R.I.P. II

Her death never made any of the papers, but I am sad to report that beach party regular Mary Hughes passed away from Cancer two weeks ago. A sexy statuesque blonde in the tradition of Brigitte Bardot, Mary was the perpetual Sixties beach bunny and stood out from all the other girls on the sand due to her eye-popping proportions—standing 5-foot-9 and measuring 36-22-36. Her beauty was breathtaking.

Never having more than a line or two, Mary was a regular in all the Frankie and Annette fun-in-the-sun beach movies beginning with Muscle Beach Party (1964) through Pajama Party (1964) and Beach Blanket Bingo (1965) and right up to The Ghost in the Invisibile Bikini (1966). After the beach movies had run their course, Mary became a Slaymate in the Dean Martin spy spoof Murderers’ Row (1966) and then an anonymous Elvis chick in the London-set Double Trouble (1967). There she met rock star Jeff Beck who wrote the song “Psycho Daisies” about his beloved blonde. Long retired from show business, Mary resided in Malibu where she told Vanity Fair magazine last year she still turned heads on the sand.

Farewell Mary Hughes. The beach party will be less fun without you.

SHAMELESS PLUG

Click here to read an article and interview I gave to Femme Fatales magazine about my new book Glamour Girls of Sixties Hollywood. Thanks guys for touting my book!


R.I.P.

Finally back online due to Blogger problems.

Sad to hear the news last week that Suzanne Pleshette passed away. She was not one of my favorites in the least (that throaty bullfrog voice of hers was annoying) but she was a Sixties Starlet though she would never admit to it. Though most fans loved her in Alfred Hitchcock’s The Birds (1963) or as Bob New hart’s acerbic wife in the popular TV series The Bob Newhart Show, I only liked her in the glossy Rome Adventure (1962) where she played a staid librarian who journeys to Italy where she finds love with pretty boy Troy Donahue who is being kept by older Angie Dickinson. The musical score is lush, Rome never looked more stunning, and Suzanne is very pretty and likable in the role.

OOPS, AWHILE CAME QUICKER THAN I THOUGHT

Though my previous Blog entry on Bunny Lake Is Missing was supposed to be my last, my friend David Savage wrote an interesting piece about the screening of it at Film Forum for Cinema Retro magazine [www.cinemaretro.com.]. Check it out.