Closer Weekly

JAYNE MANSFIELD

HER INTELLIGEN­CE, DEVOTION AND DRIVE TO SUCCEED SET HER APART FROM OTHER SEXPOTS OF THE ERA

- By LOUISE A. BARILE

Friends and family remember the charismati­c 1950s bombshell as a woman devoted to her children and driven to succeed.

At a party at New York’s Hotel Astor in 1955, two bombshells almost collided. Jayne Mansfield, the star of the Broadway hit Will Success Spoil Rock

Hunter?, stood on one side of the room, while another famous blonde, film star Marilyn Monroe, sat at a table with her back to the younger woman. “Jayne was enamoured of Marilyn and wanted to go over, but Marilyn snubbed her,” says biographer Frank Ferruccio. The insult stung. “For someone who was very sure of herself, it was hard to be snubbed by her idol.”

Marilyn’s jealousy wasn’t without cause. Though there were many buxom blondes who followed in her footsteps, Jayne’s 40-21-36 figure wasn’t her only asset. She excelled as an actress and nightclub singer, had an IQ of 163, and a genius knack for generating publicity. “She loved being the center of attention,” says Jayne’s youngest son, Tony Cimber, who tells Closer it wasn’t just Jayne’s work that set her apart. “She also cared so much about being a good mother.”

Long before women were told they could have it all, Jayne, who was born Vera Jayne Palmer in Bryn Mawr, Pa., balanced an enviable career with a robust family life. The three-times wed performer was a mother of five children — including Law & Order: SVU star Mariska Hargitay. “She was just so ahead of her time,” Mariska says. “She was an inspiratio­n, she had this appetite for life.”

THE GIRL CAN’T HELP IT

Growing up, Jayne wanted to be Shirley Temple. Childhood dance classes led to piano, violin and viola lessons. Along the way, Jayne also learned five languages. “She was multitalen­ted,” says Ferruccio, author of Diamonds to Dust: The Life and Death of Jayne Mansfield and Did Success Spoil Jayne Mansfield?

After Jayne created a sensation on Broadway in 1955, Hollywood came courting. She signed with 20th Century Fox — not coincident­ally the same studio where Marilyn was under contract. “Jayne made $2,500 a week, which was double the salary Marilyn was paid when she started,” says Ferruccio. “The studio was purposely pitting Jayne against Marilyn because Marilyn was

giving them a hard time and didn’t want to do the dumb blonde roles anymore.”

Ambitious Jayne didn’t mind playing dumb, although she won a Golden Globe for a dramatic role in 1957’s The Wayward

Bus. And unlike Marilyn, she courted publicity and made friends of the press. “Jayne would pose for a picture for anyone, anywhere, at any time,” says Ferruccio. “She was a very driven woman. It was in her blood.”

MOTHERHOOD MATTERED

Her ambition extended into her personal life. Jayne wanted to be the best hands-on mother and took her brood with her everywhere. “She was not a star mom. She was a great mom,” says Ferruccio. “When she toured, she brought them with her as opposed to leaving them with strangers. She wanted to be a part of their lives.” But it was difficult. Jayne’s first husband, Paul Mansfield, sought custody of their daughter Jayne Marie in 1956, using the actress’ appearance in Playboy as evidence that she was an unfit mother.

Career and motherhood seemed to rank higher on Jayne’s list of priorities than the men in her life. “She loved passion, but she got bored very fast,” says Ferruccio, who believes that she enjoyed her happiest union with body builder Mickey Hargitay, her second husband to whom she was wed from 1958 to 1964. “It was one of the greatest experience­s of my life to be married to her. She was a great lady,” said Mickey. “She was entirely different than what people write about her.”

Gossips did write about Jayne — and it wasn’t always nice. One persistent rumor is that she had love affairs with both John F. Kennedy and his brother Robert. “I believe that rumor was invented by one of her biographer­s,” says Ferruccio. “Time line-wise, she would have been pregnant with Mariska, so I dismissed it. I think that was said to make it look like Jayne was trying to do everything Marilyn did.”

But like Marilyn, Jayne also died tragically at a young age. The 34-year-old performer was killed when the car she was riding in rammed into a truck late at night in a dense fog. The three adults in the front seat died instantly, but Jayne’s children Mickey, Zoltan and Mariska sustained only minor injuries. “Jayne’s greatest regret would be not growing old with her children,” says her son Tony. “But I can also tell you that she never really left. She lets her presence be known. And it’s so Jayne.”

Mariska has felt her mother, too. “She’s still with me,” the actress says. “I look at my life now and think, I’m on a TV show, I run a foundation, I run a household, I’m a mom, I’m a wife, I’m a lot of things. I realize I’m like that because it’s what I know.”

“I will never be satisfied. Life is one constant search.”

—Jayne Mansfield

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 ??  ?? Jayne lives on through her kids, Zoltan, Mariska and Mickey Hargitay, Jayne Marie Mansfield, and Tony Cimber (not pictured)
Jayne lives on through her kids, Zoltan, Mariska and Mickey Hargitay, Jayne Marie Mansfield, and Tony Cimber (not pictured)
 ??  ?? “Tony Randall spoke highly of her,” says Ferruccio, who says the Rock Hunter co-stars shared a naughty sense of humor.
“Tony Randall spoke highly of her,” says Ferruccio, who says the Rock Hunter co-stars shared a naughty sense of humor.
 ??  ?? In 1964, Mickey and Jayne posed with their family. That’s Mariska
wearing the bow!
In 1964, Mickey and Jayne posed with their family. That’s Mariska wearing the bow!
 ??  ?? Jayne, dancing with her oldest daughter and namesake in 1955, wanted her kids to enjoy all the advantages she could provide.
Jayne, dancing with her oldest daughter and namesake in 1955, wanted her kids to enjoy all the advantages she could provide.
 ??  ?? “I like being a pinup girl,” said Jayne. “There’s nothing wrong with it.”
“I like being a pinup girl,” said Jayne. “There’s nothing wrong with it.”

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