Jean Willes

Jean Willes

actress

Jean Willes was born on Apr 15, 1923 in USA. Jean Willes's big-screen debut came with So Proudly We Hail! directed by Mark Sandrich in 1943. Jean Willes is known for Elmer Gantry directed by Richard Brooks, Burt Lancaster stars as Elmer Gantry and Jean Simmons as Sister Sharon Falconer. The upcoming new movie Jean Willes plays is Bite the Bullet which will be released on Jun 25, 1975.

Jean Willes is best known for her roles in a number of B-movies in the 1950s and 1960s, as well as on the small screen. Lovely and curvaceous, she usually played hard-boiled gold-diggers, party girls, gun molls, and saloon girls. She came off as a wily, smarter version of Barbara Nichols or Iris Adrian, and although she was versatile, she never rose to the first tier of stardom; in retrospect, she seems to have been capable of much more than she was given during her three-decade-plus career.Born in Los Angeles on April 15, 1923, she was raised in Utah and in Seattle. Interested in an acting career, she returned to the town of her birth and in 1942 started showing up in comedy film shorts for Columbia under her birth name. She was a smart and sexy foil to, among others, such enjoyable comics as Harry Langdon, Andy Clyde, Eddie Foy Jr., Joe DeRita, Sterling Holloway, and Hugh Herbert. After bit parts in such feature-length films as Les anges de miséricorde (1943), Here Come the Waves (1944), and Sa dernière course (1945), she began earning co-star status in such post-war feature-length programs as Revenue Agent (1950) opposite Douglas Kennedy, in A Yank in Indo-China (1952), and in one of Johnny Weissmuller's "Jungle Jim" outings.Willes became a cheesecake fixture in Hollywood, and film and TV work was steady. But when she was lucky enough to score a role in an "A" film, she was barely glimpsed, as in the Bob Hope comedy Le fils de visage pâle (1952) and the "Best Picture" war epic Tant qu'il y aura des hommes (1953). She had the most screen time in an "A" film as Dr. Miles Bennell (Kevin McCarthy)'s beautiful nurse and, reading between the lines, former paramour, in the sci-fi cult classic, L'invasion des profanateurs de sépultures (1956). (SPOILER: She succumbs to the aliens, like everyone else aside from Bennell, in the fictional California town of Santa Mira.) She was one of the four women vying for an aging Clark Gable's attentions in Le roi et quatre reines (1956), one of his lesser efforts. Guest spots on TV gave her greater visibility, and she frequently was seen in westerns (The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp (1955), Maverick (1957)) and crime dramas (Perry Mason (1957)), usually playing unsympathetic women although occasionally playing more agreeable or respectable characters. Her last feature films roles were in La flotte se mouille (1964), Attaque au Cheyenne Club (1970), and La Chevauchée sauvage (1975). After a few more TV roles, she retired in 1976.Willes died of liver cancer on January 3, 1989 at the age of 65. Her second husband, NFL football player Gerard Cowhig, died at their Van Nuys, California, home in 1995. They had one son, Gerry.

  • Birthday

    Apr 15, 1923
  • Place of Birth

    Los Angeles, California, USA

Known For

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