LOS ANGELES — Barbara Rush, a well-liked leading actress in the 1950s and 1960s who acted with Frank Sinatra, Paul Newman and other top movie stars and later had a successful TV career, has died. She was 97.
Rush’s daughter, Fox News reporter Claudia Cowan, announced her mother's death on Instagram on Easter Sunday. Further information is not available at this time.
Cowan hailed her mother as “among the last of “Old Hollywood Royalty” and called herself her mother’s “biggest fan.”
First discovered in a play at the Pasadena Playhouse, Rush was signed by Paramount Studios in 1950 and made her film debut that same year with a small role in “The Goldbergs,” which was based on the radio and TV series of the same name.
However, she soon left Paramount to work for Universal International and later 20th Century Fox.
“Paramount wasn’t set up to nurture new talent,” she recalled in 1954. “Every time a good role came along, they tried to hire Elizabeth Taylor.”
Rush went on to star in a variety of films. She appeared alongside Rock Hudson in “Captain Lightfoot” and in Douglas Sirk’s celebrated remake of “Magnificent Obsession,” Audie Murphy in “World in My Corner” and Richard Carlson in the 3-D science-fiction classic “It Came From Outer Space,” for which she received a Golden Globe for most promising newcomer.
Other movie credits included the Nicholas Ray classic “Bigger Than Life”; “The Young Lions,” with Marlon Brando, Dean Martin and Montgomery Clift and “The Young Philadelphians” with Newman. She starred in two movies with Sinatra, “Come Blow Your Horn” and the Rat Pack spoof “Robin and the Seven Hoods,” which also featured Martin and Sammy Davis Jr.
Rush, who had made TV guest appearances for years, recalled fully making the transition as she approached middle age.
“There used to be this terrible Sahara Desert between 40 and 60 when you went from ingenue to old lady,” she remarked in 1962. “You either didn’t work or you pretended you were 20.”
Instead, Rush took on roles in such series as “Peyton Place,” “All My Children,” “The New Dick Van Dyke Show” and “7th Heaven.”
“I’m one of those kinds of people who will perform the minute you open the refrigerator door and the light goes on,” she joked in a 1997 interview.
Her first play was the road company version of “Forty Carats,” a comedy that had been a hit in New York. The director, Abe Burrows, helped her with comedic acting.
“It was very, very difficult for me to learn timing at first, especially the business of waiting for a laugh,” she remarked in 1970. But she learned, and the show lasted a year in Chicago and months more on the road.
She continued to appear in tours of plays such as “Same Time, Next Year,” “Father’s Day,” “Steel Magnolias” and her solo show, “A Woman of Independent Means.”
Born in Denver, Rush spent her first 10 years moving from town to town as her father, a mining company lawyer, was reassigned. The family settled in Santa Barbara, Calif., where a young Barbara played a mythical dryad in a school play and developed a passion for acting.
Rush was wed and separated three times — to movie actor Jeffrey Hunter, Hollywood publicity executive Warren Cowan and sculptor James Gruzalski.