Sultry, glamorous blonde Venetia Stevenson was a British-born starlet
of late 1950s Hollywood whose face was her initial fortune; the camera simply adored her and, in her early
years, she dotted the covers of several magazines. Her acting talent,
however, never measured up and, within a few years, she willingly
retired.
Born in London on March 10, 1938, Venetia came from strong
entertainment stock. Her mother, actress
Anna Lee, was a well-known co-star of
the British cinema, and her father, director
Robert Stevenson, was
well-respected for his directing of such classy Grade "A" motion
pictures as
Nine Days a Queen (1936),
King Solomon's Mines (1937),
Back Street (1941) and
Jane Eyre (1943). Just prior to the
beginning of WWII in Europe, the family moved to Hollywood. By 1944,
her parents had divorced and Venetia, eventually, decided to live with
her father and new stepmother.
Venetia's photogenic beauty was apparent from the start. As part of the
youthful Hollywood scene, she was quickly discovered and moved with
ease into junior modeling work. This, plus her parents' obvious
connections, led to a natural progression into acting. Self-admittedly,
she was never a confidant actress. Making her TV debut playing a corpse
on
Matinee Theatre (1955),
she also appeared with her mother and the husband/wife team of
Fernando Lamas and
Arlene Dahl in a 1955 Arizona stage
production of "Liliom", in order to gain experience. Signed with RKO,
Venetia took acting lessons and posed for publicity stills but she made
little progress there. Warner Bros. eventually took her on and she made
several guest appearances on TV, including that of
Ricky Nelson's girlfriend on the
popular series,
The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet (1952).
Other WB series work included roles on
Cheyenne (1955) and
77 Sunset Strip (1958).
Venetia made her film entrance with a decorous, second-lead femme role
in the WB war picture
Darby's Rangers (1958), starring
James Garner,
Peter Brown and
Edd Byrnes. As part of the Hollywood dating
swirl, there were obvious set-ups with such big stars as
Tab Hunter,
Anthony Perkins and, even,
Elvis Presley. Such a set-up led to a 1956
marriage to up-and-coming actor/dancer
Russ Tamblyn, but the bloom quickly fell
off the rose and the couple divorced a year later.
For the most part. Venetia was cast as a beautiful distraction in
action-adventure and crime movies. Her handful of hunky movie co-stars
included
Jeff Richards and
Guy Madison. Such routine roles in
Day of the Outlaw (1959),
Island of Lost Women (1959),
Studs Lonigan (1960),
Seven Ways from Sundown (1960),
Horror Hotel (1960),
which was made in her native England and released here as "Horror
Hotel", and
The Sergeant Was a Lady (1961),
her last, did little to boost her feelings of adequacy or her Hollywood
ranking. Mother
Anna Lee, who found
renewed recognition as a daytime soap doyenne ("Lila Quartermaine" on
General Hospital (1963)),
appeared in support of her daughter in two films:
Jet Over the Atlantic (1959)
and
The Big Night (1960). Divorced
from Tamblyn, Venetia married one of
The Everly Brothers,
Don Everly, of "Wake Up, Little Susie" fame,
in 1962. At this point, she had no qualms about retiring from the
ever-competitive acting world and did so. The couple went on to have
two daughters and a son.
Stacy Everly and
Erin Everly both dabbled in acting, and son
Edan Everly delved into music as both a singer and guitarist. He also
teaches music and produces/writes for other artists.
In later years, Venetia became a script reader for
Burt Reynolds's production company
and, subsequently, became vice-president of Cinema Group, a production
company that made several films in the 1980s. Since her 1970 divorce
from Everly, the still-beautiful lady, who enjoys horseback riding, has
not remarried.