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Cleo Moore

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Cleo Una Moore[a] (October 31, 1924[2][3] – October 25, 1973) was an American actress, usually featured in the role of a blonde bombshell in Hollywood films of the 1950s, including seven films with Hugo Haas. She also became a well-known pin-up girl.

Key Information

Early life

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Moore was born in[2][3] in Galvez, Louisiana,[4] and raised in nearby Gonzales. Her father ran a grocery store. She was educated in Gonzales public schools and took a secretarial course at Pope's Commercial College in Baton Rouge.[5]

She married Palmer Long, the youngest child of Huey Long, the former governor of Louisiana who was assassinated while a senator, but the marriage ended in six weeks.[4]

Moore was named Miss Van Nuys for 1947–1948.[6][7]

Career

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Moore made her film debut in 1948 in Embraceable You.[8] She also played the leading lady in the film serial Congo Bill[9] and worked for Warner Bros. briefly in 1950. She worked for RKO Pictures from 1950 to 1952, appearing in films such as Hunt the Man Down and Gambling House.

She signed with Columbia Pictures in 1952. The studio had plans to mold Moore as its next film star, hoping that she would bring Columbia the success that Twentieth Century-Fox was enjoying with Marilyn Monroe. In order to compete with Monroe, Moore's hair was bleached platinum blond. Columbia dubbed her "The Next Big Thing" and "The Blonde Rita Hayworth". She first gained attention as a doomed gun moll in Nicholas Ray's film noir On Dangerous Ground in 1952.[citation needed]

Moore began starring in films in 1952. In 1953, she appeared in One Girl's Confession, opposite Hugo Haas, who directed and appeared with her in several other films. She starred in Thy Neighbor's Wife (1953) and Bait (1954), both directed by Haas.

In 1954, she starred in The Other Woman, playing a vengeful B-movie bit player. Upon completing a supporting role in Women's Prison (1955), Moore signed a brief deal with Universal Pictures to play a suicidal prostitute in the low-budget thriller Hold Back Tomorrow (1955), again opposite Agar.

In 1956, Moore starred as a predatory career girl in Over-Exposed, costarring Richard Crenna. The following year, Moore made her final film appearance in Hit and Run (1957). After the release of the film, she retired from acting.

Personal life

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After her six-week marriage to Palmer Long, Moore remained single through the 1940s and 1950s. In 1961, Moore married real-estate developer Herbert Heftler.[10]

Moore found success as a businesswoman in real estate after her screen career ended.[11]

Death

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Moore died in 1973 from a heart attack at the age of 48. Her remains are buried at Inglewood Park Cemetery.[3]

Partial filmography

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Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Cleo Moore (October 31, 1924 – October 25, 1973) was an American actress renowned for her portrayals of sultry, blonde femme fatales in low-budget Hollywood B-movies during the 1950s, particularly in film noir and exploitation dramas.[1][2] Born Cleouna Moore in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to a building contractor father, she began her career as a model before transitioning to acting, debuting on screen in the 1948 serial Congo Bill.[3][1] Her breakthrough came through a series of collaborations with director Hugo Haas at Columbia Pictures, where she starred in provocative roles that established her as a pin-up icon of the era.[3][1] Moore's most notable films include Strange Fascination (1952), where she played a mysterious singer entangled in murder; One Girl's Confession (1953), a taut noir about revenge and morality; Bait (1954), a tale of greed and seduction; The Other Woman (1954), exploring jealousy and deception; Hold Back Tomorrow (1955), depicting a death-row romance; and Women's Prison (1955), an all-female cast drama highlighting institutional brutality.[3][2][1] These Haas-produced pictures, often featuring Moore as a morally ambiguous temptress, capitalized on her striking beauty and dramatic intensity, though they were critically dismissed as sensationalist yet commercially successful at drive-ins and second-run theaters.[1] She also appeared in supporting roles in higher-profile films like On Dangerous Ground (1951) alongside Robert Ryan and Ida Lupino, and westerns such as Dynamite Pass (1950) with Tim Holt.[3][2] After her final leading role in Hit and Run (1957), a gritty crime thriller, Moore retired from acting at age 33, reportedly due to a desire for privacy following a near-fatal car accident in 1959.[3][1] She married real estate developer Herbert Heftler in 1961, with whom she had a daughter, Debra, in 1963, and lived quietly in California until her death from a heart attack eight days before her 49th birthday.[1] Though her filmography was limited to around 25 features, Moore's archetypal "bad girl" persona endures as a symbol of mid-century pulp cinema's allure and excess.[2][1]

