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Janice Rule
Actress

Janice Rule

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Actress
Gender
Female
Place of birth
Norwood, Ohio
Place of death
New York City
Age
72 years
Family
Spouse:
N. Richard Nash Robert Thom Ben Gazzara
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Mary Janice Rule (August 15, 1931 – October 17, 2003) was an American actress "at her most convincing playing embittered, neurotic socialites".

Acting career

Janice Rule was born in Norwood, Ohio, to parents of Irish origin. Her father was a dealer in industrial diamonds.

She began dancing at the Chez Paree nightclub at fifteen, which paid for ballet lessons, and was a dancer in the 1949 Broadway production of Miss Liberty. Rule also studied acting at the Chicago Professional School.

She was pictured on the cover of Life magazine of January 8, 1951, as being someone to watch in the entertainment industry. Given a contract by Warner Bros., her first credited screen role was as Virginia in Goodbye, My Fancy (1951), which featured Joan Crawford in the lead. The established star belittled the younger woman, making her work on the film difficult, although Crawford years later wrote a letter of apology to Rule for treating her badly on this film.Rule's Warner contract was allowed to lapse after only two films. She was troubled by the attitude toward women's beauty at the studios in the early 1950s: "Because I was afraid of being robbed of my individuality, I fought with the makeup people, the hairdressers, and I didn't understand problems of the publicity department," she was reported as saying in 1957.

Rule was in the original 1953 Broadway cast of William Inge's Picnic (in the role of Madge Owens, the innocent beauty, played by Kim Novak in the film version) whose company also included Paul Newman who was making his debut on Broadway. This commitment led her to turn down the role ultimately played by Eva Marie Saint in On the Waterfront (1954). "I knew I couldn't shoot in a movie all day and work on a stage at night and do my best in both," she was quoted as saying by Hedda Hopper of the Los Angeles Times in 1966. Among her other Broadway shows were The Flowering Peach, The Happiest Girl in the World and Michael V. Gazzo's Night Circus, a 1958 production which lasted for only a week, but introduced Rule to Ben Gazzara, who became her third husband.

Her other films in the 1950s included A Woman's Devotion (1956), the Western Gun for a Coward (1957) and Bell, Book and Candle (1958), in which she played the fiancée who loses publisher 'Shep' Henderson (James Stewart) to the spell-casting witch Gillian Holroyd (Kim Novak). On television she appeared in the Checkmate episode "The Mask of Vengeance" (1960), where she played Elena Nardos, the roommate of Cloris Leachman's character, Marilyn Parker. She was also in The Twilight Zone episode "Nightmare as a Child." She appeared as different characters in three episodes of Route 66. She acted as both Barbara Webb and Barbara Wells opposite David Janssen in two episodes of The Fugitive entitled "Wife Killer" and "The Walls of Night". She also had a major role as Nancy Reade in "Three Bells to Perdido", the first episode of Have Gun – Will Travel. Miss Rule also starred, second billing only to star Yul Brynner, in the 1969 film western tale of "Invitation To A Gun Fighter" where her divided loyalties, both romantic, social and moral, were exquisitely played throughout the movie.

Among her later film roles were Emily Stewart in The Chase (1966), Sheila Sommers in The Ambushers (where she was rather amusingly undressed by way of a villain's magnetic gun), Burt Lancaster's bitter ex-lover in The Swimmer (1968), Willie in Robert Altman's 3 Women (1977), journalist Kate Newman in Costa Gavras' political thriller Missing (1982), and Kevin Costner's mother in the bicycle racing film American Flyers (1985).

Personal life

Rule had a brief engagement to Farley Granger in 1956. They had appeared in the Broadway play The Carefree Tree in 1955. Next followed a relationship with Ralph Meeker; Meeker had played Hal in Picnic. Rule married and divorced on three occasions, her former husbands being N. Richard Nash, Robert Thom, and Ben Gazzara.

During the 1960s she became interested in psychoanalysis. She began her formal studies in 1973, specializing in treating her fellow actors, and received her Ph.D ten years later from the Southern California Psychoanalytic Institute in Los Angeles. She practiced in New York and Los Angeles and continued to act occasionally until her death from a cerebral hemorrhage in 2003.

She was survived by her daughters, Kate Thom Fitzgerald and Elizabeth Gazzara, both of Brooklyn; her sisters, Kathleen Rule, of Oceano, California; Ann Nader, of San Marcos, California; and Emily Forbes, of Las Cruces, New Mexico; and her brother, Ralph, of Mallorca, Spain.

Filmography

  • Fourteen Hours (1951) (uncredited)
  • Goodbye, My Fancy (1951)
  • Starlift with Ron Hagerthy (1951)
  • Holiday for Sinners (1952)
  • Rogue's March (1953)
  • Appointment with Adventure (1955)
  • A Woman's Devotion (1956)
  • Gun for a Coward (1957)
  • Bell, Book and Candle (1958)
  • The Subterraneans (1960)
  • Invitation to a Gunfighter (1964)
  • The Chase (1966)
  • Alvarez Kelly (1966)
  • Welcome to Hard Times (1967)
  • The Ambushers (1967)
  • The Swimmer (1968)
  • Doctors' Wives (1971)
  • Gumshoe (1971)
  • Kid Blue (1973)
  • 3 Women (1977)
  • Missing (1982)
  • American Flyers (1985)
  • Rainy Day Friends (1985)

Television roles

  • Wagon Train ("The Zeke Thomas Story") (1957)
  • Have Gun – Will Travel (Season 1 Episode 01) (1957)
  • The Twilight Zone, Episode "Nightmare as a Child" (1959)
  • Route 66, Episodes "A Lance of Straw" (1960), "Once to Every Man" (1961), and "But What Do You Do in March?" (1963)
  • The Fugitive TV series: Episodes "Wife Killer" (1966) and "The Walls of Night" (1967)
  • Journey to the Unknown, Episode "Stranger in the Family" (1968)
  • Shadow on the Land (1968, TV movie)
  • Trial Run (1969)
  • The Devil and Miss Sarah (1971, TV movie)
  • The Streets of San Francisco, Episode "The First Day of Forever" (1972)
  • Barnaby Jones, Episode "To Catch a Dead Man" (1973).
  • The Word (1978, miniseries)
  • Ray Bradbury Theater ("Some Live Like Lazarus", 1992)

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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