Barbara Loden(1932-1980)
- Actress
- Director
- Producer
A one-time pin-up beauty and magazine story model, Barbara Loden
studied acting in New York in the early 50s and was on the Broadway
boards within the decade. She was discovered for films by legendary
producer/director Elia Kazan who was
impressed with what she did in a small role as
Montgomery Clift's secretary in
Wild River (1960). He moved her up to
feature status with her next role as
Warren Beatty's wanton sister in his
classic
Splendor in the Grass (1961).
As Kazan's protégé, she appeared as part of Kazan's stage company in
the Lincoln Center Repertory Theater's production of After the
Fall, winning the Tony and Outer Critic's Circle awards for that
dazzling performance. An oddly entrancing, delicate blonde beauty
possessed with a Marilyn Monroe-like
vulnerability, she impressed in two of his other stage productions as
well - But For Whom Charlie and The Changeling . After
appearing in the failed movie
Fade In (1973) with
Burt Reynolds, she married Kazan
and went into semi-retirement. Barbara wrote, directed and starred,
however, in a bold independent film entitled
Wanda (1970) and became an unexpected art
house darling, distinguishing herself as one of the few woman directors
whose work was theatrically-released during the period. She won praise
in all three departments, nabbing the Venice Film Festival's
International Critics Prize. Supposedly discouraged by a doubting,
perhaps even resentful Kazan, Barbara never followed up on this
success. She expressed interest and was in the midst of putting
together another film, based on the novella The Awakening by
Kate Chopin, when she learned in 1978 she
had breast cancer. Barbara died two and a half years later, at age 48,
after the cancer spread to her liver - before the project ever came to
fruition. The Hollywood industry lost a burgeoning talent who just
might have opened doors for other women directors had she been given
the time.