Susan Cabot(1927-1986)
- Actress
- Soundtrack
Susan Cabot was born in Boston and raised in a series of eight foster
homes. She attended high school in Manhattan, where she took an
interest in dramatics and joined the school dramatic club. Later, while
trying to decide between a career in music or art, she illustrated
children's books during the day and sang at Manhattan's Village Barn at
night. It was at this same time that she made her film debut as an
extra in Fox's New York-made
Kiss of Death (1947) and worked in
New York-based television. Maxwell Arnow,
a casting director for Columbia Pictures, spotted Cabot at the Village
Barn, and a co-starring role in that studio's B-grade South Seas drama
On the Isle of Samoa (1950)
resulted. While in Hollywood Cabot was also signed for the role of an
Indian maiden in Universal's
Tomahawk (1951) with
Van Heflin. Subsequently signed to an
exclusive contract by Universal, Cabot co-starred in a long string of
films opposite leading men like
John Lund,
Tony Curtis and
Audie Murphy. Inevitably, she
became fed up with the succession of western and Arabian Nights roles,
asked for a release from her Universal pact and accepted an offer from
Harold Robbins to star in his play "A
Stone for Danny Fisher" in New York.
Roger Corman lured her back to Hollywood to
play the lead in the melodramatic rock-'n-'roller
Carnival Rock (1957) and she stayed
on to star in five more films for the enterprising young
producer-director. After a highly publicized 1959 fling with Jordan's
King Hussein, Cabot divided her time
between TV work and roles in stage plays and musicals.