Bek Nelson
{{Short description|American actress (1927–2015)}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Bek Nelson
| image = Bek Nelson in Man with a Camera (The Killer).jpg
| caption = Nelson in Man with a Camera (1958)
| birth_name = Doris Dee Stiner
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1927|05|08|mf=y}}
| birth_place = Goin, Tennessee, US
| death_date = {{nowrap|{{Death date and age|mf=yes|2015|03|28|1927|05|08}}}}
| death_place = Watsonville, California, US
| parents =
| spouse = {{marriage|Don Gordon|1959|1979|end=divorce}}
| education = Lincoln High School (Canton, Ohio)
| alma mater =
| other_names =
| children = 1
| occupation = Actress
| yearsactive = 1956–1966
}}
Bek Nelson (born Doris Dee Stiner; May 8, 1927{{cite book|author=Everett Aaker|title=Television Western Players, 1960–1975|page=318}} – March 28, 2015) was an American model and showgirl who turned to acting at age 29, making seven films and two dozen television shows in her first three years.
Early life
She was born Doris Dee StinerCensus takers in both 1930 and 1940 used the more familiar spelling of "Steiner", but her high-school yearbook and newspaper accounts show it as "Stiner" in Goin, Tennessee.Goin (pronounced like "going") in Claiborne County is what Bek told reporters and publicity agents was her birthplace, while a cousin in Tennessee told the Knoxville Journal it was Sharp's Chapel in Union County. The two unincorporated areas are separated by only 3 miles in rugged, rural terrainU.S., School Yearbooks, 1900-1999 for Doris Dee Stiner, Ohio > Canton > Lincoln High School > pages 120 and 142, retrieved from [https://www.ancestry.com/ Ancestry.com]Doris Steiner in the 1930 United States Federal Census, Ohio > Stark > Canton > District 0023, retrieved from [https://www.ancestry.com/ Ancestry.com]{{cite news |last=Suhrheinrich |first=Jeanne |title=Front Row Center |work=Evansville Courier |date=May 25, 1957 |location=Evansville, Indiana |page=5 |via = Newspapers.com}} Her parents were Ralph Stiner and Mae Cole Stiner. She had four younger brothers and a younger sister.{{cite news |title=Home Girl Bek Nelson Gets Bigger Film Pact |work=Knoxville Journal |date=October 4, 1957 |location=Knoxville, Tennessee |page=15 |via = Newspapers.com}}
The family moved from Tennessee to Canton, Ohio, when Stiner was 18 months old.{{cite magazine |author= |title=Vroommm and off you go |magazine=TV Guide |location=Radnor, Pennsylvania |publisher=Triangle Publications |date=October 17, 1964 |pages=20–21 }} Her father worked as a metal sander and then later as an inspector for Timken Roller Bearing Company.1940 United States Federal Census for Doris Steiner, Ohio > Stark > Canton > 90-59, retrieved from [https://www.ancestry.com/ Ancestry.com] At age 10, Stiner won a "Cutest Child" contest.{{cite news |title=Experienced Judge |work=The Daily Times |date=August 12, 1950 |location=Davenport, Iowa |page=17 |via = Newspapers.com}} She attended Lincoln High School from 1941 thru 1945. While in high school, she was active in dramatics, chorus, and student government, and had roles in the junior- and senior-class plays.
