Ruth Roman

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Ruth Roman
Ruth Roman MS851.jpg
Roman in 1951
Background information
Born as: Norma Roman
Born Dec 22, 1922
Lynn, Massachusetts, U.S.
Zodiac Capricorn
Died Sep 9, 1999 - age  77
Laguna Beach, California
Natural death in her sleep
Spouse(s): * Jack Flaxman
(1939 - 1941) divorced
* Mortimer Hall
(1950 - 1956) divorce
* Bud Burton Moss
(1956 - 1960) divorce
* William Ross Wilson
(1976 - )
Parents: Dorothy Schiff (mother-in-law)
Awards: 1959 Sarah Siddons Award
IMDB #: 0738746

Ruth Roman (born Norma Roman; ✦December 22, 1922 – September 9, 1999) was an American actress of film, stage, and television.

After playing stage roles on the East Coast, Roman moved to Hollywood to pursue a career in films. She appeared in several uncredited bit parts before she was cast as the leading lady in the western Harmony Trail (1944) and in the title role in the serial film 'Jungle Queen (1945), her first credited film performances.

Roman first starred in the title role of Belle Starr's Daughter (1948). She achieved her first notable success with a role in The Window (1949) and a year later was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year – Actress]] for her performance in Champion (1949 film) (1949). In the early 1950s, she was under contract to Warner Bros., where she starred in a variety of films, including the Alfred Hitchcock thriller Strangers on a Train (film)| (1951).

In the mid-1950s, after leaving Warner Bros., Roman continued to star in films and also began playing guest roles for television series. She also worked abroad and made films in England, Italy, and Spain. She was also a passenger aboard the SS Andrea Doria when it collided with another ship and sank in 1956. In 1959, she won the Sarah Siddons Award for her work in the play Two for the Seesaw. Her numerous television appearances earned her a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Early life and stage experience

Norma Roman was born in Lynn, Massachusetts, to Lithuanian Jewish parents, Mary Pauline (née Gold) and Abraham "Anthony" Roman. She was renamed "Ruth" when a fortune teller told her mother that "Norma" was an unlucky name. Her mother was a dancer, and her father a carnival barker in a carnival sideshow that they owned at Revere Beach, Massachusetts. She had two older sisters, Ann and Eve. Her father died when Ruth was eight, and her mother sold the sideshow. Later, she attended the William Blackstone School and Girls' High School (Boston, Massachusetts) in Boston. She then pursued her desire to become an actress by enrolling in the prestigious Bishop Lee Dramatic School in Boston. After further enhancing her skills performing with the New England Repertory Company and the Elizabeth Peabody Players, Roman moved to New York City, where she hoped to find success on Broadway. Instead, she worked as a cigarette girl, a hat check girl, and a model to make a living and save money.

Career

Ruth Roman, 1951

Roman moved to Hollywood, where she obtained bit parts in several films such as Stage Door Canteen (1943), Ladies Courageous (1944), Since You Went Away (1944), Song of Nevada (1944), and Storm Over Lisbon (1944). She had a featured role in Harmony Trail (1944), but continued to be mostly unbilled in films such as She Gets Her Man (1945).

Roman was cast in the title role in the 13-episode serial Jungle Queen (serial)|Jungle Queen (1945). Her roles, though, remained small in such films as See My Lawyer (1945), The Affairs of Susan (1945), You Came Along (1945), Incendiary Blonde (1945), Gilda (1946), Without Reservations (1946), A Night in Casablanca (1946), and The Big Clock (film)|The Big Clock (1948). While waiting for an opportunity in movies, Roman wrote short stories based on her experiences living in a theatrical boarding house. She sold two of them: The House of the Seven Garbos and The Whip Song.

Roman's career began to improve in the late 1940s when she was cast in a featured role in the 1948 release Good Sam (1948). The next year, she was chosen for the title role in Belle Starr's Daughter, as a killer in the thriller The Window, starring Kirk Douglas.

Warner Bros.

In recognition of Roman's rising status as an actress, Warner Bros. signed her to a long-term contract in 1949, casting her first as a supporting player for Bette Davis in Beyond the Forest and then for Milton Berle and Virginia Mayo in Always Leave Them Laughing. The studio in 1950 cast her as the female lead in Barricade (1950) with Dane Clark and Colt .45 with Randolph Scott.

Warners gave her a starring role in Three Secrets (1950) with Eleanor Parker and Patricia Neal. She played a distraught mother waiting to learn whether or not her child survived an airplane crash. This was followed by Dallas (film) (1950), where she was Gary Cooper's leading lady. The May 1, 1950, issue of Life magazine featured Roman in a cover story "The Rapid Rise of Ruth Roman".

Trailer for Strangers on a Train (1951 film)

Roman got top billing in Lightning Strikes Twice (1951 film), directed by King Vidor with Richard Todd. She was Farley Granger's love interest in Strangers on a Train (film) (1951), directed by Alfred Hitchcock. Roman was top-billed as well in the 1951 thriller Tomorrow Is Another Day (1951 film), co-starring Steve Cochran. That year, she was also one of many Warners stars in Starlift, the studio's musical tribute to United States military personnel fighting in the Korean War.

