Just as her movie career was about to unfold with a featured part in The Goldbergs, she met a fellow actor who was under contract at 20th Century Fox, the deliriously beautiful Jeffrey Hunter. The Goldbergs (a feature based on the highly popular radio show-turned-television series) gave her a featured role as a young girl torn between two gentlemen.
By December of 1950, she'd appeared in her first movie and married her first husband, Hunter.She was next placed in the period film, Quebec, which was filmed on location and starred John Drew Barrymore (billed at the time as John Barrymore Jr.) and Corinne Calvet. The story concerned the revolt of Canada against England in the 1830s. Following this, she was lent to director Douglas Sirk for use in his film The First Legion, all about the effects of a miracle on a select group of people. She played a disabled girl, driven by faith and it marked the first of four occasions that she would act for the gifted filmmaker.
Rush gave birth to her and Jeffrey Hunter's son Christopher in 1952 and was offscreen that year due to the pregnancy. When audiences next saw her, it was in 1953's Prince of Pirates, a low-budget period picture costarring John Derek. She was lent to Columbia Pictures in order to make the lackluster affair that had her playing a Spanish princess.
Restless at the way Paramount was handling her career, she switched to Universal Studios in 1953 and was promptly placed in another sci-fi film that has since become something of a classic as well, It Came from Outer Space.
The '50s are dotted with creepy films of this type, some of which are dreadful and some of which are highly memorable (Invasion of the Body Snatchers and War of the Worlds, for example.) Rush was fortunate to be cast in two that were decent and not ridiculously shabby and campy. In fact, this last one, It Came From Outer Space, earned Rush the Golden Globe for Most Promising Newcomer-Female of 1954. (She shared the honor with both Pat Crowley and, um, Bella Darvi.)
1954 brought two more films for Douglas Sirk
Later that year, the far more appropriate and enduring (if unrealistic in its own ways as well!) Magnificent Obsession
was released. Jane Wyman starred as a young widow whose husband dies when a local playboy has tied up the use of a vital resuscitator. When the playboy (Rock Hudson) tries to approach Wyman (to simultaneously apologize and sort of put the moves on her!), she is accidentally injured, perhaps irrevocably.Rush plays Wyman's step-daughter (in the source novel, the same age as Wyman's character, but here a tad younger than her.) She is steadfast in her loathing of Hudson and blames him for her father's death and her step-mother's injury. It's only when she finally realizes
the true depth of Hudson's feelings and his desire to make everything right that she relents and treats him favorably.I may have noted elsewhere in The Underworld that one of my surefire tear-inducements is the depiction of someone either forgiving another person for an injustice or otherwise burying the hatchet after a prior conflict. Maybe it's because I tend to be a fairly unforgiving person myself and am touched to see others doing it. I don't know. I just know that I find myself moved by these scenarios more often than not and this is one of the cases in which I am.
Relating to nothing is the fact that this movie also contains quite possibly the most fantastic lipstick I have ever seen. I don't know what it is, but both Wyman and Rush sport rich, saturated lip color throughout, enough to make me notice it significantly more than in virtually any other movie.While Magnificent Obsession
put Hudson on the path to superstardom (just as it had Robert Taylor in the original 1935 version), Rush was given little similar career momentum. Still incredibly lovely no matter what she was placed in, she was given fourth billing (behind Tony Curtis, his wife Janet Leigh and David Farrar) in the period film The Black Shield of Falworth, her third film of 1954. This was the year that also saw Rush's television debut on a program called Lux Video Theatre.
She made her fourth and final appearance in a Douglas Sirk film (as well as her third and final appearance opposite Hudson) in 1955's Captain Lightfoot. The story of an Irishman turned highwayman, Rush was prettily situated as the love interest yet again. At this same time, Rush's marriage to Jeffrey Hunter was unraveling. One of the town's most sparklingly attractive couples was no more.
came along in Bigger Than Life. The story of James Mason's struggle with, first, arterial inflammation followed by a mind-altering and violent addiction to cortisone offered plenty of dramatic conflict since she played his frightened and concerned wife. Mason repeatedly abuses their young son mentally and worries Rush with his drug-addled antics. Walter Matthau plays a neighbor and friend who ultimately helps contain the dangerous husband.
