
Mari Blanchard
Acting
🎂 1923-04-13
Petite, attractive Mari Blanchard rarely managed to get the lucky breaks. The daughter of an oil tycoon and a psychotherapist, she suffered from severe poliomyelitis from the age of nine, which denied her a hoped-for dancing career. For several years, she worked hard to rehabilitate her limbs from paralysis, swimming and later even performing on the trapeze at Cole Brothers Circus. At the urging of her parents, she then attended the University of Southern California, where she studied international law before dropping out nine units short of a degree. Her university studies did not lead to a career either. Sometime in the late 1940s, she joined the Conover Agency as an advertising model and, at the same time, was promoted by famed cartoonist and writer Al Capp, becoming the inspiration for one of his Li'l Abner characters. As the result of an advertisement on the back page of the Hollywood Reporter, Mari was signed to a contract with Paramount. However, her early experience in the movie business proved an unhappy one, most of her roles being walk-ons and bit parts. Ten Tall Men (1951), for example, limited her to a token stroll down a street, twirling a parasol and smiling seductively at members of the Foreign Legion. It wasn't until Mari joined Universal that her fortunes improved somewhat, with a co-starring role (opposite Victor Mature) in The Veils of Bagdad (1953). After that, it was all downhill again. Burt Lancaster, co-producer and star (with Gary Cooper of the excellent A-grade western Vera Cruz (1954), had requested Mari as his leading lady, but Universal refused her release to United Artists and forbade her to accept the lucrative role (Denise Darcel ended up getting the part). Mari then lost the lead in a much lesser picture,Saskatchewan (1954), to Shelley Winters. Instead, she was cast as Venusian Queen Allura in one of the least exciting outings by Universal's leading comic duo, Abbott and Costello Go to Mars (1953). Mari did end up with a respectable starring role in the western Destry (1954) opposite Audie Murphy. A remake of the classic Destry Rides Again (1939), she was cast in the Marlene Dietrich part and took great pains to affect a totally different look, darkening her hair so as not to be compared to the great star. Even the name of her character was changed from 'Frenchy' to 'Brandy'. "Destry" was not all smooth sailing. There was tension between her and director George Marshall (who had also directed the original version) and Mari suffered a facial injury as the result of a fight scene. The film was critically well received, but unfortunately Universal failed to renew its contract with Miss Blanchard, and her career then went into free fall. Freelancing for lesser studios, she played a TB victim injected with a serum turning her into a Mr. Hyde-like killer in the lurid She Devil (1957) (during filming she nearly died of acute appendicitis). Mari then appeared for Republic in the eminently forgettable No Place to Land (1958) before briefly starring in her own short-lived adventure series Klondike (1960). Her last role of note was as the cheerful and likeable town madam in the rollicking John Wayne western comedy McLintock! (1963). Sometime that year, Mari Blanchard developed the cancer which was to claim her life in 1970 at the age of just 47.
Cast credits(48)

Irene Chase
1957

1954

Marie Coulter
1962

Laura Carter
1959

Mrs. Vasquez
1963

1959

1958

1958

1958

Policewoman Laura Hunter
1955

Adah Isaacs Menken
1957

1959

1958

1959

Iris Lee LaVonne
1958

1960

Camille Reedbottom
1963

1963

Mary 'The Babe' Thompson
1956

Brandy
1954

Marie DeLatour
1951

Barbara Duval
1956

Sylvia Ward
1963
1959

Hat Check Girl (uncredited)
1952

Dona Dolores Castro
1952

Wanda Marlowe (scenes deleted)
1952

Selima
1953

Eloise
1951

Allura
1953

Texas Rose
1955

Dulcie Corbin
1962

Chistina
1955

Kyra Zelas
1957

Sally Tever
1951

Gladys Winthrop
1956

Aldis Spain
1954

Lou Carter
1954

1952

Eugenie (uncredited)
1951

Kathy O'Hara
1960

Ann McRae
1957

Joanie Daniel
1955

Nina - Johnny Redondo's Accomplice
1952

Stella
1951

Natalie
1951

Jean Montoya
1958

Nevin
1958