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Yvette Mimieux

Yvette Carmen Mimieux[1] (January 8, 1942 – January 18, 2022)[a] was an American film and television actress who was a major star of the 1960s and 1970s. Her breakout role was in The Time Machine (1960). She was nominated for three Golden Globe Awards during her acting career.[2]

Yvette Mimieux
Publicity still (1961)
Born
Yvette Carmen Mimieux

(1942-01-08)January 8, 1942
DiedJanuary 18, 2022(2022-01-18) (aged 80)[a]
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Occupations
  • Actress
  • writer
Years active1956–1992
Known for
Spouses
  • Evan Harland Engber
    (m. 1959; div. 1961)
  • (m. 1972; div. 1985)
  • Howard Ruby
    (m. 1986)

Early life edit

Mimieux was born in Los Angeles on January 8, 1942, to René Mimieux, who was half French and half German, and Maria Montemayor, who was Mexican.[3][4] Mimieux had at least two siblings, a sister, Gloria, and a brother, Edouardo.[4]

Her career was launched after talent manager Jim Byron happened to meet her and suggested she become an actress.[5] Her first acting appearances were in episodes of the television shows Yancy Derringer and One Step Beyond, both in 1959, at the age of 17.

Career edit

MGM edit

Mimieux appeared in George Pal's film version of H. G. Wells's 1895 novel The Time Machine (1960) starring Rod Taylor, in which she played the character Weena. It was made for MGM, which put her under long-term contract. However, her first film was Platinum High School (1960), a low budget teen crime drama produced by Albert Zugsmith for MGM and released two months before The Time Machine.[6] Her performance in Platinum High School earned her a 1960 Golden Globe Awards nomination for "New Star Of The Year - Actress".[2]

Mimieux guest-starred in an episode of Mr Lucky, then was one of several leads in the highly popular teen comedy-drama Where the Boys Are (1960). MGM put Mimieux in the ingenue role in Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1961), an expensive flop.[7] Arthur Freed wanted to team her and George Hamilton in a remake of The Clock, but it was not made.[8]

Mimieux had a central role in the romantic drama Light in the Piazza (1962), playing a mentally disabled girl. This film did pair her romantically with George Hamilton. The film lost money but was well regarded critically. She later said:

"I suppose I have a soulful quality. I was often cast as a wounded person, the 'sensitive' role."[9]

In 1962, Mimieux was slated for a role in A Summer Affair at MGM, but it was not made.[10]

Mimieux had a small part in Pal's The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm (1963), another commercial disappointment. Later that year, she appeared in Diamond Head (1963) with Charlton Heston. Mimieux went to United Artists for Toys in the Attic, based on the play by Lillian Hellman and co-starring Geraldine Page and Dean Martin. At MGM, Mimieux guest-starred on two episodes of Dr. Kildare alongside Richard Chamberlain in 1964. She played a surfer suffering from epilepsy, a performance that was much acclaimed[11] and led to a 1965 Golden Globe nomination for "Best Actress In A Television Series".[2]

Mimieux made a cameo as herself in Looking for Love (1964) starring Connie Francis, her costar from Where the Boys Are. She also played Richard Chamberlain's wife in Joy in the Morning (1965), a romantic melodrama.[citation needed]

Post-MGM edit

Mimieux was in a Western with Max von Sydow for 20th Century Fox, The Reward (1965); the Disney comedy Monkeys, Go Home! (1967); and a heist film The Caper of the Golden Bulls (1967).[12]

Mimieux did The Desperate Hours (1967) for TV and was reunited with Rod Taylor in the MGM war movie Dark of the Sun (1968). In 1968, she narrated a classical music concert at the Hollywood Bowl.[13]

In 1969, Mimieux was top-billed in the sex comedy Three in the Attic a hit for AIP,[14] and appeared in the critically acclaimed 1969 movie The Picasso Summer alongside Albert Finney. The following year, she was the female lead in The Delta Factor (1970), an action film co-starring Christopher George.[citation needed]

Television edit

 
Mimieux in c. 1975

Mimieux had one of the leads in The Most Deadly Game (1970–1971), a short-lived TV series from Aaron Spelling. She replaced Inger Stevens, who had been slated to star, but died one month before production began.[15] For this role, Mimieux was nominated for the 1971 Golden Globe Award for Best Television Actress – Drama Series.[2]

