Wanda Hendrix

Wanda Hendrix

Age
52 (passed away Feb. 1st, 1981)
Birthday
Nov. 3rd, 1928
Born in
Jacksonville, Florida, USA
Height
5' 2"

Wanda Hendrix's Main TV Roles

Show Character(s)
The Ford Television Theatre TV Show
The Ford Television Theatre
 

Main Movie Roles

1954 - Highway Dragnet
1950 - The Admiral Was a Lady
1949 - Prince of Foxes
1947 - Nora Prentiss
1947 - Ride the Pink Horse

Guest TV Roles

Show Name
Characters Played
Ep Count
Lucie Manette
2
Daphne Kaye
1
Juliette Creston
1
Mary Willis
1
Carol Whiting
1
Sandra
1
Helen Silverton
1
Maggie
1
Joan Horton
1
[Complete List]



BIOGRAPHY:

Born Dixie Wanda Hendrix in Jacksonville, Florida to a logging camp boss (Max Sylvester Hendrix) and his wife (Mary Bailley), wholesome, green-eyed, dark-haired Wanda Hendrix was involved in her hometown's little theater group when she was "discovered" by a passing talent agent and signed up for starlet roles in Warner Bros. films. Her family moved to California.

Foregoing bit parts, the petite and lovely up-and-comer was immediately featured in featured roles in both Confidential Agent (1945) and Nora Prentiss (1947) for Warner Bros. and Welcome Stranger (1947) for Paramount. Signing up with Paramount, she earned one of her best film roles with Ride the Pink Horse (1947), in which there was talk of an Oscar nomination, and appeared elsewhere in the light comedy Miss Tatlock's Millions (1948) and the melodrama My Own True Love (1949).

After appearing on the cover of Coronet magazine, decorated WWII hero-turned-Universal star Audie Murphy (I) took notice and arranged a meeting with her. They married on February 8 1949, and she co-starred with him a year later in one of his western vehicles, Sierra (1950). The marriage had problems from the beginning. Audie, who wanted her to give up her career, suffered from flashbacks and paranoia from his traumatic war-time experiences and often held her at gunpoint during violent episodes. The frightened woman left him after only seven months and divorced him soon after charging him with mental cruelty. The final decree came on April 14, 1950.

The negative publicity that came out of their stormy marriage did little to enhance Wanda's status in Hollywood and after a few standard oaters and war yarns, the more notable ones being Captain Carey, U.S.A. (1950) co-starring Alan Ladd (I), The Highwayman (1951) with Charles Coburn (I), and Roger Corman's Highway Dragnet (1954) with Richard Conte, her career waned. The actress retired completely from pictures in 1954 to marry millionaire playboy and sportsman James L. Stack, Jr., brother of actor Robert Stack. She earlier appeared with her famous brother-in-law in the films Miss Tatlock's Millions (1948) and My Outlaw Brother (1951).

The career sacrifice did little to help the marriage and the couple divorced in 1958. Returning to acting, she made a comeback on stage, film and TV but experienced little progression. Overlocked in her three 1960s films, her last film roles were filmed in the early 1970s. "Mystic Mountain Massacre" co-starring Ray Danton, was never released, and the Civil War horror _One Minute Before Death (1972), based on a short story "The Oval Portrait" by Edgar Allan Poe in which she co-starred with 'Barry Coe' (qgv) and Gisele MacKenzie died a quicker death than even the title suggests.

In 1969 she married a third and last time, to oil company executive Steve La Monte in Las Vegas. At one point she considered collaborating with author Douglas Warren on an autobiography of her first husband, Audie Murphy (I), but it never came to fruition. Divorced from her third husband in 1980, Wanda died shortly thereafter at age 52 of double pneumonia in Los Angeles. She had no children.


TRIVIA:
  • Sister-in-law of actor 'Robert Stack' (qv) at one time, she served as Stack's matron of honor when he married actress 'Rosemarie Stack' (qv) in 1956.


Related sites for this celeb
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