today's featured star has been in the business for over fifty years now and has seemingly done it all, from feature films alongside big names to hours and hours of television and then to the stage, where she explored new ground for herself. In addition, she has devoted herself to the cause of exotic animals, tirelessly carrying on work that was started by one of her significant partners years ago. As of this writing, she's pushing seventy and has practically the same body as she did when she entered the biz! And the face, while it has been tweaked here and there, has mostly escaped the scary form that so many of her contemporaries' mugs have taken. We're referring, of course, to Miss Stefanie Powers.Born Stefania Zofya Federkiewicz right in good ol' Hollywood, California to parents of Polish-American descent, she seemed tailor-made for work in show business from the start. Her parents divorcing when she was still a child, her stepfather's last name of Paul helped to sheer off some of the unwieldy moniker she started out with.
As noted in another post here at The Underworld, she was part of the local ballet class that included Jill St. John and Natalie Wood. Later, she attended Hollywood High School where one of her classmates was the ever-so-slightly older Nancy Sinatra.An outgoing and athletic type of girl, she was a cheerleader and later took an interest in the unlikely avocation of bullfighting, taking on her first match at the age of twenty! Shortly after, she became an honorary member of the Mexican Bullfighters Union and eventually invested in a breeding farm.
Her zesty personality and talent in school productions brought her to the attention of Columbia Pictures where she was signed as a contract player at the tender age of fifteen! She was groomed by the studio in all departments so that she would be ready to perform when they were ready to utilize her in the right project. As the '60s dawned, she adopted the cutesy name of Taffy Paul and began appearing in adolescent roles on such TV shows as The Ann Sothern Show, Lock Up and Bat Masterson. She kept this stage name for her film debut, which was Tammy Tell Me True, the second of three films featuring the title character (Sandra Dee was Tammy in the second and third films, replacing Debbie Reynolds, who had originated the part.)For her next film, a far bigger showcase, she took the name that she would be forever associated with: Stefanie Powers. The film,
Also in 1962, Powers was part of the sprawling young ensemble found in The Interns, a medical soap opera all about doctors in training and the nurses and others they love. The title characters were played by Michael Callan, Cliff Robertson, James MacArthur, Nick Adams and Haya Harareet (of Ben-Hur fame.) Powers played a nurse in love with MacArthur. (Could there have possibly been a less flattering lobby card issued of her?!) Senior doctors were played by Buddy Ebsen and Telly Savalas! Most astonishing now is how ungodly much the doctors smoke incessantly throughout the film.
Next she played the daughter of John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara in the rollicking western McLintock! The estranged couple battle it out while petulant Powers romances The Duke's real life son Patrick (playing someone not Wayne's son in the film.) A semi-remake of The Taming of the Shrew, it included some eye-opening spankings of O'Hara and Powers with a coal shovel! The climax has O'Hara tearing down the street in her bloomers before half the cast winds up in a massive mudhole.In 1965, she was part of the splashy, gaudy, wonderful Love has Many Faces, a slick soaper about an heiress (Lana Turner) who has married a former gigolo (Cliff Robertson) only to carry on with another one who turns up dead. Powers plays the dead boy's jilted fiance who travels to Acapulco to see for herself what has happened. She winds up catching the eye of Robertson, much to Turner's dismay.
Powers next traveled to England to make the thriller Die! Die! My Darling! (originally called The Fanatic) with the legendary stage actress Tallulah Bankhead. I won't go on about it now because, like Many Faces, there's a whole post here devoted to the movie. It remains an Underworld favorite.
In 1966, Powers was among the sizeable cast of Stagecoach, a bloated, color remake of the 1939 John Ford/John Wayne classic.
While it stood to reason that the show would be a hit, and Powers was the subject of a major press machine publicizing the project, it would up not satisfying its target audience. The character she played, April Dancer, though outfitted with some gadgets and weapons, was ultimately sort of helpless, relying on her male partner Noel Harrison and failing to ignite the sort of interest that was found in, say, Diana Rigg on The Avengers.One thing the show did do was capitalize on a few of Powers' skills. For example, one episode featured bullfighting and others called upon her mastery of foreign tongues. Powers is fluent in at least six different languages. The role was played on the parent show by Mary Ann Mobley in one episode, but Powers was ultimately chosen for the series itself. One amusing bit of worthless trivia, a TV Guide article on the show listed Powers at 117 pounds while this paperback book puts her at 108.
