Joan Taylor - Biography

Joan Taylor's mother, Amelia Berky, was a vaudeville singing-dancing star in the 1920s. Her father was a prop man in Hollywood during that same period, but, after Joan's birth, the family moved to Lake Forest, Illinois, where her father managed a movie theater. She developed a love of movies from watching so many at her father's theater, and she graduated from the Chicago National Association of Dancing Masters. Heading to Hollywood in 1946, she enrolled at the Pasadena Playhouse. Victor Jory arranged an interview for her with producer Nat Holt, and she made her film debut in the Randolph Scott western L'homme de Kansas City (1949). She appeared in quite a few films over the next several years, many of them westerns. She also made many appearances on TV series, and had a recurring role in L'homme à la carabine (1958), but it's for two sci-fi films that she is fondly remembered by 1950s movie audiences: Les soucoupes volantes attaquent (1956) and À des millions de kilomètres de la terre (1957). After her two-year stint on "The Rifleman", however, she decided to retire from films, and did so in 1963.