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Jayne Mansfield Biography - Part Three

Jayne Makes Her Debut

Soon after Paul was sent to Korea, Jayne headed west once again to Dallas. She took classes including drama at Southern Methodist University and earned a living by modeling. She also occasionally posed nude for the universities women's art classes and it was also at this time she had at least one session with a Dallas photographer posing nude. Her thespian debut occurred on September 21, 1951 in the Austin Civic Theatre's production of Ten Nights in a Barroom.

She struck up a friendship with Baruch Lumbet, father of Sydney Lumbet. He suggested Jayne take acting courses at the Dallas Institute of Performing Arts. When she confessed she couldn't even afford a babysitter, let alone acting classes, he took pity on the girl and gave her free classes. This led to a role in the local production Death of a Salesman. Milton Lewis, head of talent at Paramount Studios came to a performance, and told Lumbet, "Let me know when she's ready to come to Hollywood."

In 1954 Paul returned to Korea and grudgingly agreed to pack up the family Buick and head west to Hollywood so Jayne could follow her lifelong dream of stardom. Later she would recall upon crossing the California border, she got out of the car, kissed the ground and proclaimed, "I am home!"

She showed up in Hollywood, with no friends and without an agent. Without wasting any time, she called up Paramount Studios and said, "I want to be an actress. I have modeled and won many beauty contests. What do I do?" Enter the talent department. On April 30 she met with Milton Lewis, and had a screen test for Joan of Arc. She reported after the test the man who saw it said she was a good actress, but her figure was too distracting for him, and if it was distracting for him, it would be for everyone else. A few days later she then tested for The Seven Year Itch, which led to nowhere.

Paul anxious to get done with this little experiment and head back to Dallas, gave her the ultimatum. Her marriage or her career. She sent Paul back to Dallas without question. He tried to gain custody of Jayne Marie with the position that his wife's nude photos were hardly suitable for a fit mother. His motion was denied. The newly freed Jayne became a habitual party crasher, and at this time took on an on again off again relationship with Steve Cochran, an actor who lived across the road. (Steve allegedly had an affairs with Joan Crawford, Mamie Van Doren and Mae West.)

Her first television appearance was for Lux Video Theater in the live broadcast of The Angel Went AWOL on October 21, 1954. The story goes, she was hired by the producer, after she painstakingly sat in his office for three days. Finally she scribbled a note to him, and had it delivered. The card read simply "40-22-34". With measurements like that on her 5-foot-5-1/2 117-pound frame apparently was impressive to the producer. The note got her hired in the head spinning time of 30 seconds!

With her television appearance under her belt, she was offered a minor role in the production Hangover, which was re-titled The Female Jungle. This role led to nothing, and she returned to the theater where she worked selling popcorn. Upon seeing The Female Jungle for the first time in New York, she recalled her eyes filling with tears and she said, "I loved seeing me up there on the screen. I was filled with a chill. I had finally made it and wanted to stay there. 'I love you Jayne Mansfield," I told my image. 'I'll work hard for you! Nothing or no one could ever make me let you down.'"

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