The Scotsman

Rhonda Fleming

Hollywood actress who became known as the Queen of Technicolo­r

- BRIAN PENDREIGH

Rhonda Fleming, actress, singer and property developer. Born August 10 1923 in Los Angeles. Died: October 14 2020 in Santa Monica, California, aged 97.

Rhonda Fleming’s name will p robably not mean much now to anyone other than keen cineastes and those over the age of 75. But there was a time when she was the “Queen of Technicolo­r”.

She acquired the title not because she was the most prominent actress of the postwar years, but because her pale complexion and fiery red hair showed up the qualities of the new film stock and that in itself made her popular with producers and directors.

It is slightly ironic, therefore, that she is remembered now, if at all, for 1940s Film Noirs, including supporting roles in Build My G allows High and Alfred Hitchcock’s Spellbound.

The drama of Fleming’s life compares with anything she did on screen.

In a real-life Hollywood fairytale, her career began after she was literally approached in the street by a talent scout and transforme­d from a Beverley Hills High schoolgirl into one of the leading Hollywood stars of her day.

"He stopped me crossing the street,” Fleming recalled many decades later.

“It kinda scared me a little bit. I was only 16 or 17. He signed me to a seven-year contract without a screen test.”

Although her mother was an actress, who had appeared on stage with Al Jolson, Fleming never actually wanted to act. She wanted to be a singer. “It just happened,” she said.

Although she was to rack up six marriages and four divorces, she was young and inno - cent when she first got into movies.

When Hitch cock told her that he wanted to cast her as a nymphomani­ac in Spellbound she went home and got her mum to look up "nymphomani­ac” in the dictionary. “We were both shocked,” she said.

Their shock, however, did not stop her taking the part.

Rhonda Fleming was born in 1923 in Los Angeles, with the name Marilyn Louis. While her mother and maternal grandfathe­r had been in showbiz, her father had the more prosaic job of insurance salesman.

Her parents divorced when she was young and her mother encouraged her to become a singer, while also sending her photo around the film studios.

After Fate, or simply goo d luck, took a hand in matters, talent agent Henry Will son changed her name to Rhonda Fleming and promised to make her a star.

She married for the first time in her teens, to her high school sweetheart. He went off to the Second World War and by the time he got back his new bride had different priorities and was intent on divorce and focusing on her nascent film career.

Wilson goth era contract with the legendary producer David OS elznick,w ho was best known for producing Gone with the Wind and Rebecca.

Fleming’s first notable big screen role came in 1945 as one of psychiatri­st In grid Berg man’ s patients in Spellbound, the thriller in which Hitchcock mixed Freud and Dali to such memorable effect.

In fairly quick succession she appeared in the thriller The Spiral Staircase with Dorothy Mcguire, the western Abilene Town alongside Randolph Scott, and Out of the Past.

The latter was released in the UK as the more dramaticso­unding Build My Gallows High and is regarded as one of the key films in the Film Noir genre. Again it was a supporting role, with Jane Greer as the female lead opposite Robert Mitchum.

Fleming got her nickname “Queen of Technicolo­r” after co -starring with Bing Crosby in the musical comedy A Connecticu­t Yankee in King Arthur’s Court, in which she got to show off her singing ability. It was a big hit when it opened in 1949.

In later years Fleming maintained that she had hated being dub bed“Queen of Tech ni col or” and that she was being cast for the way she looked rather than her acting ability. She reckoned that is why so many of her films were so quickly forgotten.

In the early 1950s Fleming moved to Paramount, where she made several films with Ronald Reagan, who became a lifelong friend.

She worked solidly throughout the decade, played Cleopatra in Serpent of the Nile and was showcased in the musical Those Redheads from Seattle.

She had the lead female role in the Fritz Lang thriller While the City Sleeps, starring alongside Dana Andrews, and the western Gunfight at the OK Corral, with Bur t Lancaster and Kirk Douglas.

At the same time she developed her singing career and invested successful­ly in property, which enabled her to announce that she was“semiretire­d” at the start of the 1960s.

However, Fleming would subsequent­ly make regular guest appearance­s in hit television shows, including Wagon Train, Mcmillan and Wife and The Love Boat. And British director Michael Winner gave her a cameo as herself in his 1976 film Won Ton Ton, the Dog Who Saved Hollywood.

A staunch Republican, Fleming was active in several campaigns, including one for compulsory school prayers.

She also put money and time into women’s health and funded a research fellowship into women’s cancers, in memory of her sister.

Fleming’s first four marriages ended in divorce. Her fifth husband was Ted Mann, the wealthy founder of the Mann Theatres cinema chain.

They each had their own luxury flat in the Century City area of Los Angeles, one on top of the other. Her last two husbands predecease­d her.

She is survived by a son from her first marriage.

 ??  ?? 0 The glamorous Rhonda Fleming out on the town in 1955
0 The glamorous Rhonda Fleming out on the town in 1955

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