New York
After graduation, Stiner and a girlfriend moved to New York City, where Stiner found work as a Powers model.{{cite news |title=Looking & Listening |work=The Daily Record |date=November 15, 1958 |location=Dover, Ohio |page=6 |via = Newspapers.com}} Her specialty was modeling swimsuits, for which she became well known through newspaper photos and ads.{{cite news |title=Style Show! (ad) |work=The Plain Speaker |date=February 19, 1952 |location=Hazleton, Pennsylvania |page=3 |via = Newspapers.com}} She first lived in Manhattan, then moved to Newark, New Jersey, as her swimsuit career built up.{{cite news |title=Showing How Its Done (photo caption) |work=Brooklyn Daily Eagle |date=May 22, 1949 |location=Brooklyn, New York |page=3 |via = Newspapers.com}} She won a number of small, local beauty contests, which again brought her newspaper publicity.{{cite news |title=Taffy Sweet |work=Daily News |date=June 3, 1951 |location=New York City, New York |page=122 |via = Newspapers.com}} She also served as a model for publicizing events and trade shows.{{cite news |title=Luckiest Gal |work=The Garfield Guardian |date= |location=Garfield, New Jersey |page=3 |via = Newspapers.com}}
By 1951, however, she decided to take on a regular performing gig as a dancer with the Copacabana chorus line. Her first night was a disaster, as the presence of the audience rattled her. She credited the nightclub's manager for her recovery:
I went completely to pieces when I saw the audience, but Mr. Entratter, an understanding man, told me to sit at a table and watch the show. The next night I went on and performed like a pro, otherwise my career would have ended before it began.
Stiner did well enough to hold her job for two years. While at the Copacabana, comic strip artist Milton Caniff picked her out to be his model for the character Miss Mizzou in Steve Canyon. Years later, the Knoxville Journal ran an old photo of her posing for Caniff, with a large sketch of the character and the artist's hands and distinctive signature visible in the foreground.{{cite news |title=From Sharps Chapel (photo caption) |work=Knoxville Journal |date=August 11, 1958 |location=Knoxville, Tennessee |page=1 |via = Newspapers.com}}
In 1953, new owners took over the Copacabana, and Entratter left to be general manager of the Sands Hotel. Stiner and four other Copacabana dancers were let go, and all five decided to follow Entratter to Las Vegas to be showgirls. Entratter billed them as the "CopaGirls", using them for publicity that encouraged other young women to try out for a contest to become a CopaGirl at $150 a week.{{cite news |title=Prettiest EP Girl Has Chance at Stardom |work=El Paso Times |date=September 30, 1957 |location=El Paso, Texas |page=1 |via = Newspapers.com}}
Columbia contract
Stiner was at the Sands for at least three years. According to her later recounting with interviewers, she was performing there when Cinerama filmed the floor show. A talent scout for Columbia Pictures saw the film, noticed her, and signed her to a contract with that studio. However, her first work with Columbia, filming Pal Joey, did not start until April 1957,{{cite news |title=Before the Cameras |work=Los Angeles Evening Citizen News |date=April 27, 1957 |location=Hollywood, California |page=6 |via = Newspapers.com}} while newspaper photos from one year earlier show her doing a modeling assignment in Los Angeles as "Bek Nelson".This was to promote a new imported Sunbeam auto called the Rapier, for which the ad agency had Bek Nelson dress like a musketeer complete with a rapier{{cite news |title=Rapier Girl |work=Mirror News |date=April 24, 1956 |location=Los Angeles, California |page=11 |via = Newspapers.com}}{{cite news |title=To The Point |work=Los Angeles Evening Citizen News |date=April 27, 1956 |location=Hollywood, California |page=16 |via = Newspapers.com}} This is the earliest verifiable use of her stage name. Columnist Lowell E. Redelings said "there's quite a story to how she got that unusual first name", but didn't see fit to share it with his readers.{{cite news |last=Redelings |first=Lowell E. |title=The Hollywood Scene |work=Los Angeles Evening Citizen-News |date=May 31, 1957 |location=Hollywood, California |page=11 |via = Newspapers.com}}
Bek Nelson appeared on camera for an episode of a ZIV-produced television program, Science Fiction Theatre, which was first broadcast in August 1956. She had no lines and the two-minute part was uncredited, but it clearly establishes that her screen debut came prior to her contract with Columbia. She also did TV commercials prior to being signed by Columbia.{{cite news |title=Commercials on TV Aided Film Widow |work=Courier Post |date=January 10, 1959 |location=Camden, New Jersey |page=25 |via = Newspapers.com}}
