Rosemarie Bowe frequently turned heads with her flashing turquoise
eyes, sultry mane of black hair and sparkling personality. Effortlessly
diverting attention from the scenic location spots of her mid-'50s film
adventures and dramas, her stroll before the cameras was short--it was
over within a few years.
The Montana-born beauty was the daughter of a building contractor,
Dennis Bowe, and his wife Ruby. She and her siblings (Clara and Sydney)
were raised in Tacoma, Washington, where Rosemarie first developed an
interest in the arts. Dancing and appearing in operetta-styled musicals
at her high school in Tacoma, she graduated and attended Tacoma
Community College for one semester before being drawn to modeling.
Finding work as a photographer's model and fashion cover girl in the
Seattle area, she was the winner of pageant titles, including "Miss
Tacoma", and was an official entrant in the "Miss Washington" contest.
Eventually she relocated to Los Angeles, where she ultimately made the
cover of Life magazine, among others.
Rosemarie broke into films in the early 1950s, primarily as an extra
(model, swimmer) in MGM musicals. Within a few years she had moved into
TV episodic work and earned a co-starring role in the voodoo adventure
The Golden Mistress (1954)
which was written and directed by
Abner Biberman under the pseudonym Joel
Judge (he also had a supporting role as her father). The film, starring
Shirley Temple's ex,
John Agar, was obvious hokum but did take the
time to emphasize its lovely newcomer. Rosemarie was quite stunning as
a jungle captive and signed on to play a few other decorative,
damsel-in-distress roles.
Nothing-special movies more or less came and went but did little to
test her dramatic mettle; they were, however, providing the requisite
building ground for her to move up the Hollywood ranks.
The Adventures of Hajji Baba (1954)
had Rosemarie playing a slave girl in support of dashing young commoner
John Derek and spirited princess
Elaine Stewart. In the noirish
The Big Bluff (1955), Rosemarie
provided a harder edge as a married nightclub singer dallying on the
side with lothario
John Bromfield who, in
turn, is making a play for the affections of wealthy but terminally ill
widow
Martha Vickers.
The View from Pompey's Head (1955)
focused more on star
Dana Wynter, a
scene-stealing
Marjorie Rambeau and its
Southern-bred racism theme than on Rosemarie's secondary role. Her last
leading film assignment was in the preachy western
The Peacemaker (1956) as a
benevolent lady who tries to help gunfighter-turned-minister
James Mitchell (who was then
better known for his dancing skills in musicals) tame a corrupt town.
Rosemarie ended her career after marrying
Robert Stack, 13 years her senior, on
January 23, 1956. The couple eventually became the parents of a
daughter (Elizabeth) and son (Charles). Sharing a love with her husband
for the outdoors, especially sailing and horseback riding, Rosemarie
enjoyed life as a Hollywood celebrity and socialite and expressed no
regrets in ending her career. In October of 1969 she survived a serious
automobile accident in Sacramento that killed her husband's cousin and
left her with injuries requiring plastic surgery. Occasionally she came
out of her self-imposed retirement to appear on TV, usually in vehicles
starring her husband, such as the mini-movie
Murder on Flight 502 (1975).
Her beloved husband, Robert Stack, died in 2003 after 47 years of marriage. Rosemarie passed away many years later on January 20, 2019, at age 86.