humphrey Bogart to stay awhile. That year she also played Cole Porter’s
bright-eyed cousin in the Porter biography “Night and Day,” which starred Cary
Grant.
For the 1954 musical romance “Young at Heart,” Ms. Malone
went blond to play Doris Day’s sister and found that audiences liked her that
way. She made seven films in 1955, among them “Artists and Models,” a Dean
Martin and Jerry Lewis comedy in which she played Shirley MacLaine’s roommate
and Martin’s love interest; “The Fast and the Furious,” an early Roger Corman
production (connected with the later series of films in name only); “Battle
Cry,” in which she seduced Tab Hunter; and “Sincerely Yours,” in which she
played Liberace’s fiancée.
When movie roles thinned out, Ms. Malone turned to
television, appearing in a wide range of series. Shortly after she played Van
Johnson’s wife in the 1976 mini-series “Rich Man, Poor Man,” she placed ads in
Hollywood trade publications seeking work — in television, onstage, anywhere.
One of the juicier roles that came afterward was that of an
assassinated president’s slightly crazy mother in the film “Winter Kills” (1979).
She was also in two “Peyton Place” reunion television movies, along with other
original cast members.
Her final film appearance was as a smiling lesbian ax
murderer in “Basic Instinct” (1992).
Ms. Malone married and divorced three times. Her first
husband (1959-64) was Jacques Bergerac, a French actor who later became a
cosmetics company executive. They had two daughters. A brief marriage to Robert
Tomarkin, a stockbroker, in 1969 was annulled after only a few weeks.
In 1971 she married Charles Huston Bell, a Dallas businessman
and hotel executive. They divorced in 1974, but she remained in Dallas.
Besides her daughter Mimi, Ms. Malone is survived by her
other daughter, Diane Thompson; six grandchildren, and her brother, Robert B.
Maloney, a senior federal district judge in Dallas.
Ms. Malone’s bad-girl image endured throughout her life. In
2004 an exhibition of photographs by the filmmaker John Waters included nine
images of Ms. Malone with the upturned collar that was her subtle sex-symbol
signature.
But from the beginning, she seemed to appreciate the value of
that typecasting.
“She is a strumpet of the first order,” Ms. Malone said of
her sexy character in “Written on the Wind,” speaking to The Dallas Morning
News in 1956. “It certainly will be talked about.
“And there’s nothing an actress needs more, inside of
Hollywood and out, than to be talked about — for a performance, I mean.”
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