Around 1971, Mimieux had a business selling Haitian products and studied archeology; she would travel several months of each year.[16] After making the TV movies Death Takes a Holiday (1971) and Black Noon (1971), she sued her agent for not providing her with movie work despite having taken her money.[17]

Mimieux was an air hostess in MGM's hostage thriller Skyjacked (1972), starring Charlton Heston[18] and was in the Fox science-fiction film The Neptune Factor (1973).[19]

By the early 1970s, Mimieux was unhappy with the roles offered to actresses:

"The women they [male screenwriters] write are all one dimensional. They have no complexity in their lives. It's all surface. There's nothing to play. They're either sex objects or vanilla pudding."[20]

Mimieux had been writing for several years prior to this film, mostly journalism and short stories. She had the idea for a story about a Pirandello-like theme:

"...the study of a woman, the difference between what she appears to be and what she is: appearance vs reality...[the more I thought about the character] the more I wanted to play her. Here was the kind of nifty, multifaceted part I'd been looking for. So instead of a short story, I wrote it as a film."[20]

Mimieux wrote a thriller, which she took to producers Aaron Spelling and Leonard Goldberg, who then produced it for ABC as a television film. It aired as Hit Lady (1974), in which Mimieux played the title character.[20]

In 1975, Mimieux starred in The Legend of Valentino (as Rudolph Valentino's second wife, Natacha Rambova), and in the Canadian thriller Journey into Fear, a remake of a 1943 Orson Welles movie. In 1976, Mimieux made a pilot for a TV sitcom based on Bell, Book and Candle, but it was not picked up.[citation needed]

Later movies edit

Mimieux played a falsely imprisoned woman pursued by corrupt law enforcement in the crime drama Jackson County Jail (1976) with Tommy Lee Jones and Robert Carradine for New World Pictures, which was a box-office hit.

Mimieux appeared in such horror-oriented TV movies as Snowbeast (1977), Devil Dog: The Hound of Hell (1978), and Disaster on the Coastliner (1979). She also appeared in the TV movies Ransom for Alice! (1977) and Outside Chance (1978).

Later, she co-starred in the first PG-rated Walt Disney Productions feature, the science fiction film The Black Hole (1979). She had the lead in Circle of Power (1981).[21]

Mimieux appeared in the TV movie Forbidden Love (1982) and Night Partners (1983) and guest-starred on The Love Boat and Lime Street. She made Obsessive Love (1984), a television film about a female stalker which she co-wrote and co-produced:

"There are few enough films going these days, and there are three or four women who are offered all the good parts. Of course I could play a lot of awful parts that are too depressing to contemplate.... [Television] is not the love affair I have with film, but television can be a playground for interesting ideas. I love wild, baroque, slightly excessive theatrical ideas, and because television needs so much material, there's a chance to get some of those odd ideas done."[22][23]

Mimieux had the lead in Berrenger's (1985), a short-lived TV series and had a supporting role in the TV movie The Fifth Missile (1986). She guest-starred in a TV movie Perry Mason: The Case of the Desperate Deception (1990). Her last film was a supporting role in Lady Boss (1992).[1]

Personal life and death edit

At age 17, Mimieux wed Evan Harland Engber on December 19, 1959, but kept the marriage secret for almost two years.[24] She was married for a second time to film director Stanley Donen from 1972 until their divorce in 1985.[1] Her last marriage was to Howard F. Ruby, chairman emeritus and co-founder of Oakwood Worldwide, the owner of the Oakwood Apartments complexes.[25][26]

Mimieux died at her home in Los Angeles on January 18, 2022.[a]

Filmography edit

Television work edit

Recordings edit

  • The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm 1962 (MGM Records), as The Dancing Princess
  • Baudelaire's Flowers of Evil (Les Fleurs Du Mal) 1968 (Connoisseur Society), reading excerpts of Cyril Scott's 1909 translation with music by Ali Akbar Khan

