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Carroll Baker

Carroll Baker

33 titles Acting May 28, 1931 Johnstown, Pennsylvania, USA

Carroll Baker, born on May 28, 1931, is a retired American actress known for her versatility in both serious dramatic roles and as a prominent sex symbol during the 1960s. Baker's acting journey began after she trained under Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio, leading her to make her Broadway debut in 1954. Her breakthrough came when acclaimed director Elia Kazan selected her to star in the film adaptation of Tennessee Williams' plays, Baby Doll, which was released in 1956.

In the mid-1960s, while signed to a contract with Paramount Pictures, Baker gained widespread recognition as a sex symbol with her portrayal of a seductive widow in The Carpetbaggers (1964). Following this success, producer Joseph E. Levine cast her in Sylvia and later as the iconic Jean Harlow in the biographical film Harlow (1965). Although Harlow was heavily promoted, it ultimately received poor reviews, prompting Baker to move to Italy in 1966 amidst a contractual dispute with Paramount and Levine’s management of her career.

During the subsequent decade in Europe, she starred in a variety of intense giallo and horror films, including Romolo Guerrieri's The Sweet Body of Deborah (1968) and a series with Umberto Lenzi that began with Orgasmo (1969) and concluded with Knife of Ice (1972). In the 1980s, she took on supporting roles in notable dramas like Star 80 (1983) and Native Son (1986). Baker continued to appear in guest roles on television throughout the 1990s in series such as Murder, She Wrote and L.A. Law, before officially retiring from acting in 2003.

Filmography