Next, Rush starred opposite Rory Calhoun in Flight to Hong Kong, a B-movie about the title trip that involves a hijacking of diamonds, followed by a romance between Rush and Calhoun. The following year, she was part of a star-packed, but disappointing, adaptation of a Broadway comedy. Oh, Men! Oh, Women! put her with David Niven, Dan Dailey, Tony Randall and Ginger Rogers, but the result was a series of colorful, but shrill and grating histrionics.She was now working at ex-husband Jeffrey Hunter's studio, 20th Century Fox and,

For that same year's Harry Black and the Tiger, she portrayed the plucky girlfriend of hunter Stewart Granger, who accompanies him on safari. She was featured prominently in some of the artwork of advertisements for the film, though it is practically forgotten today. What little acting accolades there were to be found were reserved for East Indian costar I.S. Johar, who nabbed a BAFTA nomination.
She worked with Paul Newman (who she had gotten to know through his wife Joanne Woodward during the filming of No Down Payment) in the Warner Brothers film The Young Philadelphians. As Newman's society girl fiancee, the role was initially meant for Natalie Wood, but she refused to play it and went on suspension. Newman portrayed an upwardly mobile lawyer who puts off his marriage to Rush, costing him her love. The star-filled drama featured Brian Keith, Alexis Smith, Billie Burke, John Williams, Adam West and an Oscar-nominated Robert Vaughn.This same year, Rush married for the second time to Warren Cowan, a top-notch publicist. Their marriage would last for a decade and produce one daughter, Claudia, who is today a television news reporter.
Now thirty-three years of age, she began appearing more frequently on television than in movies. She had already appeared in the two-part Sunday Showcase production of What Makes Sammy Run?
and now proceeded to pop up on Frontier Circus, The Eleventh Hour, The Dick Powell Theatre and several episodes of the Nick Adams investigative show biz reporter show Saints and Sinners. In 1963, she was one of several ladies placed alongside Frank Sinatra in the movie Come Blow Your Horn, based on a Neil Simon play. It was about this time that she switched from long brunette locks to the fluffy, forward-combed frosted look that she kept (with occasional, minor variations) for a very long time thereafter, rendering her almost unrecognizable from the dark-haired girl she'd been previously.
Frankie thought enough of her to use her in practically the only female role in the following year's Robin and the 7 Hoods. A throwback to the Prohibition Era, it concerned (in a light-hearted way) the gangster shenanigans of Sinatra and fellow Rat Pack members Dean Martin and Sammy Davis Jr. (Peter Lawford was out by this period, per Sinatra's dictum, and was replaced by Bing Crosby.) Peter Falk also starred. The characters each took their names from the personalities in the story of Robin Hood so Rush was, of course, named Marian. More television continued including an episode of The Outer Limits with Vera Miles, a pair of episodes of Dr. Kildare and a two-part episode of The Fugitive, notable in that she played the wife of regular character Lt. Gerard (Barry Morse), the pursuer of the title character, played, of course, by David Janssen. She, like so many other great stars, appeared on the game show Password and was visibly concerned about doing whatever was best to aid her partners.
In 1967, she joined an all-star cast and was reunited with Paul Newman in the western Hombre. Newman played a white man, raised by Apaches, who is on a stagecoach full of disparate types eventually held up by a sadistic criminal. Rush's haughty, condescending character was the wife of Fredric March and gets a horrible comeuppance when she is taken hostage and tied up in the blistering heat. It was a somewhat rare role for her in that she was a) mostly unsympathetic and b) decidedly unglamorous by the end.She joined the ranks of other
celebs before her when she appeared on Batman as a guest villainess. As Nora Clavicle, a women's rights activist who takes over Gotham City and replaces the men in positions of power with female counterparts, she was in one of the more lackluster entries of the series. Since Batman would never strike a woman, there isn't even a “Batfight” in this installment, though Batgirl was on the scene to help take the bad lady down.By now, Rush had also joined the cast of the popular nighttime soap Peyton Place for a limited engagement. She made the rounds of other shows like Mod Squad, Rod Serling's Night Gallery, Marcus Welby, M.D., McCloud, Ironside and even Maude, as Bunny Nash, one of Maude's old school chums whose looks and lifestyle
She was making periodic TV-movie appearances as well. There were 1972's The Man, about how freak circumstances lead to a black man (James Earl Jones) winding up as President of The United States, The Eyes of Charles Sand, about a young man with ESP trying to solve a mystery, and Moon of the Wolf, with David Janssen and Bradford Dillman.