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Confliction over Mimieux's date of death appeared in the reporting. News of her death was first reported by Deadline Hollywood, phrasing it as "she was found dead on Tuesday morning" (January 18).[27] Her representative Michelle Bega, spoke directly to The New York Times, People Magazine and The Washington Post and gave the date of death as Monday night (January 17) with each source wording this differently.[28][29][30] Tuesday was cited as the date of death by Variety without a statement from Bega.[31] Ultimately, her obituary notice issued via the Neptune Society put her date of death as the 18th.[32]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c "Yvette Mimeiux". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved January 11, 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d "Yvette Mimieux". goldenglobes.com. Retrieved January 22, 2022.
  3. ^ Gates, Anita (January 18, 2022). "Yvette Mimieux, Who Found Fame With 'The Time Machine', Dies at 80". The New York Times. Retrieved October 9, 2022.
  4. ^ a b Vose, Robert (1959). "Yvette Mimieux". Look Magazine Photograph Collection (Library of Congress).
  5. ^ "Under Hedda's Hat: The Mystery of Yvette Mimieux", Chicago Tribune, June 9, 1963. pg. H36.
  6. ^ Joe Hyams, "Yvette steals the show: A year ago she was on our cover. Now look at the girl--she's had two movies, five proposals and starred at the Debs' Ball! Actors are out!", Los Angeles Times, December 6, 1959, pg. J21
  7. ^ "Yvette Mimieux Signed: Gets Role in 'Four Horsemen of Apocalypse'", New York Times, August 12, 1960, pg. 11.
  8. ^ Hedda Hopper, "Mimieux, Hamilton Teamed: Film Is Remake of 'The Clock'"], Los Angeles Times, June 7, 1961, pg. B10.
  9. ^ Megan Rosenfeld, "The Mystique of Actress Yvette Mimieux", The Washington Post, November 29, 1979, pg. D13.
  10. ^ Hedda Hopper, "Yvette Mimieux to Do 'Summer Affair'", Los Angeles Times, February 23, 1962, pg. C16.
  11. ^ "Yvette Mimieux in Television Debut", Los Angeles Times, September 5, 1963, pg. C12.
  12. ^ Hedda Hopper, "Yvette Mimieux's Got a Secret", Los Angeles Times, April 11, 1965, pg. M4.
  13. ^ "Foster Conducts Program at Bowl", by Arlen, Walter. Los Angeles Times, August 15, 1968, pg. E-24.
  14. ^ Ebert, Roger (December 20, 1968). "THREE IN THE ATTIC". RogerEbert.com. Chicago Sun-Times.
  15. ^ "Yvette Mimieux in Cast of Deadly Game", Los Angeles Times, May 19, 1970, pg. F-18.
  16. ^ Judy Klemesrud, "Actress Mixes Altruism and Business", New York Times, September 23, 1970, pg. 54.
  17. ^ "Film Agency Sued by Yvette Mimieux". Los Angeles Times. August 21, 1971. p. 20.
  18. ^ Soares, Emily. "Skyjacked (1972)". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved August 16, 2018.
  19. ^ Servi, Vera (May 28, 1972). "Movies: Yvette Mimieux's Front Page Performance". Chicago Tribune. p. K14.
  20. ^ a b c "Yvette Mimieux's Right for This Role". Los Angeles Times. October 7, 1974. p. E17.
  21. ^ "Circle of Power (1981) Directed by Bobby Roth". LETTERBOXD. Retrieved September 14, 2018.
  22. ^ JOHN O'CONNOR. "Obsessive Love, Movie With Yvette Mimieux", New York Times, October 2, 1984, pg. C18.
  23. ^ Farber, Stephen. "MIMIEUX PRODUCES A MOVIE FOR TV", New York Times, October 1, 1984.
  24. ^ "Yvette Mimieux Married". The New York Times. Associated Press. October 27, 1961. p. 27. ... has been secretly married since 1959 ... Records show that she was married to Evan Harland Engber here [in Los Angeles] on Dec. 19. ... Mr. Engber, who was recently discharged from the Army ...
  25. ^ Eng, Dinah (September 4, 2014). "Howard Ruby: The father of corporate housing". Fortune. from the original on June 2, 2019. Retrieved January 11, 2020.
  26. ^ "About Oakwood > Executive Committee > Howard Ruby: Chairman, Founder and COO". Oakwood Worldwide. Archived from the original on January 10, 2020.
  27. ^ "Yvette Mimieux Dies; Actress/Writer Who Starred In 'The Time Machine' Had Just Turned 80". Deadline Hollywood. January 18, 2022. Retrieved January 18, 2022.
  28. ^ Gates, Anita (January 18, 2022). "Yvette Mimieux, Who Found Fame With 'The Time Machine,' Dies at 80". The New York Times. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
  29. ^ "The Time Machine Actress Yvette Mimieux Dead at 80". People. January 19, 2022. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
  30. ^ Yvette Mimieux, who rose to fame in ‘The Time Machine’ and “Where the Boys Are,’ dies
  31. ^ Dagan, Carmel (January 18, 2022). "Yvette Mimieux, Star of 'The Time Machine,' 'The Black Hole,' Dies at 80". Variety. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
  32. ^ "Yvette Mimieux Ruby". Neptune Society. Retrieved February 19, 2022.

