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Terry Huntingdon
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Terry Lynn Huntingdon is an American actress and beauty pageant titleholder who was crowned Miss USA 1959. She represented the United States at Miss Universe 1959, where as finished 2nd Runner-Up.
Key Information
Early years
[edit]Huntingdon comes from a family of five-generation Californians.[2] She attended Mt. Shasta High School, where she was a majorette[3] and went from there to the University of California, Los Angeles,[4] where she majored in dance.[5]
Beauty contests
[edit]One of Huntingdon's first beauty pageant titles was Miss Mount Shasta in 1954–1955.[6]

After winning the Miss California USA crown, Huntingdon went on to become California's first representative to achieve the title of Miss USA.[7] She was the first Miss USA to win the title at a pageant held in her home state.[8]
She was second runner-up in the Miss Universe 1959 pageant.[citation needed]
Acting
[edit]
Huntingdon made occasional television and film appearances. In her first television role in 1959 she appeared on Perry Mason as defendant Kitty Wynne in "The Case of the Bartered Bikini." She was a contestant on the television quiz show You Bet Your Life, hosted by Groucho Marx, in 1960. She also appeared as Hecuba in the Three Stooges feature film The Three Stooges Meet Hercules.
Paternity suit
[edit]Huntingdon was involved in a paternity suit in 1963 when attorney Arthur Crowley denied being the father of her daughter, who was then a year old.[9] In 1965, California's 2nd District Court of Appeal reversed the Superior Court's verdict, which went in Crowley's favor, and ordered a new trial.[10] In 1966, the California Supreme Court reversed the verdict in which Crowley was absolved, and it ordered a new trial.[11]
Other activities
[edit]After leaving acting, Huntingdon worked in a variety of jobs including being a production manager for a women's clothing business, modeling, working in the office of U.S. Senator Alan Cranston,[2] and being a photographer for the Office of Economic Opportunity in the early 1970s.[2]
In 1980, she was appointed to the board of Women's National Bank.[12]
Personal life
[edit]On April 19, 1975,[13] Huntingdon married former U.S. Senator Joseph Tydings of Maryland,[14] with whom she had one daughter, actress Alexandra Tydings.[15] They divorced in 1988.[citation needed]
Filmography
[edit]| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1959 | Miss USA 1959 | Herself | Winner - Contestant/Representing California State. |
| 1959 | Miss Universe 1959 | Herself | 2nd Runner-up - Contestant/Representing USA. |
| 1959 | Perry Mason | Kitty Wynne | Episode: "The Case of the Bartered Bikini" |
| 1960 | The Untouchables | Flo Ingalls | Episode: "The Waxey Gordon Story" |
| 1960 | The Law and Mr. Jones | Model | Episode: "No sale" |
| 1961 | The Adventures of Ozzie & Harriet | Joyce | Episode: "The Chaperone" |
| 1962 | The Three Stooges Meet Hercules | Hecuba | Film debut |
| 1962 | Five Finger Exercise | Helen |
Published works
[edit]- "California Girl: Miss USA 1959"
References
[edit]- ^ Tkacik, Christina; Kelly, Jacques; Rasmussen, Frederick N. (October 8, 2018). "Joseph D. Tydings, progressive U.S. senator from Maryland, dies at age 90". The Baltimore Sun. Archived from the original on September 1, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2023.
- ^ a b c Dickman, Sharon (April 15, 1976). "She's A Congenial Asset To The Campaign". The Evening Sun. Baltimore, Maryland. p. B1. Retrieved August 10, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "(photo caption)". Herald and News. Klamath Falls, Oregon. October 31, 1957. p. 11. Retrieved August 10, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Golden Stater". The Los Angeles Times. July 20, 1959. p. 3. Retrieved August 10, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "California Coed Chosen as Miss USA". Plainfield Courier-News. Bridgewater, New Jersey. Associated Press. July 23, 1959. p. 1. Retrieved August 10, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Darlene Enloe 16 Named Fair Queen". Herald and News. Klamath Falls, Oregon. August 21, 1955. p. 8. Retrieved August 10, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "California Girl Steps Up As Beauty Winner". The Press Democrat. Santa Rosa, California. United Press International. July 23, 1959. p. 9. Retrieved August 10, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Di Napoli, Daniela (July 12, 2015). "Miss USA winners through the years". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved February 26, 2023.
