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Jill Banner

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Full Name
  
Mary Molumby

Role
  
Film actress

Name
  
Jill Banner

Years active
  
1966–1972

Occupation
  
Actress


Jill Banner Picture of Jill Banner

Born
  
November 8, 1946 (
1946-11-08
)

Died
  
August 7, 1982, North Hollywood, California, United States

Movies
  
Spider Baby, The President's Analyst

Similar People
  
Jack Hill, Theodore J Flicker, Bart Patton

JILL BANNER TRIBUTE


Jill Banner (November 8, 1946 – August 7, 1982) was an American film actress, possibly best recalled for her role as Virginia, the "spider baby" in the 1964 cult horror-comedy film Spider Baby. She also had roles as James Coburn's flower child friend in The President's Analyst (1967), and a couple of hippie girls in Jack Webb's television series, Dragnet.

Contents

Jill Banner Jill Banner 1946 1982 Find A Grave Memorial

Life and career

Jill Banner Picture of Jill Banner

Banner was born Mary Molumby in Bremerton, Washington. After her father's death in 1949, Molumby and her mother lived in South Dakota and Iowa, near relatives, finally ending up in Glendale, California. She studied at the Hollywood Professional School, a K-12 school for working professional children run by Maurice and Bertha Mann, where classes typically ran from 8:45 AM to 12:45 PM, allowing the students the afternoon off to pursue various jobs or performing careers. The school assemblies, called "Aud. Calls", were early showcases for the talents of students aspiring to be dancers, singers, and actors. She graduated in 1964.

Jill Banner Cineplexcom Spider Baby

She made her film debut in Spider Baby with Sid Haig and Lon Chaney, Jr. Directed by Jack Hill (Coffy, Switchblade Sisters), the film was tied up in litigation from 1964 until 1968. Released under various titles, including Attack Of The Liver Eaters and Cannibal Orgy, Or The Maddest Story Ever Told, the four-year-old black and white feature quickly faded from view. Spider Baby became known largely through the efforts of Los Angeles cult film resurrectionist Johnny Legend. The film tells the story of the Merrye family, who suffer from a degenerative disease. While Spider Baby remained in legal limbo in the mid-1960s, Banner was featured in Deadlier Than The Male (1966), a British mystery about two female assassins. She played Wendy, a wholesome teenager, in C’mon, Let’s Live a Little (1967), one of the last of the "beach party" films.

Jill Banner Cineplexcom Spider Baby

In the psychedelically paranoid spy spoof The President's Analyst (1967), Banner was a flower child named "Snow White", who temporarily rescues James Coburn (Our Man Flint, In Like Flint) from a combined conspiracy of the American CIA, the Russian KGB, and The Phone Company (referred to cryptically as "TPC"). She was featured in several episodes of Jack Webb's police-procedural shows, Dragnet 1967 and Adam-12, usually playing clueless teenagers and spaced-out daytrippers. In the Dragnet story "Forgery", she played a pot-smoking woman who is duped into a life of check fraud by two hippie dope dealers. In another episode, "The Hammer", Banner played a hardened but stupid juvenile whose sociopath boyfriend has murdered an elderly man for money and a ring. When captured, Banner's character shows no remorse, prompting Detective Sgt. Joe Friday to say: "I'll bet your mother had a loud bark."

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Banner performed in several movies and TV shows in the late 1960s and early 1970s, including Shadow Over Elveron (1968) with Don Ameche and Adam-12 co-star Kent McCord. In The Stranger Returns (1968), a comic spaghetti western (also known as Shoot First Laugh Last and Un Uomo, Un Cavallo, Una Pistola), Banner played the pretty daughter of a corrupt postal official who falls into the hands of banditos, only to be rescued by The Stranger. She was also featured in Hunters Are For Killing (1970), an early Burt Reynolds movie. In an interview, Reynolds once joked that such films were typically shown in prisons and airplanes because no one in the audience could leave. She appeared in episodes of the television shows The Bold Ones and Cade's County. She had an uncredited bit part in Christian Marquand's film Candy (1968), but her scene was deleted from the final print.

Later years

Banner eventually abandoned Hollywood for a real estate job in New Mexico in 1976. Marlon Brando's 1994 autobiography, Songs My Mother Taught Me, discusses the couple's relationship. Banner returned to Southern California and in the early 1980s, reportedly to develop scripts.

Death

In 1982, her Toyota was hit by a truck on Ventura Freeway. Thrown from the vehicle, she died at 03:00 am, August 7, 1982 at North Hollywood's Riverside Hospital. She was 35 years old. She is interred at Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery.

Filmography

Actress
1972
The Bold Ones: The New Doctors (TV Series) as
Churlish Girl
- Discovery at Fourteen (1972) - Churlish Girl
1972
Cade's County (TV Series) as
Melanie
- Slay Ride: Part 2 (1972) - Melanie
- Slay Ride: Part 1 (1972) - Melanie
1972
Adam-12 (TV Series) as
Rita
- The Adoption (1972) - Rita
1970
The Name of the Game (TV Series) as
Ginger Schermer / Vivi Sue
- Why I Blew Up Dakota (1970) - Ginger Schermer
- Echo of a Nightmare (1970) - Vivi Sue
1970
Ironside (TV Series) as
Judy Blue
- Noel's Gonna Fly (1970) - Judy Blue
1970
Hunters Are for Killing (TV Movie) as
Holly Farnell
1967
Dragnet 1967 (TV Series) as
Shirley Lawson / Nancy Morton / Sondra Thompson / ...
- D.H.Q.: Missing Person (1969) - Shirley Lawson
- Homicide: The Student (1969) - Nancy Morton
- Forgery: DR-33 (1969) - Sondra Thompson
- Homicide: DR-22 (1969) - Eve Wesson
- The Hammer (1967) - Camille
1968
Shadow Over Elveron (TV Movie) as
Jessie Drover
1967
Spider Baby or, the Maddest Story Ever Told as
Virginia
1967
The President's Analyst as
Snow White
1967
The Stranger Returns as
Caroline
1967
C'mon, Let's Live a Little as
Wendy
1967
Deadlier Than the Male as
Pam (uncredited)
1966
Weekend of Fear as
Carol
1966
The John Forsythe Show (TV Series) as
Marcia
- If Food Be the Music of Love (1966) - Marcia
Archive Footage
2014
Pop Culture Beast's Halloween Horror Picks (TV Series documentary) as
Virginia Merrye
- Spider Baby (2014) - Virginia Merrye
2004
The 50 Worst Movies Ever Made (Video documentary)
1986
Horrible Horror (Video) as
Virginia Merrye, In clips from 'Spider Baby'

References

Jill Banner Wikipedia