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Surely Technicolor was invented for the express purpose of showing to fullest advantage the flaming red... (Learn more)

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Rhonda Fleming picture
1949: Rhonda Fleming for director Alexander Hall's film, The Great Lover. (Photo: Hope Entertainment / Getty Images)
About Rhonda Fleming

Surely Technicolor was invented for the express purpose of showing to fullest advantage the flaming red hair of actress Rhonda Fleming. Born into a theatrical family, Fleming made her film bow while still attending high school. She was briefly under contract to producer David O. Selznick, for whom she played her first important film role, the nymphomaniac mental patient in Hitchcock's Spellbound (1946). While working at Paramount from 1947 through 1957, Fleming played opposite such diverse leading men as Bing Crosby (A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court), Bob Hope (The Great Lover), Ronald Reagan (Hong Kong) and Donald O'Connor (The Buster Keaton Story). She fluctuated between good and bad girl roles throughout her Hollywood years, with most of her staunchest devotees preferring the "bad". Closing out her film career in 1969, Fleming briefly entered the business world before making comeback appearances in Won Ton Ton: The Dog Who Saved Hollywood (1976) and The Nude Bomb (1980). The last two of Rhonda Fleming's five husbands were producer/director Hall Bartlett and theatre-chain executive Ted Mann. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Quick Facts

Also known as

AKA : Marrlyn C Louis
Birth Name : Marilyn Louis

Born

August, 10 1923 in Los Angeles, California, USA

Education

  • Beverly Hills High School, Beverly Hills, California:

Professions

actor, singer