Los Angeles Times

Rebellious heiress went into acting

- news.obits@latimes.com Times staff, wire reports

Dina Merrill, the rebellious heiress who defied her super-rich parents to become an actress, often portraying stylish wives or “the other woman,” has died. She was 93.

Merrill died Monday, a family spokeswoma­n said. The cause of death and other details weren’t immediatel­y available.

With the help of Katharine Hepburn, who recommende­d her for the 1957 comedy “The Desk Set,” Merrill was a popular star for years, in part because of her resemblanc­e to Grace Kelly. Her films included “Operation Petticoat,” “The Sundowners” and Robert Altman’s Hollywood satire “The Player.”

She also was a dedicated philanthro­pist and supporter of the arts.

Merrill was the daughter of cereal heiress Marjorie Merriweath­er Post and E.F. Hutton, a multimilli­onaire industrial­ist and financier in his own right.

One of her childhood homes was Mar-a-Lago, which her mother had built not long after her birth in 1923.

Merrill was born Nedenia Marjorie Hutton in New York City on Dec. 29, 1923. She adopted her stage name when she began her film career.

Her first husband, Stanley Rumbough Jr., was an heir to the Colgate toothpaste fortune. After Merrill divorced him to marry Oscar-winning actor Cliff Robertson in 1966, her name was removed from the New York Social Register.

She had expressed surprise that she’d still been included.

A few years before her name was excised, Merrill had said: “It’s really so depressing to still be listed in the social register after all the acting I have done.”

At the time of her death, Merrill had been married to Ted Hartley since 1989.

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