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Vanessa Brown

Personal Profile

Vanessa Brown
  • Birth Name:
    Smylla Brind
  • Date of Birth:
    March 24, 1928
  • Zodiac Sign:
    Aries
  • Place of Birth:
    Vienna, Austria
  • Place of Death:
    Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, U.S.A
  • Date of Death:
    May 21, 1999
  • Sex:
    Female
  • Nationality:
    American

Family

Vanessa Brown
  • Father:
    Austrian-Jewish
  • Spouse:
    Robert Franklyn (1950–1957) (divorced), Mark Sandrich Jr. (1959–1989) (divorced)

Career

Vanessa Brown

Trivia

Vanessa Brown
  • Brown acted in live television dramas of the early 1950s, including Robert Montgomery Presents and The Philco Television Playhouse, and appeared on Pantomime Quiz and Leave It to the Girls.
  • She was the eighth actress to play the role of Jane, appearing in Tarzan and the Slave Girl (1950) opposite Lex Barker, followed by a role in Vincente Minnelli's acclaimed The Bad and the Beautiful (1952).
  • She played a series of ingenue roles over the next few years in The Late George Apley (1947), The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (1947) and The Heiress (1949) and other films.

Biography

Vanessa Brown
Last Updated: Monday, August 03, 2009

Austrian-born actress Vanessa Brown was on the Broadway stage from age 13 in Watch on the Rhine, and at the same time was featured as a contestant on the popular radio series Quiz Kids. Billed as Tessa Brind, Vanessa made her screen bow in the Val Lewton-produced study of wartime juvenile delinquency Youth Runs Wild (1944).

She became "Vanessa Brown" for good with 1946's I've Always Loved You, spending the next six years as a popular film ingenue. In 1950 Brown joined the ever-growing ranks of movie "Janes" in Tarzan and the Slave Girl. She also appeared in the 1955 sitcom My Favorite Husband, replacing the series' original star, Joan Caulfield. Brown retired from films to marry director Mark Sandrich Jr. in the mid-'50s, returning briefly before the cameras in 1967.

Vanessa worked on the 1977 satirical TV soap opera All That Glitters, and also had a recurring role on the still-thriving real soap opera General Hospital. Back in radio in the early '70s, Vanessa was an occasional guest speaker on the short-wave Voice of America service.

Filmography

Vanessa Brown

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