Early life

Family background

Cleo Moore was born Cleouna Moore on October 31, 1924, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to parents Murphy Charles Moore, a building contractor, and Una Causey Moore, although some records, including her obituary, list her birth year as 1929 based on her reported age at death.[4][5][6] The family resided primarily in Louisiana during her early years, with Moore raised in the nearby town of Gonzales after an initial relocation from Baton Rouge.[4][7] She grew up with several siblings, including younger sisters Marilee (born around 1938), Johnnie (born around 1944), Mara Lea, and Voni.[4][6] Her father's work in construction contributed to the family's mobility in the region during her formative years, shaping a childhood marked by transitions within Louisiana before the household moved to California in 1946.[4]

Education and initial pursuits

Moore graduated from Gonzales High School in 1941, after which she took a secretarial course at Pope's Commercial College in Baton Rouge.[4][7] In 1946, following the end of World War II, Moore relocated with her family to Southern California, where her father anticipated a postwar construction boom and established a successful building enterprise. She contributed to the family's business during this period, gaining initial experience in a professional environment while residing in the Los Angeles area.[4] Moore's entry into the entertainment industry began through modeling and beauty contests, reflecting her early aspirations to build a public persona in Hollywood. In 1947, she was crowned Miss Van Nuys, a local title that highlighted her striking blonde appearance and led to opportunities in pin-up photography and promotional work. These sessions, including poses for events like the 1949 California Hobby Show where she was named "Miss Plastic Art," helped cultivate her image as a glamorous bombshell and attracted attention from talent scouts, resulting in initial screen tests for film roles.[7][8][4]

Career

Film debut and early roles

Cleo Moore made her screen debut in an uncredited bit part as Sylvia in the romantic comedy Embraceable You, released by Warner Bros. on August 21, 1948.[9] Later that year, she secured her first credited role as the leading lady in the 15-chapter Columbia serial Congo Bill, portraying the dual characters of Queen Lureen and heiress Ruth Culver, a missing woman sought by adventurer Congo Bill in an African jungle setting.[10] This adventure serial marked her breakthrough into more prominent screen work, though it remained a low-budget production typical of the era's chapterplays. After Congo Bill, Moore returned briefly to modeling before resuming her acting career in 1950 with a short-term contract at Warner Bros., which led to a series of supporting roles in B-movies.[11] That year alone, she appeared in seven films, often as a sensual, blonde ingenue in low-budget Westerns and film noirs, including Rio Grande Patrol as Peppie, Gambling House as Sally, 711 Ocean Drive as Mal's Date (uncredited), and Hunt the Man Down as Pat Sheldon. These roles, produced by studios like RKO and Columbia, highlighted her physical appeal but confined her to peripheral characters in fast-paced, economical genre pictures.[12][13] From 1950 to 1952, Moore transitioned to a contract with RKO Radio Pictures, where her screen time gradually expanded in additional B-films such as Dynamite Pass (as Lulu) and On Dangerous Ground (as Myrna Bowers), yet she faced persistent typecasting as a voluptuous, undemanding blonde in supporting parts that emphasized allure over dramatic depth.[12][13] This early phase established her within Hollywood's low-budget sector, where her striking looks garnered attention but limited opportunities for varied characterization.[14]

