The Colorado Springs Gazette final

Arlene Dahl was star in many color films of the 1950s

BY ANDREW DALTON

LOS ANGELES • Arlene Dahl, the actor whose charm and striking red hair shone in such Technicolor movies of the 1950s as “Journey to the Center of the Earth” and “Three Little Words,” has died at age 96.

Dahl’s son, actor Lorenzo Lamas, said in posts on Facebook and Instagram that she died Monday morning of last week in New York. No cause of death was given.

“I will remember her laughter, her joy, her dignity as she navigated the challenges that she faced,” Lamas said. “She truly was a force of nature.”

In 1959’s “Journey to the Center of the Earth,” an adaptation of Jules Verne’s sci-fi classic, Dahl plays the widow of a scientist who joins co-stars James Mason and Pat Boone on a harrowing race to the earth’s core.

She sang and danced in 1950’s “Three Little Words,” a musical biopic of songwriters Bert Kalmar and Harry Ruby, playing Ruby’s wife Eileen Percy opposite frequent costar Red Skelton.

She co-starred with Bob Hope in 1953’s “Here Come the Girls,” provided the love interest for Skelton in 1950’s “Watch the Birdie’” and played the hero’s sweetheart in such adventures as 1952’s “Caribbean” with John Payne, 1953’s “Jamaica Run” with Ray Milland and 1954’s “Bengal Brigade” with Rock Hudson.

Dahl was as famous for her six marriages as for her acting career. Her husbands included screen performers Fernando Lamas and Lex Barker, Fleischman’s yeast heir Christopher Holmes, wine importer Alexis Lichine and investor Rounsevelle Schaum. She was wed to businessman Marc Rosen for the final 37 years of her life.

When her movie career ended, Dahl remained prominent in television, including a three-year stint in the soap opera “One Life to Live” in the mid 1980s.

She made frequent appearances on “The Love Boat” in the 1980s, and guest-starred on her son Lamas’ series “Renegade” and “Air America” in the late 1990s.

Dahl also was active in the lifestyle business, with a syndicated column on beauty tips, a perfume, and lingerie and exercise outfits she designed herself. In the 1960s, Dahl wrote an advice book, “Always Ask a Man: Arlene Dahl’s Key to Femininity.”

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2021-12-05T08:00:00.0000000Z

2021-12-05T08:00:00.0000000Z

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The Gazette, Colorado Springs