While still appearing on TV as April Dancer, Powers was in movie theaters as part of a film with many interesting actors. Warning Shot, starring David Janssen, had a roster of costars that included Lillian Gish, Joan Collins and Eleanor Parker, to name a few. Intended as a TV-movie, it was released on the big screen instead. A tight and trim little mystery, it's fun mostly as a spot-the-star exercise.It would be 1970 before Powers appeared in another feature film. She was becoming busy on television (appearing as a guest on the caper series It Takes a Thief starring one Robert Wagner.) The film Crescendo, opposite James Olson, was a Hammer Studios
chiller about a music student who goes to live in a French villa with the widow of a famous composer who is the subject of her thesis. While there, she is surrounded by mysterious goings on and sinister people and, eventually, some gory murders. The film is notable for containing a nude scene of Powers, but shortly after its initial release, it was cut in order to obtain a less restrictive rating. Thus, some viewers see her in the altogether and some don't, depending on the print.The year 1971 was made up of several TV-movies,
that period being a great one for amusingly pat, yet arresting , ninety minute gems. Five Desperate Women had her trapped on an island with four other ladies and a questionable Robert Conrad. Sweet, Sweet Rachel, the pilot movie for the series The Sixth Sense, centered on ESP being used to catch a psychic using telepathy to commit murder. Paper Man (a surprisingly prescient concept) had Dean Stockwell and a group of other college students creating a person that only exists on paper so that they can run up bills under his name and use a (huge!) computer to cover their tracks. Trouble is, someone decides to start killing off the people involved! She rounded out the year with a role in an Ellery Queen mystery pilot starring Peter Lawford as the sleuth.Appearing on the big screen again in 1972, she was the unlikely love interest to Lee Van Cleef
This was about the time that Powers became a heavily familiar face to TV viewers. She did five separate appearances on Love, American Style, appeared on Banacek, The Mod Squad, The Sixth Sense, Barnaby Jones, McCloud, Marcus Welby, M.D., four different episodes of Medical Center. You can pretty much name it. She also did an update of the famous Topper films for TV called Topper Returns. This one starred Roddy McDowall as Topper and had Stefanie and someone named John Fink as the ghostly couple (in this rendition, still in their 1940s guises and bemused by the advanced 1970s.)The '70s being a primo period for disaster, she was one of the passengers caught in a broken down tram in Skyway to Death. Then it was back to the Disney folks for Herbie Rides Again,
This is not to say that she didn't appear in a fair share of complete drek. Falling squarely into that category is one of the worst movies I have ever seen and, trust me, I've seen a LOT! Gone With the West is a total and complete mess, despite a cast that includes James Caan, Sammy Davis Jr. and Aldo Ray. She plays an American Indian (who somehow has a Spanish accent) and, though the movie is dreadfully written, shot, edited and scored, she is far from the worst thing in it. Even this is considered better than her next one, though, a dastardly comedy called It Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time, a slapdash project that somehow managed to involve Anthony Newley, Lloyd Bochner, Issac Hayes, Yvonne de Carlo and John Candy!Powers had done quite a bit of guest star appearances and appeared in many telefilms, sometimes with titles so close to each other as to be absurd. For example, she was in No Place to Run in 1972
Fortunately, a far more popular project was on the horizon by now. Aaron Spelling was planning another in a long line of successful television shows and wanted to pair Robert Wagner and Natalie Wood in this one, a contemporary spin on Nick and Nora Charles, a society couple who keep finding themselves ensconced in mysteries (frequently including murder.) Wagner was onboard, but it was decided to go with someone other than his real life wife Natalie. Eventually, Powers, who had worked with Wagner on his show It Takes a Thief, was mentioned (after bandying about Suzanne Pleshette and Lindsay Wagner as possibilities) and ultimately won the role.From the start, chemistry between the leads was magical. The show Hart to Hart was a success and offered viewers a marriage that had never lost its spark.
Anyway, the crimes involved in the show were incidental. What drew viewers to the series was the glittering repartee of the lead couple. They were very much in love, but not above teasing each other, and were typically given sexy bits of dialogue, often courtesy of frequent writer Tom Mankiewicz whose father Joe was a tremendous writer-director. Powers was dressed by Nolan Miller, who would later make a huge splash with Dynasty. It was a light, sometimes silly, but endearing, program with a degree of class that tended to be lacking in the late '70s. She was nominated for an Emmy twice and for a Golden Globe fives times, one for each year the series aired.
Both stars received major blows to their personal lives during the run of Hart to Hart and would lean on each other at times for emotional support. Natalie Wood's mysterious and sudden death by drowning was a living nightmare for Wagner while William Holden's death due to an accident paired with alcohol abuse was a heartbreak to Powers. She and Holden had enjoyed a lengthy and fascinating romance during the mid-to-late '70s that included world travel, particularly to regions of Africa where Holden was working hard on preservation causes.
When William Holden died in 1981, Powers took up his cause of conservation and wildlife preservation/protection. She and his existing partners, from a property he had long supported, created The William Holden Wildlife Foundation. The 1,800 acre ranch and education center in Kenya houses thirty-seven species of animals who were in danger of extinction due to over-hunting, poaching and population encroachment. The foundation has also built four libraries at several African schools. This dedication to the cause is remarkable in that she and Holden had actually ended their relationship prior to his death, but the devotion to these animals and the land had stayed important to her nonetheless.Powers also had branched into stage acting, several of the projects being musicals, in an effort to explore otherwise untapped challenges. Aside from Love Letters (which had won her The Sarah Siddons Award), some of the shows she appeared in include Mame, Applause, The Vagina Monologues and, rather surprisingly, The King and I, in the role of Anna Leonowens!