Collaboration with Hugo Haas

Cleo Moore's collaboration with director, writer, and actor Hugo Haas began with Strange Fascination (1952), where she played Margo, a mysterious singer entangled in murder, followed in earnest by One Girl's Confession (1953), in which she took the lead role of Mary Adams, a vengeful secretary who confesses to robbery and murder to avenge her mother's mistreatment by her wealthy employer.[15][16] This low-budget noir marked a pivotal shift for Moore, transitioning her from supporting roles to starring as a determined, morally complex protagonist in Haas's independently produced films. Haas, a Czech émigré known for his fatalistic melodramas, cast Moore as his muse, leveraging her blonde allure and Southern accent to embody resilient women entangled in crime and betrayal.[17] The partnership yielded several key films that defined Moore's screen persona, including Thy Neighbor's Wife (1953), in which she portrayed Lita Vojnar, a woman drawn into adultery and murder amid village intrigue; Bait (1954), where she played Peggy, the seductive wife in a gold-mining triangle of greed and jealousy opposite Haas and John Agar; The Other Woman (1954), featuring Moore as an aspiring actress seeking revenge on a manipulative director; Hold Back Tomorrow (1955), depicting her as a condemned woman sharing a final night with a death-row inmate played by John Agar; and Hit and Run (1957), her last film, as a married woman tempted by a younger man, leading to a fatal accident cover-up. These productions, often shot on tight schedules and budgets under Haas's Colpix banner, emphasized recurring motifs of doomed romance, criminal impulses, and femme fatale archetypes, with Moore's characters frequently outmaneuvering weak-willed men in tales of perfidy and retribution.[18] This series of collaborations significantly boosted Moore's visibility in the B-movie circuit, establishing her as an icon of 1950s film noir through her portrayals of ambiguous blondes who blurred lines between victim and villain.[17] The Haas films garnered a cult following decades later, particularly from the 1980s onward via television broadcasts and home video releases, cementing their status as overlooked gems of low-budget suspense and highlighting Moore's naturalistic intensity in roles that showcased female agency amid masculine folly.[7]

Final films and retirement

In 1956, Moore starred in the Columbia Pictures film Over-Exposed, directed by Lewis Seiler, where she portrayed Lila Crane, an ambitious burlesque dancer who poses as a model and transitions into a photographer while uncovering criminal activities in New York City's nightlife scene.[19] This role marked one of her few major studio projects outside her typical low-budget collaborations, showcasing her as a resourceful femme fatale navigating deception and danger.[20] Moore's last film appearance came in 1957 with Hit and Run, a noir thriller directed by Hugo Haas, in which she played Julie Hilmer, a woman entangled in a web of infidelity, blackmail, and moral compromise alongside Haas and Vince Edwards.[21] Produced by Haas's independent company, the film encapsulated the seedy, fatalistic tone of her signature Haas vehicles but also signaled the close of her on-screen work.[22] At age 33, following the release of Hit and Run, Moore chose to retire from acting, turning down further offers to prioritize her personal life and future family commitments.[22] She made no return to the industry, effectively ending her nine-year Hollywood career that spanned roughly 20 feature films, predominantly B-movies where she embodied the archetype of the seductive, troubled blonde.[23]

Personal life

First marriage

Cleo Moore's first marriage took place in 1944, shortly after graduating from high school in Louisiana. She eloped with Palmer Reid Long, the youngest son of the assassinated Louisiana Governor and U.S. Senator Huey Pierce Long Jr., in a union that captured brief media attention due to the groom's prominent family background.[6] The couple married in Baton Rouge, but the relationship was marked by their young ages—she 19 and he 23—reflecting a whirlwind romance. (Note: Some sources, including her 1973 obituary, report her birth year as 1929, implying an age of 15 at marriage; however, most biographical references use 1924.)[5][24] The marriage proved short-lived, lasting only six weeks before it was annulled, with no children born during this period. Moore returned to her family and pursuits in California, where she began modeling and entering beauty pageants, such as being named Miss Van Nuys in 1947–1948. The dissolution occurred amicably and without notable public scandals, attributed to personal incompatibilities and the impulsiveness of youth rather than any dramatic conflicts.[6][25] This early union had minimal direct impact on Moore's burgeoning acting career, which did not take off until the late 1940s with her film debut. However, the experience underscored her Louisiana roots and may have contributed to her decision to remain single through the 1940s and 1950s, allowing her to focus entirely on professional opportunities in Hollywood without domestic obligations. The annulment provided a clean break, enabling her to pursue roles in B-movies and film noir without personal entanglements complicating her rising profile.[6]