External links edit

yvette, mimieux, yvette, carmen, mimieux, january, 1942, january, 2022, american, film, television, actress, major, star, 1960s, 1970s, breakout, role, time, machine, 1960, nominated, three, golden, globe, awards, during, acting, career, publicity, still, 1961. Yvette Carmen Mimieux 1 January 8 1942 January 18 2022 a was an American film and television actress who was a major star of the 1960s and 1970s Her breakout role was in The Time Machine 1960 She was nominated for three Golden Globe Awards during her acting career 2 Yvette MimieuxPublicity still 1961 BornYvette Carmen Mimieux 1942 01 08 January 8 1942Los Angeles California U S DiedJanuary 18 2022 2022 01 18 aged 80 a Los Angeles California U S OccupationsActresswriterYears active1956 1992Known forThe Time MachinePlatinum High SchoolThe Most Deadly GameWhere the Boys AreSpousesEvan Harland Engber m 1959 div 1961 wbr Stanley Donen m 1972 div 1985 wbr Howard Ruby m 1986 wbr Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 MGM 2 2 Post MGM 2 3 Television 2 4 Later movies 3 Personal life and death 4 Filmography 5 Television work 6 Recordings 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Citations 8 External linksEarly life editMimieux was born in Los Angeles on January 8 1942 to Rene Mimieux who was half French and half German and Maria Montemayor who was Mexican 3 4 Mimieux had at least two siblings a sister Gloria and a brother Edouardo 4 Her career was launched after talent manager Jim Byron happened to meet her and suggested she become an actress 5 Her first acting appearances were in episodes of the television shows Yancy Derringer and One Step Beyond both in 1959 at the age of 17 Career editMGM edit Mimieux appeared in George Pal s film version of H G Wells s 1895 novel The Time Machine 1960 starring Rod Taylor in which she played the character Weena It was made for MGM which put her under long term contract However her first film was Platinum High School 1960 a low budget teen crime drama produced by Albert Zugsmith for MGM and released two months before The Time Machine 6 Her performance in Platinum High School earned her a 1960 Golden Globe Awards nomination for New Star Of The Year Actress 2 Mimieux guest starred in an episode of Mr Lucky then was one of several leads in the highly popular teen comedy drama Where the Boys Are 1960 MGM put Mimieux in the ingenue role in Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse 1961 an expensive flop 7 Arthur Freed wanted to team her and George Hamilton in a remake of The Clock but it was not made 8 Mimieux had a central role in the romantic drama Light in the Piazza 1962 playing a mentally disabled girl This film did pair her romantically with George Hamilton The film lost money but was well regarded critically She later said I suppose I have a soulful quality I was often cast as a wounded person the sensitive role 9 In 1962 Mimieux was slated for a role in A Summer Affair at MGM but it was not made 10 Mimieux had a small part in Pal s The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm 1963 another commercial disappointment Later that year she appeared in Diamond Head 1963 with Charlton Heston Mimieux went to United Artists for Toys in the Attic based on the play by Lillian Hellman and co starring Geraldine Page and Dean Martin At MGM Mimieux guest starred on two episodes of Dr Kildare alongside Richard Chamberlain in 1964 She played a surfer suffering from epilepsy a performance that was much acclaimed 11 and led to a 1965 Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress In A Television Series 2 Mimieux made a cameo as herself in Looking for Love 1964 starring Connie Francis her costar from Where the Boys Are She also played Richard Chamberlain s wife in Joy in the Morning 1965 a romantic melodrama citation needed Post MGM edit Mimieux was in a Western with Max von Sydow for 20th