While filming Pal Joey during April and May 1957, Bek was used for an uncredited bit as a nurse in Operation Mad Ball, which was also in production on the Columbia lot.{{cite news |title=Before the Cameras |work=Los Angeles Evening Citizen News |date=May 11, 1957 |location=Hollywood, California |page=17 |via = Newspapers.com}} She then co-starred in a Columbia comedy short Tricky Chicks with Muriel Landers, playing nightclub hostesses suspected of being foreign agents. According to columnist Hedda Hopper, Columbia head Harry Cohn was "giving Bek Nelson a big, big build-up."{{cite news |last=Hopper |first=Hedda |title=Looking at Hollywood |work=The Bangor Daily News |date=June 19, 1957 |location=Bangor, Maine |page=15 |via = Newspapers.com}}
Cohn had Columbia cast her in four more films made in 1957, to be released in 1958. She had a small, uncredited part as a dance-hall girl in Cowboy, then a feature role as a stewardess in the disaster film Crash Landing.{{cite news |title=Before the Cameras |work=Los Angeles Evening Citizen News |date=August 17, 1957 |location=Hollywood, California |page=19 |via = Newspapers.com}} Bek told the Knoxville Journal that the ocean rescue scene was filmed at the studio lake, with the director requesting "Please don't anyone stand up in the water... we don't want anyone to know our ocean is only three feet deep." Next came another comedy short, with The Three Stooges in Flying Saucer Daffy. Finally, she went back to an uncredited dance-hall girl bit in Gunman's Walk{{cite news |title=Before the Cameras |work=Los Angeles Evening Citizen-News |date=December 21, 1957 |location=Hollywood, California |page=16 |via = Newspapers.com}}
Bek's next film for Columbia, Bell, Book and Candle, was made and released in 1958.{{cite news |title=Before the Cameras |work=Los Angeles Evening Citizen-News |date=February 15, 1958 |location=Hollywood, California |page=9 |via = Newspapers.com}} It was also her last film; Harry Cohn died of a heart attack at the end of February that year. His successors let her contract finish up in 1958 with lending her out for television shows.
Television 1957-1966
When she was not making films, Columbia lent Bek out to television production companies, including the associated Screen Gems. As 1957 was top-heavy with film work, she did only two TV programs that year, but 1958 had her doing 15 episodes, a large number for anyone not playing a series regular. Included among these were 9 episodes of the ABC series Lawman, where she had a recurring role as a widowed restaurant owner. Columnist Jack Gaver mused, "It is difficult to decide which name is odder -- Bek Nelson or Dru Lemp. The former plays the latter ..."{{cite news |last=Gaver |first=Jack |title=Dane Clark Tells Episode in Role Hunt |work=Austin American Statesman |date=December 4, 1958 |location=Austin, Texas |page=31 |via = Newspapers.com}} An unknown TV Key Mailbag editor found the name confusing. A letter writer asked who played the mean guy, "tall, with strange eyes, and an unusual face" on "The Deputy" episode of Lawman. The editor replied, "the villain on that show was an actor named Bek Nelson".There were three "mean guys" in this episode, but the main mean guy fitting this description, the actual actor playing the main villain, was Jack Elam. The other two meanies were Lee Van Cleef and Edd Byrnes.{{cite news |title=TV Key Mailbag Notes |work=The Decatur Herald |date= |location=Decatur, Illinois |page=10 |via = Newspapers.com}}
By 1959, Bek Nelson was an independent actress, represented by the Harold L. Gefesky Agency, with whom she remained throughout her show-business career.{{cite magazine |author= |title=Leading Women |magazine=Academy Players Directory |location=Hollywood, California |publisher=Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences |date=1959 |issue=83 |page=184 }} Once again she appeared on 15 episodes of shows, including another small recurring bit on four episodes of The Third Man. Guest star, feature player, and bit part were all represented in her resume of parts that year, and for years to come. She had no professional vanity about her billing status, but like other television actresses of the time, found doing Westerns to be limiting.{{cite news |title=6 Roles Open for Girl Stars Doing Westerns |work=Austin Daily Herald |date=January 17, 1959 |location=Austin, Minnesota |page=19 |via = Newspapers.com}}
A girl in a television horse opera can be typed as a dance-hall hostess, a rancher's wife, a rancher's daughter, a gambling-hall queen, or a gal from the East visiting the rugged West. And the last choice is that of the frontier town's restaurant owner, which I currently fill.