She was loaned to MGM for Invitation (1952 film), then co-starred with Errol Flynn in Mara Maru (1952). She went back to MGM to play Glenn Ford's love interest in Young Man with Ideas (1952) and was reunited with Cooper in Blowing Wild (1953), only this time she was billed beneath Barbara Stanwyck.

Post-Warners

Trailer for The Far Country (1955 film)

Roman went to Universal to play Van Heflin's love interest in Tanganyika (1954 film). At Universal she was a love interest to James Stewart in the Anthony Mann-directed western The Far Country (film) (1955) and at Republic was top billed in The Shanghai Story (1954) with Edmond O'Brien.

Roman did Down Three Dark Streets (1954) with Broderick Crawford, and started appearing on TV in shows like Lux Video Theatre, The Red Skelton Hour, Producers' Showcase, Climax!, General Electric Theatre, Celebrity Playhouse, The Ford Television Theatre and Jane Wyman Presents The Fireside Theatre.

Roman had a good part in England in Joe MacBeth (1955) playing Lady MacBeth, and she was with Van Johnson in The Bottom of the Bottle (1956) and Mayo in Great Day in the Morning (1956).

Roman appeared in the western Rebel in Town (1956) and was top-billed in Five Steps to Danger (1957). She was in Bitter Victory (1957) and went to Italy to star in Desert Desperados (1959).

Continuing work in theatre

In 1959, Roman won the Sarah Siddons Award for her work in Chicago theatre. She was selected from among 47 nominees based on her performance in Two for the Seesaw (play)

Back in Hollywood, she played Paul Anka's mother in Look in Any Window (1961).

Television

Trailer for Great Day in the Morning (1956)

Roman worked regularly in films well up to the late 1950s. Then she began making appearances on television shows. These included recurring roles in NBC's 1965–1966 The Long, Hot Summer (TV series), and toward the end of her career, recurring roles in the 1986 season of Knots Landing and several episodes of Murder, She Wrote, both on CBS.

She guest-starred in NBC's Bonanza and Sam Benedict, ABC's The Bing Crosby Show (1964 TV series) sitcom, and its circus drama The Greatest Show on Earth (TV series) starring Jack Palance, as well as Burke's Law (1963 TV series) starring Gene Barry and I Spy (1965 TV series) featuring Robert Culp and Bill Cosby. She also appeared as a fiery redhead in an episode of Gunsmoke.(1971 "Waste-Part 1)"

She appeared in the early 1960s in the medical dramas The Eleventh Hour (1962 TV series) and replayed January 2011, Breaking Point (1963 TV series). She starred in a season 3 episode of Mission: Impossible (1968 TV series ) titled "The Elixir" as Riva Santel as well as a Season 2 episode of Naked City (TV series). Many other series featured guest appearances by Roman, including Route 66 (TV series), The Untouchables (1959 TV series), Mannix, Cannon (TV series), Marcus Welby, M.D., The Mod Squad (TV series), The FBI (TV series), Tarzan (1966 TV series), and The Outer Limits (1963 TV series, "Moonstone" episode).

In 1971 Roman appeared as Marjorie Worth on "The Men from Shiloh" (rebranded name for the TV western The Virginian (TV series) in the episode titled "The Angus Killer."

In 1960, Roman was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6672 Hollywood Boulevard for her contribution to television.

Personal life

Roman and her second husband, Mortimer Hall

Roman was married four times. She had one son, Richard Roman Hall on November 12, 1952,

She married Hall on December 17, 1950. In 1956, she sued him for divorce, Roman was a Democratic Party who supported Adlai Stevenson II campaign during the 1952 United States presidential election.

SS Andrea Doria sinking

In July 1956, Roman was just finishing a trip to Europe with her three-year-old son Richard. At the port of Cannes they boarded the Italian passenger liner SS Andrea Doria|SS Andrea Doria as first-class passengers for their return passage to the United States. On the night of July 25, the vessel collided with the Swedish passenger liner MS Stockholm (1948)'.

Roman was in the Belvedere Lounge when the collision happened and immediately took off her high heels and scrambled back to her cabin barefoot to retrieve her sleeping son. Several hours later, they were both evacuated with the other passengers from the sinking liner. Richard was lowered first into a waiting lifeboat, but before she could follow, the lifeboat departed. Ruth stepped into the next boat and was eventually rescued along with 750 other survivors from the Andrea Doria by the French passenger liner SS Île de France. Richard was rescued by the Stockholm and was reunited with his mother in New York.

Death

Roman died at the age of 76 in her sleep of natural causes at her beachfront villa on Crescent Bay in Laguna Beach, California, on September 9, 1999.

Filmography

Wikilogo-20.png
Wikipedia article: Ruth Roman Filmography

Further reading

  • Sculthorpe, Derek (2022) Ruth Roman A Career Portrait. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co., Inc. < ISBN:978-1-4766-8824-4 >

External links

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