Donna Martell

Donna Martell

Actress
Born
December 24, 1927
Awards
1 wins, 1 nominations

Fiery, dark-haired, exotic-looking Donna Martell was born of Italian ancestry Irene Palma de Maria, the daughter of a master tailor for a major clothing manufacturing company. She attended L.A. City College where she excelled at athletics, especially baseball. During this time, Donna was persuaded


Biography

Fiery, dark-haired, exotic-looking Donna Martell was born of Italian ancestry Irene Palma de Maria, the daughter of a master tailor for a major clothing manufacturing company. She attended L.A. City College where she excelled at athletics, especially baseball. During this time, Donna was persuaded by a classmate to audition for a theatrical agent from the Donaldson-Middleton Agency. At just 17 years of age, she was "signed on the spot" by Republic Studios to appear in as an ingénue alongside Roy Rogers and Dale Evans in the western Apache Rose (1947).

Initially billed as Donna DeMario, she went on to receive steady offers to work in westerns, due in no small part to her equestrian skills (she owned a Palomino named Pal, stabled at the San Bernardino Orange Ranch). Though wooed by three of the majors (MGM, 20th Century Fox and Warner Brothers), Donna opted to sign with Universal-International. However, after two years, she became dissatisfied with the meager roles offered her and she decided to go freelance, in due course establishing herself as a prolific and capable television actress. Often cast as south-of-the-border senoritas, she played leads opposite most of the famous western leading men of the era, including Gene Autry, Randolph Scott, Dale Robertson (Tales of Wells Fargo (1957)), Gene Barry (Bat Masterson (1958)) and Clint Walker (Cheyenne (1955)). In 2002, Donna won the Golden Boot Award for her contribution to the western genre.

In addition to her sagebrush heroines, Donna also played an Indian princess in Last Train from Bombay (1952) and Jennifer Jones's sister in the lavishly produced romantic A-grader Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing (1955). In retrospect, she may wish to forget her role as the commander of a spacecraft in the rare sci-fi feature Project Moon Base (1953), filmed in ten days (!) on a shoestring budget at the old Hal Roach studio in Culver City. Her character in this dreadful (and, indeed, misogynistic) picture was called Colonel Briteis (pronounced 'Bright Eyes'). Its sole saving grace was brevity (63 minutes).

In a later interview, Donna asserted that she had never socialized with her male co-stars, "unless it was for publicity". From 1953, she was married to the baseball player Gene Corso (of the Pittsburgh Pirates) who died in 1996.

Donna's acting career came to an end in 1963, though she continued to appear in some TV commercials. For several years, she ran her own business, selling floor coverings. Later still, she became a frequent attendee at film festivals and conventions.

Actress

Grace KellyGrace Kelly(1983)as Mrs. Austin
BonanzaBonanza(1959)as Esther Callan
Hawaiian EyeHawaiian Eye(1959)as Mona Orello
OutlawsOutlaws(1960)as Margarita Vincente
Tales of Wells FargoTales of Wells Fargo(1957)as Zita Lopez

Archive Footage

Blast Off(1956)as Moana
General Electric Summer Originals(1956)

Known for

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Photos 17

Donna Martell in Project Moon Base (1953)Donna Martell in Project Moon Base (1953)Claire Du Brey, Harry Hayden, Donna Martell, Gar Moore, and Roland Winters in Bud Abbott Lou Costello Meet the Killer Boris Karloff (1949)Donna Martell and Gar Moore in Bud Abbott Lou Costello Meet the Killer Boris Karloff (1949)Watson Downs, Donna Martell, Monte Montague, and Forbes Murray in Western Courage (1950)James Griffith and Donna Martell in Death Valley Days (1952)