Second marriage and family

Cleo Moore married real estate developer Herbert Heftler on November 19, 1961, in Teaneck, New Jersey, after meeting him while filming an industrial promotional film in the late 1950s.[4] The couple's union marked a significant shift for Moore, who had retired from acting shortly before to prioritize family life over her Hollywood career.[1] Their daughter, Debra Lee Heftler, was born in 1963, fulfilling Moore's long-held wish for motherhood amid her transition from the spotlight.[1] The family settled into a stable domestic routine, with no additional children born during the marriage. Moore devoted much of her time to raising Debra while offering support to Heftler's real estate ventures, reflecting the enduring partnership that defined her later years.[4] The Heftlers resided on a spacious estate in Coldwater Canyon, Beverly Hills, California, where Moore embraced the role of homemaker and local socialite.[7] This serene family environment in the affluent enclave provided a stark contrast to her earlier tumultuous personal life, and the marriage remained intact until Moore's death in 1973, with Heftler outliving her until 1999.[26]

Later years and death

Post-acting endeavors

After retiring from acting following the release of her final film in 1957, Cleo Moore transitioned into the life of a prominent Beverly Hills socialite during the 1960s, engaging in the city's elite social scene while maintaining a degree of privacy from her former Hollywood associates. In late 1959, she was seriously injured in a near-fatal car accident in Los Angeles, which contributed to her desire for a more private life.[1] She and her family, established in the area after her 1961 marriage to real estate developer Herbert Heftler, participated in high-society gatherings that reflected the affluent lifestyle of the era's upper echelons in Los Angeles.[1] Moore achieved considerable success as a businesswoman in real estate, collaborating closely with her husband on investments and property development ventures that capitalized on the booming post-war market in Southern California. Their joint efforts transformed her into a savvy entrepreneur, with the couple amassing a significant portfolio of properties that underscored her acumen beyond the screen.[27] Residing on a sprawling estate in Coldwater Canyon, Beverly Hills, Moore cultivated a serene and secluded existence, focusing on family and business pursuits rather than public appearances. This phase of her life highlighted her adaptability, evolving from a film starlet to a discreet yet influential figure in Beverly Hills society.[4]

Illness and death

In the final years of her life, Cleo Moore resided quietly in Beverly Hills with her family, but she passed away suddenly on October 25, 1973, at the age of 48, succumbing to a heart attack while sleeping at her home in Inglewood, California.[3][1] Funeral services were held privately on October 29, 1973, in Inglewood, after which Moore was interred at Inglewood Park Cemetery.[28][24] She was survived by her husband, real estate developer Herbert Heftler, whom she had married in 1961, and their daughter, Debra, born in 1963; the family managed her affairs following her death, though details of her estate and will were not publicly disclosed.[1][29]

