Occupation Actress Role Film actress | Name Joanne Linville Years active 1950 - 2005 | |
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Full Name Beverly Joanne Linville Children Amy Rydell, Christopher Rydell Movies James Dean, A Star Is Born, The Seduction, The Goddess, Gable and Lombard Similar People Mark Rydell, Christopher Rydell, Tisha Sterling, Larry Linville, David Schmoeller |
Joanne Linville on Mark Ruffalo
Joanne Linville (born January 15, 1928, in Bakersfield, California) is a retired American film and television actress. Linville and actress Irene Gilbert co-founded the Stella Adler Academy in Los Angeles in 1985.
Contents
- Joanne Linville on Mark Ruffalo
- Joanne linville seven steps to an acting craft part 1
- Early life
- Acting career
- Author
- Personal life
- Filmography
- References

Joanne linville seven steps to an acting craft part 1
Early life

Beverly Joanne Linville was born in Bakersfield, California, on January 15, 1928.
Acting career

Linville's motion-picture credits include The Goddess (1958), Scorpio (1973), Gable and Lombard (1976), A Star Is Born (1976), and The Seduction (1982).

In 1959, Linville appeared on the long-running CBS daytime drama The Guiding Light as Amy Sinclair, a runaway drug addict whose daughter was nearly taken from her as part of an illegal adoption scam ring. Linville starred in two television presentations of One Step Beyond— as Aunt Mina in the episode "The Dead Part of the House" (1959), and as Karen Wadsworth in the episode "A Moment of Hate" (1960). In 1961, she starred in the Twilight Zone episode "The Passersby". In 1968, she played the Romulan commander in the Star Trek episode "The Enterprise Incident".
Other television appearances include Decoy, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Have Gun Will Travel, Coronado 9, Checkmate, Adventures in Paradise, The Twilight Zone, Empire, Gunsmoke (three episodes), Dr. Kildare, Ben Casey, Route 66, The Eleventh Hour, I Spy, Bonanza, The Fugitive, The F.B.I. (two episodes), The Invaders (two episodes), Felony Squad, Hawaii Five-O (three episodes: season one - "Once Upon a Time", parts I and II; season two, "Kiss the Queen Goodbye"), Kojak, Columbo: Candidate for Crime, The Streets of San Francisco (two episodes), Nakia, Switch, Charlie's Angels, CHIPS, Mrs. Columbo, Dynasty, and L.A. Law.
Linville also appeared in the made-for-TV movies House on Greenapple Road (1970), Secrets (1977), The Critical List (1978), The Users (1978), and The Right of the People (1986).
Linville played Janine Turner's character's mother in the television series Behind the Screen.
Joanne Linville and George Grizzard starred in "I Kiss Your Shadow", the final episode of the television series Bus Stop. The episode was based on the short story by Robert Bloch. In his book Danse Macabre, Stephen King nominated this episode as "...the single most frightening story ever done on TV." King wrote that Bus Stop was "...a straight drama show... The final episode, however, deviated wildly into the supernatural, and for me, ..."I Kiss Your Shadow" has never been beaten on TV—and rarely any where else—for eerie, mounting horror."
Author
Linville is also the author of an instructional/biographical book published in 2011 by Cameron & Company titled, "Joanne Linville's Seven Steps to an Acting Craft". It is described as "an exploration into the creative world and the techniques that have guided Linville through a lifetime dedication to acting and craft."
Personal life
Linville was married to actor/director Mark Rydell from 1962 until their divorce in 1973. They have two children, actor Christopher Rydell (born November 16, 1963) and actress Amy Rydell.
Linville played gossip columnist Hedda Hopper in the television movie James Dean. Rydell directed the film and also played Jack L. Warner. Amy Rydell played Christine White, Dean's girlfriend in New York.