Gloria Talbott Biography: Age, Net Worth, Death, Parents, Husband, Wikipedia

June 2024 · 5 minute read

Gloria Maude Talbott was born in Glendale, California. In 1882, her great-grandfather Benjamin F. Patterson moved to the area from Ohio and acquired some land. Later, he helped with the city’s platting. She debuted as an actor in movies when she was a little child, including A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945), Sweet and Low-down (1944), and Maytime (1937). She was a Glendale High School student. She was selected as the “Miss Glendale” beauty pageant’s 1947 champion. Talbott was a member of the cast of One Fine Day, a comedy that premiered in November 1948 at the Biltmore Theater in Los Angeles.

Lori Talbott, her sister (1925–2006), also pursued a career in acting. Talbott started a dramatic group when she finished school, and they performed “arena”-style acts at several bars. After her first marriage, she stopped performing, but after her divorce, she picked it back up and worked a lot in film and television.

Essential Data

Early Life

Gloria Talbott was born on February 7, 1931, in Glendale, a suburb of Los Angeles, that her great-grandfather Benjamin Franklin Nye Patterson helped develop and died on September 19, 2000.

Career

In the 1950s, Talbott frequently worked in the film industry. She played Rose Rodriguez in the 1952 documentary The Rodriguez Story. She appeared in the comedies Crashout in 1955, We’re No Angels in 1955, Lucy Gallant in 1955, and All That Heaven Allows in 1955 with Humphrey Bogart. She played an Indian named Shona alongside Fred MacMurray in the movie The Oregon Trail.

She later earned the title of “scream queen” after starring in a series of scary movies, such as The Daughter of Dr Jekyll in 1957, The Cyclops in 1957, I Married a Monster from Outer Space in 1958, and The Leech Woman in 1960. Bri Quince, the romantic lead in the 1966 Western movie An Eye for an Eye, was her last on-screen appearance. In 1953, Talbott acted in “The Dear Departed” on Chevron Theatre, “The Crime of Sylvester Bonnard” on Favorite Story, and “High Seas” on television. She played Pocahontas in the 1955 TV Reader’s Digest episode “America’s First Great Lady”. She was the season’s first guest star in both of the new adult Westerns that season, Gunsmoke’s “Home Surgery” and The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp’s “Mr Earp Meets a Lady.” She played Maureen in the science-fiction “Man From 1997” episode of the television anthology Conflict on November 27, 1956. James Garner and Charlie Ruggles also appeared in the episode.

She briefly appeared in the “The Young Actress” episode of Mr. Adams and Eve aired on January 4, 1957. She debuted as Linda Brazwell on October 1, 1957, in the episode “Reluctant Hero” of the ABC/Warner Bros. Western series Sugarfoot. The NBC Western anthology series Frontier (1955), the syndicated Western-themed criminal drama Sheriff of Cochise with John Bromfield, and the syndicated Adventures of Superman, The Range Rider, and The Cisco Kid are among Talbott’s numerous television credits. She appeared in the Crossroads religious anthology series episode “The Singing Preacher” from 1956.

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The Restless Gun, season one, episode 19, “Hang and Be Damned,” starring and producing John Payne, aired on NBC on January 27, 1958, and Talbott played Valya. She also appeared in the 1958 episode “Fatal Memory” of CBS’s Wanted: Dead or Alive (returning for the 1960 episode “Tolliver Bender”). In the 1958 episode “A Cup of Black Coffee” of the CBS crime drama Richard Diamond, Private Detective, she appeared as Jenny in a guest role, replicating the relationship she shared with David Janssen in the 1955 movie All That Heaven Allows. She appeared in several Zorro episodes on ABC as a guest star.

Talbott appeared in the Riverboat episodes “Landlubbers” and “Devil in Skirts” of the NBC Western series as Nora Lanyard and Lucinda Jennings, respectively, in 1960. In “The Velvet Frame” of the ABC/WB drama The Roaring 20s, she was cast as Sandy. In the episodes of Bonanza’s “Escape to Ponderosa” and The Rebel on ABC, she played Nedda. She

played Maria Mosner in the ABC adventure series The Islanders episode “The Twenty-Six Paper” from 1961. She made a guest appearance in the same year’s “Buddy’s Wife” episode of the CBS sitcom Bringing Up Buddy. She made another appearance on Gunsmoke in the episodes “Cody’s Code” from 1962 and “The Cousin” from 1963.

Personal Life

Talbott has two children and was married four times.

Death

Talbott passed away from kidney failure on September 19, 2000, while being treated in a hospital in Glendale, California.

Filmography

Net Worth

She was a well-known American actress in numerous films and TV shows. Talbott’s net worth exceeds $5 million.

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