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Celebrities / Actors / Carroll Baker / Biography
Carroll Baker

Carroll Baker

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Biography

This page uses content from the Carroll Baker biography page on the English version of Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. This list of authors can be seen in the page history. Rotten Tomatoes disclaims any and all warranties as to the accuracy or reliability of the content.

For the Canadian country music performer, refer to Carroll Baker.

Carroll Baker (born May 28, 1931) is an American actress who has enjoyed popularity as both a serious dramatic actress and, particularly in the sixties, a movies "sex symbol." Despite being cast in a wide range of roles during her heyday, Baker's beautiful features, blonde hair, and distinctive drawl made her particularly memorable in roles as brash, flamboyant women.

Baker was born in Johnstown, Pennsylvania to Virginia and William Baker, a traveling salesman.[1] After working as a magician's assistant, she began her film career in 1953, with a small part in Easy to Love. After appearing in television commercials and training at New York's famed Actors Studio, she appeared in the Broadway production of All Summer Long. That brought her to the attention of director Elia Kazan, who cast Baker as the title character in his controversial Baby Doll. Her Tennessee Williams-scripted role as a Mississippi teenage bride to a failed middle-aged cotton gin owner brought Baker instant fame as well as a certain level of notoriety; Baby Doll would remain the film for which she is best remembered. She was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress for her role in that film.

Also in 1956, she appeared in a supporting role in the epic Giant, opposite James Dean.

She would go on to work steadily in films throughout the late fifties and early sixties, appearing in a variety of genres: romances, such as The Miracle co-starring a young Roger Moore and But Not for Me also in (1959); westerns, including The Big Country (1958) and How the West Was Won (1962); and steamy melodramas, including Something Wild (1961), directed by her then-husband Jack Garfein, and Station Six-Sahara (1962). She also found time to appear on Broadway, starring in Garson Kanin's Come on Strong, produced in 1962.

Baker's flashy portrayal of a Jean Harlow-type movie star in the 1964 hit The Carpetbaggers brought her a second wave of notoriety and marked the beginning of a tumultuous relationship with the film's producer, Joseph E. Levine. Based on her Carpetbaggers performance, Levine began to position Baker to be a movies sex symbol, casting her in the title roles of two 1965 potboilers, Sylvia and Harlow. Despite much pre-publicity, the latter film was not a success, and relations between Baker and Levine soured.

Following a protracted legal battle with Paramount Pictures and divorce from her second husband, she moved to Europe. Eventually settling in Italy, she would spend the next several years starring in hard-edged giallo thrillers, including The Sweet Body of Deborah (1968), Paranoia (1970), and Baba Yaga (1973). During those busy years, film locations would take her all around the world, including Italy, Spain, Germany, the United Kingdom, and Mexico. A lead role in Andy Warhol's Bad (1977) brought her back to American shores. The seventies also saw a return to the stage, where she appeared in productions of Lucy Crown and Motive.

By the eighties, Baker moved into character work, playing the mother of Dorothy Stratten in Star 80 (1983) and Jack Nicholson's wife in Ironweed (1987). Film and television work continued sporadically through the nineties, and the 2006 DVD release of Baby Doll features a documentary with Baker reflecting on the impact the film had on her career.

An apocryphal story has it that a Masai chief offered 150 cows, 200 goats, sheep, and $750 for her while she was on location in Africa for the 1965 movie Mister Moses.

She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1725 Vine Street.

She has been married three times:

  • Second marriage: Director Jack Garfein, a Holocaust survivor who she met at the Actors Studio and for whom she converted to Judaism. They had one daughter, Blanche Baker, born in 1956, and a son, Herschel Garfein, born in 1958.
  • Third marriage: Actor Donald Burton

Ms. Baker has written three books: Baby Doll, An Autobiography, published in 1983, and A Roman Tale and To Africa, With Love, both published in 1985.

Filmography

  • Easy to Love (1953)
  • Giant (1956)
  • Baby Doll (1956)
  • The Big Country (1958)
  • But Not for Me (1959)
  • The Miracle (1959)
  • Bridge to the Sun (1961)
  • Something Wild (1961)
  • How the West Was Won (1962)
  • Station Six-Sahara (1962)
  • The Carpetbaggers (1964)
  • Cheyenne Autumn (1964)
  • Sylvia (1965)
  • The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965)
  • Mister Moses (1965)
  • Harlow (1965)
  • Her Harem (1967)
  • Jack of Diamonds (1967) (Cameo)
  • The Sweet Body of Deborah (1968)
  • Orgasm (1969)
  • So Sweet, So Perverse (1969)
  • The Spider (1970)
  • Paranoia (1970)
  • The Fourth Mrs. Anderson (1971)
  • Captain Apache (1971)
  • The Devil Has Seven Faces (1971)
  • Knife of Ice (1972)
  • Baba Yaga (1973)
  • The Flower with Petals of Steel (1973)
  • The Body (1974)
  • The Virgin Wife (1975)
  • Private Lessons (1975)
  • My Father's Wife (1976)
  • As of Tomorrow (1976)
  • Bait (1976)
  • Bad (1977)
  • Cyclone (1978)
  • The World Is Full of Married Men (1979)
  • The Sky is Falling (film) (1979)
  • The Watcher in the Woods (1980)
  • Star 80 (1983)
  • The Secret Diary of Sigmund Freud (1984)
  • Native Son (1986)
  • Hollywood Uncensored (1987) (documentary)
  • Ironweed (1987)
  • Kindergarten Cop (1990)
  • Blonde Fist (1991)
  • Jackpot (1992)
  • Gipsy Angel (1994)
  • In the Flesh (1995)
  • Skeletons (1996)
  • The Game (1997)
  • Nowhere to Go (1998)
  • Cinerama Adventure (2002) (documentary)

External links

  • Official website
  • Carroll Baker Baby Doll Fan Club
  • Carroll Baker in Baby Doll Lobby Card
  • Baby Doll Lobby Card

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify the biographical information on this page under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.



 
 
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