Filmography

Feature films

Cleo Moore appeared in approximately 25 feature films between 1948 and 1957, primarily low-budget B-movies from studios such as Columbia Pictures, Lippert Productions, and Universal-International, where she frequently played seductive, vengeful blonde characters entangled in crime or moral dilemmas.[30] Her roles often emphasized her physical allure and tough persona, contributing to the noir and exploitation elements popular in 1950s drive-in cinema. While early appearances were minor, her lead performances in the Hugo Haas cycle—seven films in total—cemented her status in the genre, though these productions received mixed critical reception but solid box-office returns for their budget level.[31][1] Her ascent to leads began with the Haas collaborations, showcasing her as a calculating femme fatale. In One Girl's Confession (1953, Columbia), Moore starred as Mary Adams, a waitress who robs her abusive employer and confesses to secure revenge, a role that highlighted her steely resolve and earned the film popularity as one of the decade's notable B-movies.[15] The following year, Bait (1954, United Artists release via Haas) featured her as Peggy, a gold-digging beauty who manipulates three men in a deadly mine scheme, exemplifying the vengeful blonde trope central to her Haas films and drawing modest box-office success. Later highlights included Over-Exposed (1956, Columbia), where Moore played aspiring photographer Lila Crane (alias Lily Krenshka), a nightclub dancer entangled in blackmail and murder, praised for its taut pacing despite formulaic elements.[32]
YearTitleRoleProduction Notes
1953One Girl's ConfessionMary AdamsColumbia; Haas-directed noir; vengeful robbery plot; popular B-hit.[15]
1954BaitPeggyHaas/United Artists; gold mine intrigue; seductive manipulator archetype.
1956Over-ExposedLily Krenshka / Lila CraneColumbia; crime thriller; career ambition amid scandal.[32]

Television and serials

Cleo Moore's on-screen work extended beyond feature films into serials and early television, though her appearances in these formats were limited, reflecting her primary focus on B-movies during the late 1940s and 1950s.[17] Her debut in serialized storytelling came with the 15-chapter Columbia Pictures serial Congo Bill (1948), directed by Spencer G. Bennet and Thomas Carr, where she portrayed the dual role of Lureen, the "White Queen" of a hidden African valley, and Ruth Culver, the missing heiress sought by adventurer Congo Bill (Don McGuire).[33] This cliffhanger-style production, based on the DC Comics character created by Whitney Ellsworth and George Papp, emphasized adventure and exotic locales, with Moore's character central to the plot involving fortune inheritance and tribal intrigue across its episodic structure of weekly installments.[33] The serial's format, typical of the era's chapterplays, featured high-stakes action sequences and recurring villains, marking Moore's early exposure to multi-part narratives before her shift to standalone films. In the mid-1950s, as television gained prominence, Moore made a rare guest appearance on the anthology series Ford Theatre (also known as Ford Television Theatre), playing Lana in the episode "Remember to Live," which aired on November 4, 1954.[34] This dramatic installment, directed by James Neilson and starring Dane Clark as Joe Travis alongside Barbara Hale, explored themes of personal redemption and rural life, with Moore's supporting role contributing to the story's emotional depth amid its live-broadcast style common to early network TV.[34] Unlike her film work, Moore had no recurring television roles, and her episodic outings remained sporadic, underscoring the transitional period when anthology programs like Ford Theatre bridged radio drama to visual storytelling for Hollywood talent.[34]

Complete Feature Films

YearTitleRoleNotes
1948Embraceable YouSylviaUncredited
1950Dynamite PassLuluLippert Pictures
1950Bright LeafLouiseUncredited
1950711 Ocean DriveMal's DateUncredited
1950The Great Jewel Robber(uncredited)
1950Rio Grande PatrolFlo
1950Hi-JackedPhyllis Dulane
1950Gambling HouseSecretary
1951On Dangerous GroundMyrna Bowers
1952Strange FascinationMargoDirected by Hugo Haas
1953One Girl's ConfessionMary AdamsDirected by Hugo Haas
1953Thy Neighbor's WifeLitaDirected by Hugo Haas
1954BaitPeggyDirected by Hugo Haas
1954The Other WomanSherry StewardDirected by Hugo Haas
1955Hold Back TomorrowDoraDirected by Hugo Haas
1955Women's PrisonMae
1956Over-ExposedLily Krenshka / Lila Crane
1957Hit and RunJulie HilmerDirected by Hugo Haas[3]
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