- ^ "Attorney Denies He's Child's Father". The Bristol Daily Courier. Bristol, Pennsylvania. United Press International. April 17, 1963. p. 37. Retrieved August 10, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Beauty Granted New Paternity Suit Trial". The Los Angeles Times. June 29, 1965. p. 40. Retrieved August 10, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "(untitled brief)". The Los Angeles Times. May 26, 1966. p. 2. Retrieved August 10, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "House for Sale". The Los Angeles Times. April 24, 1980. p. 93. Retrieved August 10, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Tydings Of Marriage". The Cincinnati Enquirer. April 22, 1975. p. 3. Retrieved August 10, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "From Maryland, with flair: blond, blue-eyed model Emlen Tydings". The Evening Sun. Baltimore, Maryland. August 8, 1982. p. E8. Retrieved August 10, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Roberts, Sam (October 12, 2018). "Joseph Tydings, Ex-Democratic Senator and Nixon Target, Dies at 90". The New York Times. Retrieved February 26, 2023.
External links
[edit]Terry Huntingdon
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Education
Birth and Family Background
Terry Lynn Huntingdon was born on May 8, 1940, in San Francisco, California.[3][6][1] As a fifth-generation Californian, she was raised in the rural setting of Mount Shasta, at the base of the 14,000-foot Mount Shasta volcano, following her family's relocation from the urban environment of San Francisco.[7][1] This small-town backdrop in Northern California, characterized by its proximity to natural landmarks and relative isolation from major metropolitan centers, provided the immediate familial context for her formative years, though specific details on parental occupations or household dynamics remain undocumented in primary sources.[1]Schooling and Early Development
Huntingdon attended Mount Shasta High School in Mount Shasta, California, graduating in 1958 as a majorette in the school band.[8] [4] Her role as majorette involved marching routines and baton twirling during band performances, activities that emphasized coordination, timing, and public presentation.[8] After high school, she enrolled at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), where she majored in dance.[9] Her coursework focused on dance techniques, which built upon her high school experiences by refining physical expression, rhythm, and stage awareness.[9] These institutional settings provided structured training in performative disciplines, observable in the precision required for both majorette drills and dance curricula.[4] As she approached graduation from UCLA, her academic advisor noted that her prominence in the smaller Mount Shasta community might contrast with the competitive environment of Los Angeles, advising adaptation to urban challenges.[4] This progression from rural high school extracurriculars to university-level dance studies marked her early cultivation of skills in poise and performance, evident in documented pageant preparatory demands of the era.[9]Beauty Pageant Career
Rise Through Local Competitions
Huntingdon, born and raised in Mount Shasta, California, initiated her beauty pageant involvement through local competitions in Northern California during her teenage years. These regional events, often tied to community festivals or preliminary qualifiers, emphasized attributes such as poise, talent demonstrations, and physical presentation, with winners advancing to state-level selection for Miss California USA. Her early participation built foundational experience in swimsuit, evening gown, and interview segments typical of the era's pageant format, where contestants numbered in the dozens per local event and judging prioritized natural beauty and stage presence over elaborate production.[10] As a student at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Huntingdon refined her competitive edge through academic and extracurricular pursuits that enhanced her composure and articulation skills, advantages noted in contemporary accounts of her progression. Representing Mount Shasta in preliminary rounds, she navigated a structured pathway where local titles granted entry to broader California auditions, culminating in her qualification for the Miss California USA 1959 event on June 27, 1959. This ascent from hometown contests underscored the decentralized feeder system of mid-20th-century U.S. pageants, where empirical success rates favored participants with regional familiarity and consistent performance across multiple venues.[11][1] Her physical attributes—standing approximately 5 feet 7 inches with a balanced figure suited to the swimsuit standards of the time—combined with practiced demeanor, distinguished her in local judging, which often scored on a 100-point scale allocating points for personality (20%), talent (20%), and appearance (60%). These competitions, drawing from small-town entrants, provided empirical data on viability for national contention, as only top local performers proceeded, filtering for resilience amid travel and repetitive evaluations.[12]Miss California USA 1959
