Carmelita Pope

Carmelita Pope (born April 15, 1924, in Chicago, Illinois) is an American stage, film, and television actor.

Pope became friends with another aspiring actor, Jocelyn Brando, and also became friends with her brother, Marlon Brando. The two developed a close bond. Brando frequently stayed at Pope's home, where they played bocce ball together.[1]

Pope and Brando outside her home in Chicago

Pope's break as an actor came when she was cast by George Abbott as the lead, Corliss Archer, first as a replacement in the Chicago cast [2] and subsequently in the U.S.O. production of his play Kiss and Tell that was to tour Italy and Northern Africa in 1945.

Upon her return stateside, Pope replaced Cecily De Lucas in the role of Daisy Belle in the comedy Maid in the Ozarks at the Belasco Theatre on Broadway[3]

It was Pope's performance as anointed saint Mother Cabrini in the 1947 film Citizen Saint (under her stage name, Carla Dare) that drew the attention of director Elia Kazan.[4] He subsequently cast her as Kim Hunter's understudy in the Broadway production of A Streetcar Named Desire.[5] She was reunited with childhood friend Marlon Brando, who was playing Stanley.

After the announcement that a large portion of the original cast (including Kim Hunter) would be leaving A Streetcar Named Desire in 1949, the producers put out a casting call for actors to replace them. Hunter, who had never missed a performance, told Pope that she would fake an illness and miss a day so that Pope could perform for the producers.[6] Surprising even Pope herself, Hunter did call out sick one day, and Pope went on. She signed her contract to play Stella the next day. Pope remained with the production until it closed.

Press Release - New York World

Pope married Chicago ad man Howard Charles Ballenger II in April 1949, and the pair moved to Chicago, where they raised two sons.[2] She starred as a panelist on the television show Down You Go in the 1950s, did numerous radio spots, and was also the spokeswoman for Pam Cooking Spray. Following the death of her husband in 1986, Pope moved to Los Angeles, where she served as the director of the Hollywood office of the American Humane Association.[7] She remarried in 1988 and retired to Stuart, Florida.

Pope now lives in Boise, Idaho, where she volunteers at the Warhawk Air Museum.

References

  1. Daniels, Mary. "Carmelita Pope: 'Bud' Brando's 'Sweetheart.'" Chicago Tribune 12 September 1976.
  2. 1 2 Beck, Joan. "TV Star Likes her Role as Housewife Best." Chicago Tribune, 17 October 1951.
  3. "Carmelita Pope." Internet Broadway Database. http://ibdb.com/person.php?id=454563
  4. A.W. (1947). "Citizen Saint." The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9405E2DC1230E23ABC4051DFB3668383659EDE
  5. "Broadway Follow-Up: A Streetcar Named Desire." Billboard, New York, 16 June 1949.
  6. Pendreigh, Brian (2002). "We Remember." Simian Scrolls.
  7. Wolfson, Lisa. "Imposing Shadow of Humane Society Keeps Film Set Abuse Down." Associated Press, 1 July 1987

External links

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