Century Fox The Reward 1965 the Disney comedy Monkeys Go Home 1967 and a heist film The Caper of the Golden Bulls 1967 12 Mimieux did The Desperate Hours 1967 for TV and was reunited with Rod Taylor in the MGM war movie Dark of the Sun 1968 In 1968 she narrated a classical music concert at the Hollywood Bowl 13 In 1969 Mimieux was top billed in the sex comedy Three in the Attic a hit for AIP 14 and appeared in the critically acclaimed 1969 movie The Picasso Summer alongside Albert Finney The following year she was the female lead in The Delta Factor 1970 an action film co starring Christopher George citation needed Television edit nbsp Mimieux in c 1975 Mimieux had one of the leads in The Most Deadly Game 1970 1971 a short lived TV series from Aaron Spelling She replaced Inger Stevens who had been slated to star but died one month before production began 15 For this role Mimieux was nominated for the 1971 Golden Globe Award for Best Television Actress Drama Series 2 Around 1971 Mimieux had a business selling Haitian products and studied archeology she would travel several months of each year 16 After making the TV movies Death Takes a Holiday 1971 and Black Noon 1971 she sued her agent for not providing her with movie work despite having taken her money 17 Mimieux was an air hostess in MGM s hostage thriller Skyjacked 1972 starring Charlton Heston 18 and was in the Fox science fiction film The Neptune Factor 1973 19 By the early 1970s Mimieux was unhappy with the roles offered to actresses The women they male screenwriters write are all one dimensional They have no complexity in their lives It s all surface There s nothing to play They re either sex objects or vanilla pudding 20 Mimieux had been writing for several years prior to this film mostly journalism and short stories She had the idea for a story about a Pirandello like theme the study of a woman the difference between what she appears to be and what she is appearance vs reality the more I thought about the character the more I wanted to play her Here was the kind of nifty multifaceted part I d been looking for So instead of a short story I wrote it as a film 20 Mimieux wrote a thriller which she took to producers Aaron Spelling and Leonard Goldberg who then produced it for ABC as a television film It aired as Hit Lady 1974 in which Mimieux played the title character 20 In 1975 Mimieux starred in The Legend of Valentino as Rudolph Valentino s second wife Natacha Rambova and in the Canadian thriller Journey into Fear a remake of a 1943 Orson Welles movie In 1976 Mimieux made a pilot for a TV sitcom based on Bell Book and Candle but it was not picked up citation needed Later movies edit Mimieux played a falsely imprisoned woman pursued by corrupt law enforcement in the crime drama Jackson County Jail 1976 with Tommy Lee Jones and Robert Carradine for New World Pictures which was a box office hit Mimieux appeared in such horror oriented TV movies as Snowbeast 1977 Devil Dog The Hound of Hell 1978 and Disaster on the Coastliner 1979 She also appeared in the TV movies Ransom for Alice 1977 and Outside Chance 1978 Later she co starred in the first PG rated Walt Disney Productions feature the science fiction film The Black Hole 1979 She had the lead in Circle of Power 1981 21 Mimieux appeared in the TV movie Forbidden Love 1982 and Night Partners 1983 and guest starred on The Love Boat and Lime Street She made Obsessive Love 1984 a television film about a female stalker which she co wrote and co produced There are few enough films going these days and there are three or four women who are offered all the good parts Of course I could play a lot of awful parts that are too depressing to contemplate Television is not the love affair I have with film but television can be a playground for interesting ideas I love wild baroque slightly excessive theatrical ideas and because television needs