Connie Stevens

A pretty blonde girl-next-door who evolved from ingenue to sex symbol, Stevens, a resourceful actor and singer, began her career in her native Brooklyn where she formed her own vocal group, The Foremost, featuring three male backups who went on to become The Lettermen. Stevens was later part of the all-girl group The Three Debs before making her professional stage debut in a Hollywood Repertory Company production of "Finian's Rainbow".

Stevens made her feature movie acting debut as the teenage love interest in "Young and Dangerous" (1957) and co-starred in such late 1950s teen flicks as "The Party Crashers", "Dragstrip Riot" and "Rock-a-Bye Baby" (all 1958). With "Parrish" and "Susan Slade" (both 1961), Stevens moved into more mature territory. Both soapers co-starred hunk Troy Donahue as Stevens' love interest. In the former she must compete with two other ingenues for his affections, and in the latter she tries to win him despite having had an illegitimate child which her own mother (Dorothy McGuire) pretends is her own. Throughout the 1960s and 70s Stevens continued to make innocuous fare like "Palm Springs Weekend" (1963), "Two on a Guillotine" (1965), "Way... Way Out" (1966) and "Scorchy" (1976) that cashed in on her sexy image. As she aged out of pert blonde roles, Stevens continued to work appearing in "Grease 2" (1982) and joined old pals Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello for a trip down memory lane in "Back to the Beach" (1987). Her last screen role to date was an extended cameo as Tim Robbins' mom in the underrated comedy "Tapeheads" (1988).

On the small screen, Stevens was a regular on the long-running detective series "Hawaiian Eye" (ABC, 1959-63), playing sidekick Cricket, a ditzy singer-photographer who sometimes inadvertently got in the way of solving that week's crime. Stevens starred with George Burns in the series "Wendy and Me" (ABC, 1964-65), and through the years appeared on numerous variety specials, frequently with Bob Hope, and several TV-movies, notably the Marilyn Monroe-inspired "The Sex Symbol" (ABC, 1974).

Stevens was formerly married to actor James Stacy and singer Eddie Fisher. Her two daughters with Fisher, Joely and Tricia, are both singers and actors.

  • Also Credited As:
    Concetta Rosalie Ann Ingolia
  • Born:
    August 8, 1938 in Brooklyn, New York, USA
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Singer, Businesswoman
Family
  • Brother: Charles Ignolia. died March 2, 1996 of heart attack
  • Daughter: Joely Fisher. born October 29, 1967
  • Daughter: Tricia Leigh Fisher. born 1970
  • Half-brother: John Megna. died in 1995 from complications from AIDS
  • Half-sister: Ava Megna Bonamy.
  • Mother: Eleanor Megna. died on December 17, 1993 at age 79
  • Nephew: Peter Ingolia.
Education
  • Sacred Heart Academy, California
  • Hollywood Professional School, Los Angeles, California
Milestones
  • 1957 Feature acting debut, Young and Dangerous
  • 1957 Feature debut in unbilled bit, Eighteen and Anxious
  • 1959 TV series regular debut, playing Cricket on the ABC detective drama, Hawaiian Eye
  • 1967 Broadway debut, Star Spangled Girl
  • 1969 TV-movie debut, The Little Angel
  • 1971 Regular on a comedy variety series, The Des O Connor Show
  • 1980 Debut in a TV miniseries, Scruples
  • 1997 Made acclaimed documentary A Healing , about women who served in the military during the Vietnam War
  • 2000 Addressed the Republican National Convention
  • Founded Shane Productions
  • Joined cast of syndicated series Baywatch as the mother of Pamela Anderson Lee s character
  • Professional acting debut in Hollywood Repertory Theatre production, Finian s Rainbow
  • Returned to regular series work as co-star of the 2000-2001 midseason replacement sitcom These Women
  • Star of TV sitcom, Wendy and Me

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