The Julie Newmar Tribute Website
American actress
Julie
Newmar's father was a college instructor and her mother was a former
Ziegfeld dancer. This odd mix may explain why Julie complemented her dancing and
acting career with offscreen intellectual pursuits. A lifelong student of
ballet, Newmar was accepted as a dancer by the Los Angeles Opera Comany at age
15, and before her UCLA enrollment was under way she'd left college to try her
luck in films. A stint as a gold-painted exotic dancer in Serpent of the Nile
(1954) was usually conveniently ignored by Newmar's biographers, who preferred
to list
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954) as her screen debut. From here it
was on to Broadway for a featured dance in the musical Can-Can, then to
the sizable but nonspeaking role of Stupefyin' Jones in Li'l Abner. It
was for Newmar's performance as a Swedish sexpot in the genteel farce The
Marriage-Go-Round that the actress attained true stardom - and also won a
Tony Award. Recreating her stage roles for the film versions of
Li'l Abner
(1959) and Marriage-Go-Round (1961), Newmar spent the next few years
dividing her time between stage work and TV guest spots (she played the Devil in
the 1963 "Twilight Zone" episode "Of Late I Think of Cliffordville"). In 1964,
Newmar was cast as a beautiful robot on the TV sitcom "My Living Doll," a series
that languished opposite "Bonanza" and barely got through the season. According
to Newmar, she accepted her best-remembered TV role, that of Catwoman on the
weekly series Batman on the advice of her brother, a Harvard fellow in
Physics who, along with his classmates, was a rabid Batman fan. Newmar
played Catwoman for two seasons, but contractual committments kept her from
appearing in the 1966 feature film version of Batman, wherein her role
was taken over by
Lee
Meriwether. For diverse reasons, Newmar wasn't back as Catwoman for the
final "Batman" season, so
Eartha Kitt
essayed the role. Newmar's film career peaked with
MacKenna's
Gold (1968) and The Maltese Bippy (1969), after which she was
consigned to such deathless projects as
Hysterical
(1983),
Nudity Required (1990) and
Ghosts
Can't Do It (1991). In the mid 1980s, Julie Newmar began making the
personal-appearance rounds thanks to the publicity attending the 20th
anniversary of the "Batman" series, and in 1992 Julie was again an interview
subject as a byproduct of
Michelle
Pfeiffer's unforgettable Catwoman stint in the 1992 feature film
Batman
Returns.
FILMOGRAPHY:
One
Last Score (1999)
Backlash: Oblivion 2 (1995)
To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar
(1995)
Oblivion (1994)
Ghosts Can't Do It (1990)
Nudity
Required (1990)
Streetwalkin' (1985)
Evils
of the Night (1984)
Love
Scenes (1984)
Hysterical (1983)
Terraces (1977)
Fools, Females and Fun (1973)
The Feminist and The Fuzz (1971)
Mackenna's Gold (1969)
The Maltese Bippy (1969)
Batman (1966)
Star Trek - Ep. 32 (1967)
The Monkees - (1966)
My Living Doll (1964)
For Love or Money (1963)
The Marriage-Go-Round (1960)
Li'l Abner (1959)
The Rookie (1959)
UPDATED 03/18/2005 11:07:42 AM