Terry Lynn Huntingdon, a 19-year-old freshman at the University of California, Los Angeles from Mount Shasta, was crowned Miss California USA 1959 on June 27, 1959.[1] The event took place at the Starlight Bowl in Burbank, California, where she competed against other state contestants to earn the title.[10] Her selection as the winner positioned California to send a representative to the national Miss USA competition later that summer.[13] The Miss California USA pageant in 1959 emphasized traditional beauty pageant elements, including evaluations in swimsuit and evening gown competitions, alongside assessments of poise, personality, and interview responses.[14] Huntingdon's performance in these segments secured her victory, highlighting her physical appeal and composure under scrutiny.[1] As the titleholder, she received the opportunity to advance directly to the national stage, marking a pivotal step in her pageant career.[12] This state-level triumph underscored Huntingdon's rapid ascent in the competitive world of beauty pageants, occurring at the close of her first year of college and propelling her toward broader recognition.[1] The crowning not only qualified her for Miss USA 1959 but also aligned with the era's focus on selecting ambassadors who embodied ideals of American femininity and grace.[13]Miss USA 1959 Victory
Terry Lynn Huntingdon, having won the Miss California USA title on June 27, 1959, competed in the national Miss USA pageant held two days before the Miss Universe finals. The event took place on July 22, 1959, at the Long Beach Municipal Auditorium in Long Beach, California, with participants from 46 states vying for the crown through judged segments including swimsuit, evening gown, and interview competitions.[1][9] Huntingdon's performance led to her selection as the victor, marking California's inaugural win in the pageant's history and establishing her as the eighth Miss USA.[15] At the conclusion of the finals, outgoing titleholder Eurlyne Howell of Louisiana crowned the 19-year-old from Mount Shasta, California, amid national media attention captured by outlets like the Associated Press. Runners-up included first runner-up Carelgean Douglas of Texas, second runner-up Nanita Greene of Florida, third runner-up Arlene Nesbitt of Washington, D.C., and fourth runner-up Dorothy Gladys Taylor of Illinois.[16] The victory highlighted Huntingdon's poise and appeal in a competition emphasizing physical beauty, personality, and public representation potential, with no evidence supporting claims of pregnancy at the time—such assertions appear unsubstantiated and conflate unrelated pageant lore.[9] Huntingdon's triumph carried contemporary significance as the first Miss USA pageant held entirely in California, amplifying local pride and media coverage in a state increasingly prominent in American entertainment and culture. Her public persona as a wholesome, small-town representative resonated, positioning her for duties promoting American ideals of femininity and citizenship during her reign. Empirical metrics from the event, though not publicly detailed in scoring breakdowns, underscored her edge in subjective judging criteria over competitors from more pageant-experienced states.[17]Miss Universe 1959 Participation
As Miss USA 1959, Terry Lynn Huntingdon represented the United States at the Miss Universe 1959 pageant, held on July 18, 1959, at the Long Beach Auditorium in Long Beach, California—the final year the event took place there.[9] This international competition occurred just one day after her Miss USA crowning on July 17, 1959, at the same venue, requiring minimal travel but demanding rapid adaptation from national to global standards amid a grueling schedule.[9][2] Competing against 30 contestants from nations including Japan, Iceland, and Argentina, Huntingdon advanced through preliminary rounds evaluating swimsuit, evening gown, and interview segments before reaching the finals.[9] She ultimately placed as 2nd runner-up, behind winner Akiko Kojima of Japan and 1st runner-up Sigridur Paulma of Iceland.[2][9] This high but non-winning finish underscored the pageant's competitive intensity, where even the U.S. representative—selected from a field of 52 American states and territories—faced diverse physical, cultural, and performative challenges from international entrants, with judges prioritizing a composite of poise, beauty, and personality under subjective criteria.[9] The outcome highlighted practical realities of such events, including the slim odds of dual national-international success (only three Miss USA titleholders have won Miss Universe in the pageant's history up to that point) and the influence of judging panels comprising celebrities and officials whose preferences could favor exotic appeal over domestic familiarity.[2] Huntingdon's placement earned her media attention and prizes valued at approximately $25,000, including travel and endorsements, but fell short of the $50,000 grand prize and year-long title duties awarded to the victor.[9]Acting Career
