A gorgeous, pneumatic blonde rival to pouty sex kitten
Ann-Margret, singer/dancer/actress Joey
Heatherton was also a product of the swinging 60s and taunted the film
and TV variety scenes with her own version of a purring young sexpot.
Born in 1944 as "Davenie Johanna Heatherton" and the daughter of
veteran song-and-dance man
Ray Heatherton
(1909-1997), Joey trained in ballet as a youngster and started her
career off as a teen performer on the New York stage as one of the
children in "The Sound of Music". She also began recording about that
same time. She went on to gain national exposure as a regular on
The Perry Como Show (1948),
portraying an innocent young coed who developed a crush on the star.
The gimmick worked and Joey eventually tried to parlay this success
into an acting career.
The payoff worked. She started to appear in such TV dramas as
The Virginian (1962),
The Nurses (1962) and
Route 66 (1960). For a time, she
showed extreme promise, playing troubled, vulnerable, often neurotic
young girls opposite cinema's established or up-and-coming talent of
the day, including the films,
Twilight of Honor (1963) with
Richard Chamberlain and
Nick Adams,
Where Love Has Gone (1964)
starring
Bette Davis and
Susan Hayward, and
My Blood Runs Cold (1965)
opposite
Troy Donahue. The promise was
short-lived, however, but since music was deemed her forte anyway, Joey
wisely refocused on her musical gifts and went on to project a mod,
sulky "Lolita" image fully-decked out in mini-skirts and go-go boots. A
much better singer than
Ann-Margret and an
equally good dancer, she appealed to the male masses in droves with her
high-octane dance moves and saucy glances as huge selling points. By
the late 60s, the talented, all-round entertainer had developed into a
solid Vegas showroom and TV variety favorite. On the plus side as well,
she had soldiers swooning on both land and sea as she toured with
Bob Hope on his USO tours. She proved
quite fetching in the TV movie,
The Ballad of Andy Crocker (1969)
with
Lee Majors, and was part of the
eclectic casting in
Of Mice and Men (1968)
that toplined
George Segal and
Nicol Williamson. On top of all this,
she was seductively pitching RC Cola and Serta mattresses in TV ads on
a regular basis.
Joey's problems began in 1971, stemming with a major tabloid-troubled
marriage and divorce from
Lance Rentzel. The 70s also saw a radical
change in audience taste as witnessed by her diminishing popularity.
Despite showing extreme potential as a Billboard chart-maker with a
"Top 40" pop hit in the
Ferlin Husky song,
"Gone", in 1972, Hollywood made it nearly impossible for her to escape
the blast-from-the-past image, finding herself more and more
unemployable as the decade wore on. She did enjoy a fun, short-lived
fling on a summer variety series, that co-starred her beloved dad
Ray Heatherton,
(
Joey & Dad (1975)).
Unfortunately, Joey encountered other problems in the throes of her
career decline, with a life-threatening substance addiction and eating
disorder which deeply hindered any game attempts to climb back into
favor. She was crassly featured in the critically-panned
Richard Burton starrer,
Bluebeard (1972); portrayed
Xaviera De Vries in the lurid
The Happy Hooker Goes to Washington (1977)
to little fanfare; and then pretty much disappeared, except as
eccentric tabloid fodder or popping up unexpectedly in the cult
John Waters film,
Cry-Baby (1990), or the April 1997
Playboy spread.
On her side, however, she is a survivor and Hollywood has always
encouraged big comeback stories. If anybody has ever proven to be a
certifiable talent deserving of such, it's Joey Heatherton. She
remains, however, a prime example of how devastating and destructive a
fickle entertainment business can be.