so much material there s a chance to get some of those odd ideas done 22 23 Mimieux had the lead in Berrenger s 1985 a short lived TV series and had a supporting role in the TV movie The Fifth Missile 1986 She guest starred in a TV movie Perry Mason The Case of the Desperate Deception 1990 Her last film was a supporting role in Lady Boss 1992 1 Personal life and death editAt age 17 Mimieux wed Evan Harland Engber on December 19 1959 but kept the marriage secret for almost two years 24 She was married for a second time to film director Stanley Donen from 1972 until their divorce in 1985 1 Her last marriage was to Howard F Ruby chairman emeritus and co founder of Oakwood Worldwide the owner of the Oakwood Apartments complexes 25 26 Mimieux died at her home in Los Angeles on January 18 2022 a Filmography editA Certain Smile 1958 uncredited Platinum High School 1960 Lorinda Nibley The Time Machine 1960 Weena Where the Boys Are 1960 Melanie Tolman The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse 1962 Chi Chi Desnoyers Light in the Piazza 1962 Clara Johnson The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm 1962 The Princess The Dancing Princess Diamond Head 1962 Sloane Howland Toys in the Attic 1963 Lily Berniers Looking for Love 1964 Yvette Mimieux Joy in the Morning 1965 Annie Brown nee McGairy The Reward 1965 Sylvia Monkeys Go Home 1967 Maria Riserau The Caper of the Golden Bulls 1967 Grace Harvey Dark of the Sun 1968 Claire Three in the Attic 1968 Tobey Clinton The Picasso Summer 1969 Alice Smith The Delta Factor 1970 Kim Stacy Skyjacked 1972 Angela Thacher The Neptune Factor 1973 Dr Leah Jansen Journey Into Fear 1975 Josette Jackson County Jail 1976 Dinah Hunter The Black Hole 1979 Dr Kate McCrae Circle of Power 1981 Bianca Ray The Fascination 1985 The Fantasy Film Worlds of George Pal 1985 documentary Weena in The Time Machine archive footage Television work editYancy Derringer 1959 Episode Collector s Item Ricky Alcoa Presents One Step Beyond 1960 Episode The Clown Nonnie Regan Mr Lucky 1960 Episode Stacked Deck Margot Dr Kildare 1964 2 episodes Pat Holmes The Desperate Hours 1967 TV movie Cindy Hilliard The Most Deadly Game 1970 1971 Vanessa Smith Death Takes a Holiday 1971 TV movie Peggy Chapman Black Noon 1971 TV movie Deliverance Hit Lady 1974 TV movie Angela de Vries The Legend of Valentino 1975 TV movie Natacha Rambova Bell Book and Candle 1976 TV movie Gillian Holroyd Snowbeast 1977 TV movie Ellen Seberg Ransom for Alice 1977 TV movie Jenny Cullen Devil Dog The Hound of Hell 1978 TV movie Betty Barry Outside Chance 1978 TV movie Dinah Hunter Disaster on the Coastliner 1979 TV movie Paula Harvey Forbidden Love 1982 TV movie Joanna Bittan Night Partners 1983 TV movie Elizabeth McGuire The Love Boat 1984 Episode Hong Kong Affair Leni Martek Obsessive Love 1984 TV movie Linda Foster Berrenger s 1985 canceled after 12 episodes Shane Bradley The Fifth Missile 1986 TV movie Cheryl Leary Perry Mason The Case of the Desperate Deception 1990 TV movie Danielle Altmann Lady Boss 1992 TV Series Deena Swanson final appearance Recordings editThe Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm 1962 MGM Records as The Dancing Princess Baudelaire s Flowers of Evil Les Fleurs Du Mal 1968 Connoisseur Society reading excerpts of Cyril Scott s 1909 translation with music by Ali Akbar KhanReferences editNotes edit a b c Confliction over Mimieux s date of death appeared in the reporting News of her death was first reported by Deadline Hollywood phrasing it as she was found dead on Tuesday morning January 18 27 Her representative Michelle Bega spoke directly to The New York Times People Magazine and The Washington Post and gave the date of death as Monday night January 17 with each source wording this differently 28 29 30 Tuesday was cited as the date of death by Variety without a statement from Bega 31 Ultimately her obituary