Transition to Entertainment
Following her victory at the Miss USA 1959 pageant on July 17, 1959, Terry Lynn Huntingdon leveraged her newfound national prominence to enter the entertainment industry. Pageant success often attracted attention from casting directors seeking photogenic talent for television roles, and Huntingdon secured her first acting appearance shortly thereafter in the Perry Mason episode "The Case of the Bartered Bikini," which aired on October 31, 1959. In this debut, she played Kitty Wynne, a bikini model and defendant in a murder case, capitalizing on her recent title for visibility in a guest spot that highlighted her physical appeal over extensive acting experience. Huntingdon's entry was facilitated by the era's common pathway for beauty queens into media, where pageant organizations and media exposure provided informal connections to producers without formal agents being prominently documented in her case. By early 1960, she appeared as a contestant on the game show You Bet Your Life hosted by Groucho Marx on January 8, marking an initial foray into variety programming. She then pursued freelance modeling and television opportunities, relocating to New York City after her Miss Universe commitments ended in September 1959, where assignments took her across the U.S. and Europe.[18][19] The shift from pageant celebrity to professional acting presented hurdles, as the transient fame of titleholders rarely translated into enduring contracts amid competition from established performers. Huntingdon's career manifested as sporadic guest roles and film parts rather than series regulars, reflecting the challenges of building credentials beyond her beauty queen status in an industry prioritizing prior screen presence. This pattern of intermittent work underscored the difficulty in maintaining momentum post-pageant, with her efforts yielding a brief rather than sustained presence in Hollywood.[20]Key Television and Film Roles
Huntingdon debuted on television in the Perry Mason episode "The Case of the Bartered Bikini," which aired on October 17, 1959, playing Kitty Wynne, a swimsuit model suspected of murdering a fashion designer.[21] This role marked her entry into acting shortly after her Miss USA win, leveraging her pageant background in a character tied to the modeling industry.[21] In 1961, she appeared in the Route 66 episode "Effigy in Snow," portraying a skier amid a storyline involving a killer at a Squaw Valley ski resort.[22] The anthology series, known for its road-trip narratives and social themes, featured her in a minor supporting capacity during its critically acclaimed first season.[22] Her most prominent film role came in 1962 as Hecuba, a priestess, in The Three Stooges Meet Hercules, a time-travel comedy directed by Edward Bernds where the Stooges encounter ancient Greece.[23] The Columbia Pictures release capitalized on the Stooges' slapstick appeal, achieving commercial success with an estimated gross of $2 million domestically.[23] Reviews noted its formulaic humor typical of the era's family-oriented features, earning a 6.1/10 average user rating on IMDb from over 1,200 votes.[23]Career Challenges and Duration
Huntingdon's transition to acting was hampered by her lack of prior experience and the prevalence of typecasting for beauty pageant participants in an industry dominated by established talent. Her roles were predominantly minor guest appearances on television, reflecting the competitive landscape where newcomers often struggled for breakthroughs.[20][3] From 1959 to 1962, she appeared in approximately seven credited projects, including Perry Mason ("The Case of the Bartered Bikini," 1959), The Untouchables (1960), Route 66 (1960), The Law and Mr. Jones (1960), The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet (1961), and the film The Three Stooges Meet Hercules (1962). These limited engagements, mostly in supporting capacities, highlight the empirical barriers to sustained success, as her visibility from the Miss USA title did not translate into starring opportunities amid a surge of trained performers entering Hollywood during the early 1960s television boom.[3][24] By the mid-1960s, Huntingdon's acting output ceased, marking the effective end of her entertainment pursuits after roughly four years of sporadic work. This short duration aligns with patterns observed among pageant-affiliated actresses, where initial novelty faded against professional demands and market saturation.[20]Legal Controversies
