| British actress Joan Collins, daughter of a London theatrical booking
agent, made her showbiz bow in a production of The Doll's House -- in a
male role. She was 9 years old then, and it would be the last time there
would be any doubt as to her gender. With the sort of glamorous
countenance that prompted people to ask "why aren't you in
movies?", Collins first appeared before the cameras in a small role
as a beauty contestant in Lady Godiva Rides Again (1953). She made an
auspicious American debut as an Egyptian temptress in Land of the Pharoahs
(1955). This assignment led to a contract with 20th Century-Fox, where
despite a few good dramatic parts (Girl on the Red Velvet Swing [1955] in
particular) and an adroit comic characterization in Rally Round the Flag,
Boys (1958), she was written off by critics as decorative but nothing
more. She was perilously close to "perennial starlet" status in
the 1960s, and by the 1970s was the uncrowned queen of "B"
pictures. Offscreen she cut quite a swath through the tabloid headlines;
if her autobiography, Past Imperfect is to be believed, she dallied with
virtually every male actor in Hollywood except Wile E. Coyote. Her
maturation from mere personality to superstar came about when she was cast
in 1981 as glamorous and predatory Alexis Carrington on Dynasty. Despite
professional and personal setbacks, Collins has managed to survive in an
industry that swallows up lesser starlets on an average of ten per hour.
Nor is Joan the only Collins with talent and charisma; her sister Jackie
Collins is a highly successful romance novelist, whose books The Bitch and
The Stud were turned into films, both starring sibling Joan. |