Nancy Guild(1925-1999)
- Actress
- Soundtrack
Movie and television actress Nancy Guild was a contract player at 20th
Century-Fox, which reminded the public that her surname "rhymes with
wild" after she was signed to a seven-year contract in 1946. The studio
bosses must have changed their mind how they would position her as she
typically played demure, ladylike roles.
She made her debut as a night club chanteuse in
Joseph L. Mankiewicz's
Somewhere in the Night (1946),
which was marketed with newspaper ads bearing the "Nancy Guild Rhymes
with Wild" catch line. She followed that up with the Philip Marlowe
picture
The Brasher Doubloon (1947),
based on Raymond Chandler's novel "The
High Window."
On the rebound from an engagement with producer
Edward Lasker, Guild married fellow 20th
Century-Fox contract player
Chuck Russell in early 1947. The
following year, they appeared together in the
Dan Dailey musical
Give My Regards to Broadway (1948).
Leaving Fox, she co-starred with
Orson Welles in
Gregory Ratoff's
Black Magic (1949) before moving on
to Universal Studios, where she appeared in
Bud Abbott and Lou Costello Meet the Invisible Man (1951).
In 1953, she appeared opposite a talking
mule in
Francis Covers the Big Town (1953),
her last picture until Such Good Friends (1971).
Having divorced Russell in 1950, Guild married the successful Broadway
impresario Ernest H. Martin, the
three-time Tony Award-winning producer of
Guys and Dolls (1955),
The Sound of Music (1965), and
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (1966)
among others, in 1951. She appeared occasionally on television,
retiring after an appearance on
Robert Montgomery Presents (1950)
in 1955. She did return to the silver screen in 1971, in
Otto Preminger's
Such Good Friends (1971)
She divorced Martin in 1975, marrying photojournalist John Bryson in 1978. Her final marriage lasted 17
years. She divorced Bryson in 1995. In all, she was both married and divorced three times.
Nancy Guild died in East Hampton, New York on August 16, 1999, at the
age of 73. She was survived by her three daughters and three granddaughters.
Century-Fox, which reminded the public that her surname "rhymes with
wild" after she was signed to a seven-year contract in 1946. The studio
bosses must have changed their mind how they would position her as she
typically played demure, ladylike roles.
She made her debut as a night club chanteuse in
Joseph L. Mankiewicz's
Somewhere in the Night (1946),
which was marketed with newspaper ads bearing the "Nancy Guild Rhymes
with Wild" catch line. She followed that up with the Philip Marlowe
picture
The Brasher Doubloon (1947),
based on Raymond Chandler's novel "The
High Window."
On the rebound from an engagement with producer
Edward Lasker, Guild married fellow 20th
Century-Fox contract player
Chuck Russell in early 1947. The
following year, they appeared together in the
Dan Dailey musical
Give My Regards to Broadway (1948).
Leaving Fox, she co-starred with
Orson Welles in
Gregory Ratoff's
Black Magic (1949) before moving on
to Universal Studios, where she appeared in
Bud Abbott and Lou Costello Meet the Invisible Man (1951).
In 1953, she appeared opposite a talking
mule in
Francis Covers the Big Town (1953),
her last picture until Such Good Friends (1971).
Having divorced Russell in 1950, Guild married the successful Broadway
impresario Ernest H. Martin, the
three-time Tony Award-winning producer of
Guys and Dolls (1955),
The Sound of Music (1965), and
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (1966)
among others, in 1951. She appeared occasionally on television,
retiring after an appearance on
Robert Montgomery Presents (1950)
in 1955. She did return to the silver screen in 1971, in
Otto Preminger's
Such Good Friends (1971)
She divorced Martin in 1975, marrying photojournalist John Bryson in 1978. Her final marriage lasted 17
years. She divorced Bryson in 1995. In all, she was both married and divorced three times.
Nancy Guild died in East Hampton, New York on August 16, 1999, at the
age of 73. She was survived by her three daughters and three granddaughters.