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Jolene Brand

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jolene Brand
Born
Jolene Marie Bufkin
OccupationActress
Years active1957–1966
SpouseGeorge Schlatter
Children2

Jolene Brand (born Jolene Marie Bufkin) is an American actress. She acted most in the 1950s and 1960s, and appeared in seven episodes of the Ernie Kovacs television shows.

Early years

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Brand was from Baldwin Park, California. She graduated from Covina High School and attended Mt. San Antonio College. She won an American Legion beauty contest in 1951 and was queen of the Los Angeles County Fair in 1953.[1]

Career

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Early in her career, Brand performed in Las Vegas, and in 1955 she sang and danced at Ciro's night club in California.[1] Also in 1955 she was named a WAMPAS Baby Star.[2]

In 1958, she acted in the B-film Giant from the Unknown, about a man who was frozen in suspended animation for 500 years and was freed by a lightning bolt and goes on a killing spree.[3] Later that year she was signed up to play a part in the Disney television show Zorro. She played the romantic interest for the main character played by Guy Williams.[4] She was a model on the television series Queen for a Day as well.

Brand portrayed "Indian Emily" in the 1959 episode of the same name on the syndicated television anthology series, Death Valley Days, hosted by Stanley Andrews. The setting is the United States Army outpost at Fort Davis, Texas. Emily, an Apache captive, adopts the white man's ways but flees when a young officer, Tom Easton (Burt Metcalfe), whom she loves, prepares to marry someone else. She returns to warn the fort of a pending Apache attack, and dies of a gunshot wound fired in error after saving the fort. Meg Wyllie played Tom's compassionate mother, Mrs. Easton. A memorial at Fort Davis honors the heroism of Indian Emily.[5] Brand and her husband George Schlatter were close friends with Kovacs and his wife, Edie Adams.[6]

Filmography

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Film

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Film
Year Title Role Notes
1958 Giant from the Unknown aka The Diablo Giant Ann Brown Credited as Joline Brand

Television

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Television
Year Title Role Notes
1966 Vacation Playhouse Wanda Episode: "The Hoofer"
1962 Hawaiian Eye Lola Episode: "Janine Westerfield"
1962 Bronco Emily Episode: "A Town That Lived and Died"
1961 - 1962 The Ernie Kovacs Show Various Episode: 7 appearances from 18 May 1961 to 23 January 1962
1961 Cheyenne Lorna Abbott Episode: "Legacy Of the Lost"
1961 Maverick Penelope Baxter Episode: "A Technical Error"
1960 Guestward, Ho! Pink Cloud Episode: "The Christmas Spirit"
1960 Mr. Lucky Clara Iglesias Episode: "Operation Fortuna"
1960 Hennesey Nurse Episode: "Angel Face"
1960 Hennessy Gloria Episode: "Senior Nurse"
1960 Hennessy Wave Episode: "Hennesey and the Ancient Vehicle"
1960 The Detectives Starring Robert Taylor Ann Episode: "Anatomy of Fear"
1959 Man with a Camera Joyce Whitman Episode: "The Bride"
1959 Death Valley Days Emily Episode: "Indian Emily"
1959 Whirlybirds Jackie Bryan Episode: "The Deadly Game"
1959 Whirlybirds Lucy Episode: "If I Were King"
1959 US Marshall Connie James Episode: "Federal Agent"
1958 - 1959 Zorro Anna Maria Verdugo Episode: 9 Episodes from 1958 - 1959
1958 Rescue 8 Linda Carson Episode: "Calamity Coach"
1958 State Trooper Mrs. Reinhardt Episode: "Firebug"
1957 The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show Lucy Episode: "Misery Loves Company"
1957 Gunsmoke Young Bride Episode: "How to Kill a Woman"
1957 Official Detective ? Episode: "The Hostages"
1957 Take a Good Look ? Episode: Episode dated 31 December 1959
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References

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  1. ^ a b "Jolene Bufkin named 'Miss Red Feather'". The Pomona Progress Bulletin. October 28, 1955. p. 27. Retrieved April 12, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  2. ^ "Jolene Bufkin Is Wampas Baby". The Pomona Progress Bulletin. October 31, 1955. p. 17. Retrieved April 12, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ W. Lee Cozad More Magnificent Mountain Movies (pg. 215) via google.com; accessed November 11, 2017.
  4. ^ Jolene Brand profile, Glamour Girls Of The Silver Screen, glamourgirlsofthesilverscreen.com; accessed November 11, 2017.
  5. ^ Gallagher, Danny (October 9, 2013). "Laugh-In's George Schlatter Will Receive The Dallas VideoFest's Ernie Kovacs Award". "Dallas Observer" blogsite.
  6. ^ Starr, Michael (March 17, 2011). "Starr Report". New York Post.