By 1973, her movie career amounted to working for Walt Disney in the dreadful Bob Crane comedy Superdad. While she was still lovely to look at, the weak project offered little to no challenge as an actress (other than trying to get through it without looking preposterous!) A four-year marriage (her last) to bit actor Jim Gruzalski stretched from 1971 to 1975.
Dick Van Dyke had a sitcom, practically forgotten now, that aired between 1971 and 1974 called The New Dick Van Dyke Show. He played a talk show host in Arizona (where Van Dyke actually lived. In fact, a studio was built there in order to film this series, which was very much desired by CBS!) Barbara Rush made three appearances along the way, always as the same character, and one such event was deemed important enough to warrant the cover of a newspaper TV schedule.Considering, too,
that she worked alongside Hudson, Douglas, Sinatra, Martin, Burton, Newman and so many others, along with being married to the tragic Jeffrey Hunter and worth for the great Douglas Sirk, one would have loved to read a book by her, but none has ever come forth. It's not to late, Miss Rush, get a collaborator and start reminiscing!

6 comments:
A little trivia: Barbara was up for a part that seemed written for her ... the role of Cindy Bakersfeld played by Dana Wynter in 'Airport'. She too would have looked stunning in that lustrous black sable.
Soneone (maybe elsewhere here) once remarked on the resemblance between Barbara and Dana. In fact, when looking for photos of Miss Rush for this post, I came upon a "tribute" page in which two of the three photos there were of Dana!!!! I can indeed see her as Cindy in Airport. Thanks!!
She and Dana seemed interchangable back in he 50s, but I always preferred Dana!
George (Warren Beatty) in "Shampoo" talks to a bank officer about a loan to open his own hair salon. When the bank officer asks about references, George says "Barbara Rush. I do her hair".
Great article. Here's a bit more on Barbara's B movie career:
http://bmoviebabes.blogspot.com/2015/05/72-barbara-rush.html
I am a friend of Barbara's. Barbara was actually offered the role. The film started production in January of 1969. Barbara was still filming "Peyton Place," until February of 1969.
Due to production delay caused by an unusually no snow winter during filming in the actual Minneapolis airport, Barbara's scenes were put on hold as she was scheduled to film them in March or April.
During this time, David Merrick offered Barbara the starring role in the National touring production of "40 Carats." The last time Barbara had starred in a stage play was in 1953 with her beloved Hank, Jeffrey Hunter.
Barbara prefers to think of him by his real name, Henry, and she uses the name he preferred which is Hank.
Still not having a firm date to film her scenes, Merrick arranged for her to perform in a stage play in Chicago from April - May of 1969. The thinking was she could fly to Minneapolis and film her scenes on her days off from the play.
By late May, when Universal got ready to film her scenes as Cindy, Barbara was in rehearsals for '40 Carats," and Barbara had to pass on the role.
Barbara was not bitter about losing the role in a big hit film as "40 Carats," was a big personal hit for her and relaunched her stage career.
Plus, Universal cast her in several hit TV shows and TV films to compensate
for the loss of the role.
There were a few occasions when fans would send her photos of Dana and she would respond back with a nice letter, she could not sign a photo of Dana Wynter.
Barbara will be 95 on 1/4/2022. She has been a wonderful and caring friend for 44 years in my life. She is one of the nicest and kindest people you could hope to meet. Sadly, she thinks her autobiography would be boring as there are no scandals.
I tried to tell her, Barbara you worked with everyone either in film, TV, radio, or stage (Robert Redford in a TV episode, Claudette Colbert on Radio, Don Murray on TV, Cloris Leachman on TV, Mary Astor on TV, and Margo Martindale on stage to name a few not mentioned in the above post.)
Joan Crawford told her how to have her photo airbrushed and explained by actually doing it for the photographer. Loretta Young lived up the block from Barbara and the last four years of her life, Loretta would call Barbara and ask her to please come over for breakfast. During the 1980s, Lana Turner would ask Barbara to dinner, Barbara and I being punctual would show up at either the old Spago on Sunset or the Polo Lounge on time. An hour later in walks Lana making a star entrance.
Yes, an autobiography would be great, but at this late date, it will not happen. There are so many wonderful stories and adventures we had and I wish she would have written her book. There are several great interviews
you can find on the internet. I wish TCM would air her interviews from 2019.
Best Bill G Worlow
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