The entrancing and exotic-eyed "B"-level leading lady Jody Lawrance,
whose 1950s career was spotty at best, provided lovely diversion from
the manly adventure movies she helped bring to the screen. Personal
turmoil and studio conflicts, however, ultimately hurt her career and
the remainder of her life was spent out of the limelight.
She was born Nona Josephine Goddard in Fort Worth, Texas. Her childhood was troubled and disruptive. Parents Ervin S.
("Doc") and Eleanor (née Roeck) Goddard divorced while Jody was a
child. Ervin, nicknamed "Doc" although he was not one, was an amateur
inventor and research engineer at the Adel Precision Products Company
at one point. Moving to California, he eventually married Grace McGee in
1937. Jody subsequently migrated to California and lived with her
father and stepmother in their Van Nuys bungalow.
Marilyn Monroe (then Norma Jeane Baker)
was a foster child of her stepmother Grace, who knew Norma Jeane's
mother when both worked for Columbia -- Grace as a film librarian and
and Gladys as a film cutter. Jody and Norma Jeane lived together
briefly in 1941-1942.
Jody went on to attend Beverly Hills High School (studying under Benno
Schneider and his wife) and the Hollywood Professional School.
Excelling as a swimmer, Jody's first shot was appearing in a water show
operated by Larry Crosby, who was also a publicity manager for famous
younger brother
Bing Crosby.
The teenager was awarded her first on-camera professional part on the
TV show "The Silver Theatre" in 1949. Because her real name, Nona
Goddard, lacked glamour, she changed it to Jody (short for Josephine,
her middle name) Lawrance (her maternal grandmother's maiden name).
Jody's drama teacher Schneider managed to get her an introduction to
Columbia. The studio took an immediate interest in the 19-year-old
beauty and signed her to a 7-year contract at $250 per week.
Jody made four relatively strong films in 1951. She provided
damsel-in-distress duty in her screen debut between up-and-coming
screen hero
John Derek and established
villain
Anthony Quinn in the
spirited swashbuckler
Mask of the Avenger (1951).
This was followed by
The Family Secret (1951)
playing the altruistic fiance to a murder suspect (again,
John Derek. Things looked even more promising
when she co-starred an exotic love interest to robust
Burt Lancaster in the Eastern adventure
yarn
Ten Tall Men (1951). Her final
film that year was a horror opus portraying the fiance to
Louis Hayward as the
The Son of Dr. Jekyll (1951).
She started the following year off with the adventure film
The Brigand (1952) opposite handsome,
sliver-eyed
Anthony Dexter,
better known for his captivating Valentino-like looks than for his
acting ability. In 1953 career problems surfaced when the studio
assigned Jody, who had now completed six film projects, to a lackluster
role in one of its minor musicals, a poor man's version of "On the
Town" entitled
All Ashore (1953) which
starred sailors-on-leave
Mickey Rooney,
Dick Haymes and
Ray McDonald.
Peggy Ryan,
Barbara Bates and Jody were cast
as their the love interests. Set this time on California's Catalina
Island instead of New York, Jody balked at the assignment while citing
a lack of confidence in her singing and dancing abilities. She ask the
studio to replace her but Columbia refused and the actress begrudgingly
filmed the movie. Her "difficulty" with the studio on this assignment
ultimately led to a break of her contract. Feeling overlooked by the
studio at the time, she supposedly did not regret her release too much.
On her own, however, the quality of Jody's films declined markedly with
her the "Poverty Row" independent film, the sub-par and highly distorted
biographical piece
Captain John Smith and Pocahontas (1953)
again starring
Anthony Dexter. It
was revealed that Jody suffered a frightening allergic reaction on the
set after dying her lighter hair jet black for the role. Among many
other problems, the 23-year old, blue-eyed actress was quite miscast in
the role of the much younger Indian maiden. The released film was a
dismal failure and Jody's career suffered as a result.
Finding almost no offers in 1954-1955 and in order to make ends meet,
Jody took on employment as an ice cream shop waitress near the UCLA
campus in Los Angeles. The story goes that one day one of her customers
was her former co-star
Burt Lancaster. He
came to her aid by introducing her to his friend, director
Michael Curtiz, who reignited her career
with his minor film noir
The Scarlet Hour (1956) which
starred
Tom Tryon and had Jody playing a
second femme role behind
Carol Ohmart, who
was being built up as Paramount's supposed answer to a difficult
Marilyn Monroe at the time. Jody was
promoted as one of the "Deb Stars of 1955" along with other hopefuls
including
Cathy Crosby,
Anita Ekberg,
Mara Corday,
Marisa Pavan and
Lori Nelson, among other lesser
known actors.
Back on the boards again, Jody revived her look on screen as a blonde
again. Things looked hopeful when Paramount Studios signed her to a
contract, earning $300 a week. In the spiritual drama
The Leather Saint (1956), she
plays a platinum-blonde nightclub singer (and even sings a bit of "I'm
in the Mood for Love" in the film) and temptress to (once again)
John Derek whose Episcopal minister agonizes
over his decision to box for money in order help medically finance
church/community projects for special needs children.
Things fell apart once more, however, when Paramount released her the
following year. It seems that the studio was perturbed when, while
promoting her to the public as a sexy single, Jody resisted the
cheesecake angle and also secretly married Bruce Tilton (1930-2007), an
airplane parts company executive, in Las Vegas on April 7, 1956 and was pregnant. A
daughter, Victoria, was born a year later.
She remained unproductive career-wise during this period of new
marriage and more family. By April of 1958, however, the Tilton
marriage had dissolved and a bitter custody suit ensued (in the end,
Jody lost). While she returned to the screen, the pickings were slim.
She landed minor parts in the
Shirley Booth vehicle
Hot Spell (1958) and
Barry Sullivan film
The Purple Gang (1959), and found
isolated work on TV in such dramatic fare as "Perry Mason," "The
Loretta Young Show" and "The Rebel". Her last screen role of any
substance was the minor western
Stagecoach to Dancers' Rock (1962)
starring
Martin Landau.
Jody met second husband Robert Wolf Herre and they married in November
of 1962. Two children, Robert Jr. and Abigail ("Chrissy") were born
from this relationship. Other than an isolated TV appearance on "The
Red Skelton Show" in 1968, little was heard of Jody following this
period until it was learned that she had died in Ojai, California on
July 10, 1986, at age 55.