notice issued via the Neptune Society put her date of death as the 18th 32 Citations edit a b c Yvette Mimeiux Turner Classic Movies Retrieved January 11 2020 a b c d Yvette Mimieux goldenglobes com Retrieved January 22 2022 Gates Anita January 18 2022 Yvette Mimieux Who Found Fame With The Time Machine Dies at 80 The New York Times Retrieved October 9 2022 a b Vose Robert 1959 Yvette Mimieux Look Magazine Photograph Collection Library of Congress Under Hedda s Hat The Mystery of Yvette Mimieux Chicago Tribune June 9 1963 pg H36 Joe Hyams Yvette steals the show A year ago she was on our cover Now look at the girl she s had two movies five proposals and starred at the Debs Ball Actors are out Los Angeles Times December 6 1959 pg J21 Yvette Mimieux Signed Gets Role in Four Horsemen of Apocalypse New York Times August 12 1960 pg 11 Hedda Hopper Mimieux Hamilton Teamed Film Is Remake of The Clock Los Angeles Times June 7 1961 pg B10 Megan Rosenfeld The Mystique of Actress Yvette Mimieux The Washington Post November 29 1979 pg D13 Hedda Hopper Yvette Mimieux to Do Summer Affair Los Angeles Times February 23 1962 pg C16 Yvette Mimieux in Television Debut Los Angeles Times September 5 1963 pg C12 Hedda Hopper Yvette Mimieux s Got a Secret Los Angeles Times April 11 1965 pg M4 Foster Conducts Program at Bowl by Arlen Walter Los Angeles Times August 15 1968 pg E 24 Ebert Roger December 20 1968 THREE IN THE ATTIC RogerEbert com Chicago Sun Times Yvette Mimieux in Cast of Deadly Game Los Angeles Times May 19 1970 pg F 18 Judy Klemesrud Actress Mixes Altruism and Business New York Times September 23 1970 pg 54 Film Agency Sued by Yvette Mimieux Los Angeles Times August 21 1971 p 20 Soares Emily Skyjacked 1972 Turner Classic Movies Retrieved August 16 2018 Servi Vera May 28 1972 Movies Yvette Mimieux s Front Page Performance Chicago Tribune p K14 a b c Yvette Mimieux s Right for This Role Los Angeles Times October 7 1974 p E17 Circle of Power 1981 Directed by Bobby Roth LETTERBOXD Retrieved September 14 2018 JOHN O CONNOR Obsessive Love Movie With Yvette Mimieux New York Times October 2 1984 pg C18 Farber Stephen MIMIEUX PRODUCES A MOVIE FOR TV New York Times October 1 1984 Yvette Mimieux Married The New York Times Associated Press October 27 1961 p 27 has been secretly married since 1959 Records show that she was married to Evan Harland Engber here in Los Angeles on Dec 19 Mr Engber who was recently discharged from the Army Eng Dinah September 4 2014 Howard Ruby The father of corporate housing Fortune Archived from the original on June 2 2019 Retrieved January 11 2020 About Oakwood gt Executive Committee gt Howard Ruby Chairman Founder and COO Oakwood Worldwide Archived from the original on January 10 2020 Yvette Mimieux Dies Actress Writer Who Starred In The Time Machine Had Just Turned 80 Deadline Hollywood January 18 2022 Retrieved January 18 2022 Gates Anita January 18 2022 Yvette Mimieux Who Found Fame With The Time Machine Dies at 80 The New York Times Retrieved January 19 2022 The Time Machine Actress Yvette Mimieux Dead at 80 People January 19 2022 Retrieved January 19 2022 Yvette Mimieux who rose to fame in The Time Machine and Where the Boys Are dies Dagan Carmel January 18 2022 Yvette Mimieux Star of The Time Machine The Black Hole Dies at 80 Variety Retrieved January 19 2022 Yvette Mimieux Ruby Neptune Society Retrieved February 19 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Yvette Mimieux nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yvette Mimieux Yvette Mimieux at IMDb Yvette Mimieux at the TCM Movie Database Yvette Mimieux at AllMovie Yvette Mimieux at Rotten Tomatoes Yvette Mimieux discography at Discogs Yvette Mimieux Gallery Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yvette Mimieux amp oldid 1215614486, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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