Full Name Reba Tassel Role Television actress Occupation Actress | Years active 1951-1964 Siblings Gustave Tassell Name Rebecca Welles | |
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Born February 5, 1928 ( 1928-02-05 ) Philadelphia, PA, U.S. Children Gwen Welles, Deborah Weis, Pamela Landrum, Elizabeth Welles Movies Desire Under the Elms, The Brass Legend, Juvenile Jungle Similar People |
Rebecca Welles (born Reba Tassell; February 5, 1928 – February 13, 2017) was a former American television and film actress.
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Early years
Rebecca Welles was born Reba Tassell on February 5, 1928 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to Lena (née Schiller; 1901-1973) and Samuel Tassell (1896-1963). Her only sibling was fashion designer Gustave Tassell. In 1944, she was the recipient of a $500 tuition award from the Theatre Guild to the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. She went on to spend two years at the academy and to act in stock theater in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Career
Welles' first TV appearance was in the episode "A Chill on the Wind" on Studio One in 1951, where she was credited under her birth name, but subsequently worked under the surname "Welles". (A newspaper source in February 1951 says of Welles, "Last November she had a walk-on in the Studio One drama of A Letter to Cairo.)
Active from 1951 to 1964, Welles made appearances on about fifty TV shows, including 77 Sunset Strip, Gunsmoke, Boots and Saddles, Bat Masterson, Alcoa Theatre, and four episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents. She made five appearances on Perry Mason, including three roles as defendants: in 1959 she played Carol Delaney in "The Case of the Stuttering Bishop", and Carol Taylor in "The Case of the Frantic Flyer." She played Rita Norge in the 1957 episode, "The Case of the Runaway Corpse." In her other two appearances she played the role of murderer Edith Bristol in the 1961 episode, "The Case of the Waylaid Wolf," and murderer Leslie Eden in the 1964 episode, "The Case of the Illicit Illusion." In addition, Welles appeared in four feature films, including Good Morning, Miss Dove (1955) and Desire Under the Elms (1958). She made her last onscreen appearance in a 1964 episode of Arrest and Trial.
In the "Bat Masterson" episode Brunette Bombshell, Welles was the first woman to receive an off screen over the knee spanking in a television show.The episode Brunette Bombshell shows her going face down across Gene Barry's knee and as he spanks her the camera moves up so you can not see his hand spanking her bottom.You can only see him smiling as he drops his hand down.This was because both Gene Barry and Rebecca Welles were married at the time and he did not think it was proper to spank another man's wife. However, he had no trouble taking her across his knees. Barry is quoted as saying of the episode; "Rebecca Welles was a spoiled brat.She could have used an attitude adjustment badly but I did not believe it was my duty to administer a spanking to another man's wife."
In a reversal of sorts, Welles was the inspiration for an episode of Big Town on CBS-TV. A newspaper article in The Bridgeport Telegram on February 21, 1951, reported, "Susan Douglas stars as Miss Cinderella ... which was inspired by the experience of Reba Tassell, the TV Cinderella girl who made such a hit on Studio One last month."
Personal life
Welles married television director Don Weis on August 25, 1961, in Los Angeles, California. Don had two daughters from a previous marriage; Deborah Weis Ellis and Pamela Weis Landrum.
Death
Welles died on February 13, 2017 in Sante Fe, Mexico. She was 89.