One of her moved beloved projects was a West End London production of Matador starring John Barrowman. Powers played an Ava Gardner-esque actress. A severe downturn in tourism caused by the first Persian Gulf War helped lead to an early closing for the show and the cast album was canceled the day before it was to be recorded.In an almost unbelievable chain of events, considering how closely identified Powers has been with Wagner for three decades, some sort of misunderstanding occurred between them and their desire to work on further Hart to Hart mysteries. The seeds of it were planted when Powers felt that five years of touring in Love Letters was plenty, but Wagner wanted to keep doing it. His current wife Jill St. John took that over, so no harm, no foul (unless you count Wagner dissing Stefanie's acting over Jill's in his auto-bio.) Wagner next took exception to the fact that Powers wanted to pursue a stage opportunity when there was all sorts of money on the table for more Hart movies. He accused her of betraying him and the crew and their fans (she had made, after all, EIGHT movies - not six as his book states - and longed for new pastures.) Finally, when she suggested another reunion movie about ten years after that, he balked, saying he wasn't about to give Angela Lansbury a run for her money in senior crime-solving. Whatever...

She also attends many social functions (such as the premiere of I Love You Phillip Morris, at which these shots in black were taken. Lookin' good, lady!) She's a hit in The Underworld as much for her distinctive voice and method of speaking as she is for her beguiling personality and lovely looks. Somehow, despite a career that's lasted over half a century, I don't think she's altogether finished yet. Hopefully, she can find a vehicle to further show off her many (some yet untapped) talents.

10 comments:
Just to clarify why Natalie Wood did not star in 'Hart to Hart' ... she turned it down because the Wagners had agreed years earlier that, for the sake of their children, they would never be working on projects at the same time. That way, while one parent was away on location or spending long hours on the set, the other would be at home with the children.
Natalie still had a hand in things however, she and Wagner owned the production company (called Rona II) that produced 'Hart to Hart.'
She's devoted to exotic animals but she fights bulls!
Ha ha!, Labuanbajo! I know!!!! I would presume that in the wake of her interest in the animals through William Holden, she is in favor of no-kill bullfighting, but still..... I get you. It's still a form of torment, I should think.
Ross, according to Robert Wagner, Wood was the movie star of the family and he was more TV by then. His quote was something like, "She sells tickets. I sell (fill in the blank - can't remember here at work)" meaning his work was used on TV with ads to sell products. Ironically, she began doing more television projects anyway, but probably didn't want the grind of a weekely series.
This was a really comprehensive overview of Stephanie Powers' life. She has been one of the those stars that has kept her nose clean and out of trouble while working almost continually and dedicating her life to something other than Hollywood parties. I've admired her passion for life and commitment for wildlife conservation for nearly 30 years. She's a classy, intelligent woman and I hope to see her involved in many more projects in the entertainment world in the future.
Thanks for the great post.
Smiles-
Melissa
Melissa, thanks for your comments and welcome to The Underworld. I hope you will take a little swim around to see if anything else piques your interest! (And, yes, it's true that there has scarcely been any hint of scandal about Stefanie in all these years!)
Whatever work she's had done has been judiciously applied. She looks fantastic and should be a role model for older (and younger) actresses considering cosmetic surgery.
I first became aware of her as The Girl (not Woman) from UNCLE, but I think I preferred her co-star, Noel Harrison.
What a survivor!
I did not see one mention of the 2 part episode she was in of the six million dollar man, the secret of bigfoot.
To this day I still believe that Wagner killed Natalie, either for romantic interests in Powers or another woman.
She doesn't fight bulls. If you read her book she explains that as a child on a ranch there were Mexican employees that were fans of the sport. She dressed up as a matador for laughs, as a child.
Carolyn, I do think you need to realize the game of celebrity auto-bios. No matter how honest or "clean" anyone wants to come, there are nearly always things that are left out, glossed over, "explained" away or ignored entirely (and in some cases, completely fabricated!)
I'm not knocking Ms. Powers - why would I spend countless hours preparing an in-depth love letter like this to her if I were?! But there is absolutely no denying that she had at least a moderate interest in bullfighting as a young woman. I never stated that she "fought bulls" in my post though she is cited elsewhere as having taken on her first one at age twenty. And she was made an "Honorary" member of that union in addition to breeding bulls. Additionally, her own interest in the "sport" led to one of the episodes of "The Girl from UNCLE" including it as a key plot point. And then she took such a hearty interest in the musical play "Matador."
None of this meshes with her much-publicized devotion to wild animal welfare (which didn't really come about until the early-1970s), so of course she is not about to acknowledge it publicly or in her book! She's actually had a tangle or two with reporters over the subject.
It's not that far removed from renowned animal lover Doris Day having been swathed in exquisite furs during her Hollywood heyday, though she does confront that and chalks it up to ignorance at the time. No matter what, I am positive that, if she even still holds the slightest interest in bullfighting, it would surely be no-kill. For my own part, I dislike everything about all of it (except maybe the tight pants), but everyone is different in his or her pursuits and endeavors.
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