While other actresses would have long given up a stalled career out of pure frustration after decades of extra/bit parts and little reward, perennial starlet Sue Casey somehow found the stamina to maintain ... for six decades! In films from 1946, the voluptuous brunet, at most, became a campy vixen in a few 1960's "drive-in" bombs, yet has always held a remarkably appreciative outlook as to how things turned out.
Born in Southern California on April 8, 1926, her family lived in the Beverly Hills area (her father was a builder) at the time of her birth but was forced to move after the crash of the stock market in 1929 to a more modest area of town. While Sue expressed no early interest in acting, her West Coast beauty was undeniable and it didn't take long before the teenager caught the eye of a talent agent who persuaded her to try with the well-oiled fantasy line, "How would you like to be a star?" The exhausting route that Sue took in that ultimate pursuit is now one for the Hollywood annals.
Making the usual audition rounds, Sue's first extra part came with the lightweight MGM film Féerie à Mexico (1946) for Samuel Goldwyn. A young married lady at the time with a child in tow, she found her next work as Danny Kaye's boss' secretary in the La vie secrète de Walter Mitty (1947). Promoted by the studio as a "Goldwyn Girl," Sue dutifully attended all the requisite premieres, parades, late night parties, parades, fashion and charity events -- anything to further advance herself. To supplement her studio income, Sue worked as a photographer and artist's model.
Naturally, between 1948 and 1955, nearly all of her one-dimensional on-camera assignments revolved around her beauty and figure. A diverting presence in the usual MGM comedy or drama such as Blondie's Big Deal (1949) and Passion fatale (1949), she provided classy set decoration for the studio's prime Golden Age musicals as well, including Ma vie est une chanson (1948), Voyage à Rio (1950), Annie, la reine du cirque (1950), Show Boat (1951), Un Américain à Paris (1951), Tous en scène! (1953), Deep in My Heart (1954), and the Esther Williams swimming extravaganzas La fille de Neptune (1949) and La première sirène (1952). Often times she would be directed over to other major studios -- Paramount, Columbia, Universal and Warner Bros. -- and provide fetching atmosphere there. Director Raoul Walsh once complimented her as "the most beautiful extra in pictures today."
By the mid 1950s Sue had still barely put two lines together on screen and after filming the non-descript parts of a snake charmer in Le clown est roi (1954), a sunbather in Fenêtre sur cour (1954) and a harem girl in Le fils de Sindbad (1955), decided to take some time away from the cameras and concentrate on family. She went on to have three more children.
By 1959, however, Sue was back in front of the lens as beautiful as ever but this time the focus was on TV. Successfully establishing herself as a wholesome commercial actress, she pitched everything from cereal to automobiles in over 200 assignments. Light TV guest parts also came her way in episodes of "The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour," "The Bailey's of Balboa," "The Dick Van Dyke Show," "The Farmer's Daughter," "The Beverly Hillbillies," and "Family Affair", among a few others. As for the big screen, nothing changed. Obscure bit/extra parts continued with Un numéro du tonnerre (1960), Le tombeur de ces dames (1961), Diamants sur canapé (1961), Quinze jours ailleurs (1962), La fille à la casquette (1963) and Les ambitieux (1964).
Finally, after nearly two decades of pursuing her dream in Hollywood, Sue nabbed a leading role! As "bad girl" Vicky Lindsay in what is arguably one of film's biggest "turkeys" of all time, The Beach Girls and the Monster (1965), Sue attained a notoriety that led to minor cult status. The film had a non-existent budget and was received poorly in every way, shape and form upon its initial release. Sue even had to do her own hair and makeup and forced to pick out her vixen character's clothes from her own closet. The actors were never paid until the movie was sold years later to TV (retitled "Monster from the Surf") and that was a mere pittance. Over the years the movie has gained a following.
Two other dismissible co-star roles in two other unmemorable campy films followed for Sue. She played a hillbilly mom in the fugitive drama Swamp Country (1966) that starred pearly-toothed pre-Carol Burnett hunk Lyle Waggoner, and a manipulative mom and art forger in Catalina Caper (1967). This movie starred former Disney star Tommy Kirk after his fall from studio grace, and (again) Lyle Waggoner.
In later years Sue developed a successful real estate business. She would also find acting work (often without an agent) intermittently on film and TV. Featured in a couple of higher-scaled movie musicals -- as a lady attendant to Vanessa Redgrave's Queen Guinevere in Camelot (1967) and as one of John Mitchum's two wives in La kermesse de l'Ouest (1969) -- her final film resume would add such films as Tendre combat (1979), Messe noire (1981), Whitesnake: Live... in the Still of the Night (2005), Les nouvelles aventures de la famille Brady (1996) and American Beauty (1999). In the last mentioned, an Oscar winner for "Best Picture," a desperate Annette Bening tries to sell her well-to-do character a house. Sue Casey...a survivor in every sense of the word.