For 1960 and 1961, the number of television roles she accepted were reduced to half or less of previous years. She was married now, her husband had a successful acting career, and they were hoping to start a family. Subsequent years had her sometimes do only two shows a year. Her career did pick up some in 1964 and 1965; she had a small part in her husband's award-winning indie film The Lollipop Cover and a brief recurring role on Peyton Place, for most episodes of which she was shown just talking on the phone, without directly interacting with the other actors. Her final acting job was a pro bono bit in 1966 for Insight, a syndicated show usually shown on Sundays.{{cite news |title=Tuesday, February 15, 1966 (TV Listings) |work=Chicago Tribune |date=February 12, 1966 |location=Chicago, Illinois |page=65 |via = Newspapers.com}}
Personal life
According to an article in TV Guide, Bek was married shortly after moving to New York in 1945, with the marriage being annulled.
Reporting the aftermath of a fire in Laurel Canyon during July 1959, the Los Angeles Times cited a Mrs. Bek Nelson Gordon as saying several houses near hers on Willow Glen Road had been lost.{{cite news |title=43 Homes Burned in Laurel Canyon |work=Los Angeles Times |date=July 12, 1959 |location=Los Angeles, California |page=2 |via = Newspapers.com}} However, actor Don Gordon and Bek Nelson did not take out a marriage license until much later. They were married under her birth name on December 31, 1959, in Los Angeles.Doris D Stiner in the California, U.S., Marriage Index, 1949-1959, retrieved from [https://www.ancestry.com/ Ancestry.com] At that time, a cohabitating single actress could suffer a serious career setback if the situation became widely known.
This was Gordon's third marriage and Bek's second. Gordon told an interviewer in October 1960, "she doesn't want to be an actress, and I'm glad. I think women should stay home, keep house, and have babies."{{cite news |last=Heffernan |first=Harold |title=I Heard Today in Hollywood |work=Edmonton Journal |date=November 1, 1959 |location=Edmonton, Alberta |page=22 |via = Newspapers.com}} Bek evidently agreed, for she stopped acting after the couple adopted a daughter in 1966. The couple remained married for 20 years, divorcing in 1979.
Filmography
class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders"
|+ Film (by year of first release) |
scope="col" | Year
! scope="col" | Title ! scope="col" | Role ! scope="col" | Notes |
---|
rowspan=3|1957
| Lola | Bek is a "Sex-Tet", the six girl chorus line backing Frank Sinatra in this adaption of the Broadway musical |
Operation Mad Ball
| Nurse | Uncredited; she was put in this while also filming Pal Joey on another sound stage at Columbia |
Tricky Chicks
| Bek | One of the last Columbia shorts produced by Jules White has Bek as a nightclub hostess |
rowspan=5|1958
| Charlie's Girl | Uncredited; she played a dance hall girl involved with cowpoke Dick York |
Crash LandingWorking title was Rescue at Sea
| Nancy Arthur | First feature role has her as a stewardess on board a plane that crashes in the Atlantic |
Flying Saucer Daffy
| Tyrin | Columbia Three Stooges short; Bek plays a peaceful alien who befriends Joe Besser |
Gunman's Walk
| Dance Hall Girl | Uncredited; Tab Hunter sings to Bek |
Bell, Book and Candle
| Tina | She plays Jimmie Stewart's secretary in her last Columbia film |
rowspan=2|1965
|The Lollipop Cover | Waitress | B/W Indie film co-written by and starring Bek's husband; won award at Chicago Film Festival{{cite news |last=Dusheck |first=George |title=Lollipops, Love Went Into Film |work=San Francisco Examiner |date=November 19, 1965 |location=San Francisco, California |page=28 |via = Newspapers.com}} |
Invisible Diplomats
| Jackie | Short educational film produced by AT&T about telephone switches |
Notes
{{reflist|group=fn}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category}}
- {{IMDb name|0625171}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Nelson, Bek}}