Paternity Suit Against Arthur Crowley
In August 1961, Terry Huntingdon, an unmarried actress and former Miss USA, discovered she was pregnant and filed a filiation proceeding in Los Angeles Superior Court against attorney Arthur Crowley, alleging he was the father of her unborn child, initially named "Baby Girl" or "Baby Crowley" in the complaint.[25] The suit claimed multiple acts of sexual intercourse between the parties from May 1 to August 30, 1961, during which Huntingdon asserted she had no relations with any other men, positioning Crowley as the sole possible father.[25] Her last menstrual period began on or about July 21 or 22, 1961, placing the likely conception window between July 26 and August 7, with the child ultimately born on May 14, 1962.[25] The relationship timeline highlighted key encounters amid escalating tensions: an admitted sexual encounter in May 1961, followed by a violent argument on July 22, 1961, after which Huntingdon did not see Crowley until a reunion on August 2, 1961, to watch a television show she was promoting, leading to further claimed intercourse on August 2, 3, and 5.[25] Prior to filing, Huntingdon's abortion attempts failed or were abandoned, including arrangements facilitated by associate Alvin Ganzer, who provided an airplane ticket to Mexico City and $600 for the procedure.[25] Crowley immediately denied paternity upon learning of the pregnancy, refusing to provide financial support or marry Huntingdon despite her requests.[25] Early evidentiary disputes centered on the exclusivity of their relationship and potential alternative fathers. Huntingdon maintained she had been faithful to Crowley during the relevant period, but he countered by alleging her sexual involvement with others, specifically naming producer Alvin Ganzer and actor Brett Wright, including claimed intercourse with Wright on July 27-28, 1961—within the conception window.[25] These claims introduced contemporaneous evidence such as hotel records and witness statements suggesting Huntingdon's interactions with Wright, challenging her assertions of monogamy and forming the basis for pretrial and trial disputes over access to potentially exculpatory records.[25] The suit drew significant media attention, with press coverage documenting court appearances and portraying it as a high-profile scandal involving a beauty queen and a prominent Hollywood lawyer known for representing celebrities like Howard Hughes.[26] Photographs from 1961-1963 show Huntingdon testifying and Crowley as a witness, amplifying public interest in the evidentiary clashes over relationship fidelity and paternity timelines.[27]Court Proceedings and Outcomes
The paternity suit proceeded to trial in Los Angeles Superior Court, culminating in a jury verdict on May 15, 1963, after an eight-week proceeding, where nine jurors found by majority that Arthur Crowley was not the father of Huntingdon's daughter, born May 14, 1962, with standard ABO, MN, and Rh blood tests excluding one alleged alternative partner but failing to exclude another.[28][25] Huntingdon's claims rested on testimony of repeated intercourse with Crowley from May through August 1961, while Crowley admitted a single act in May but alleged subsequent relations with others and introduced testimony from potential alternative fathers, highlighting limits in contemporaneous blood testing for affirmative paternity proof, which could only exclude rather than confirm biological causation.[25] Huntingdon appealed the judgment, raising issues including the trial court's exclusion of proposed Kell-Cellano blood grouping tests—deemed experimental and lacking general medical acceptance under the prevailing Frye standard—and an erroneous jury instruction that improperly shifted the burden by implying opportunity with others mandated acquittal.[25] In Huntingdon v. Crowley (1966), the California Supreme Court reversed the judgment, criticizing the instruction for undermining the presumption of legitimacy absent conclusive exclusion and upholding the exclusion of the Kell-Cellano evidence due to its unproven reliability, though noting standard tests' inconclusive results underscored evidentiary challenges in filiation suits reliant on testimony amid potential multiple partners.[25] The case was remanded for retrial, but no public record confirms a subsequent proceeding or final paternity adjudication, leaving resolution uncertain and emphasizing judicial caution against overreliance on nascent serological methods for causal determination in disputed parentage.[25] The proceedings reflected Huntingdon's insistence on support obligations under Civil Code sections 196a and 231, contrasted with Crowley's defense portraying her claims as potentially misrepresented amid admitted early intimacy but denied ongoing exclusivity, with the reversal providing no ultimate vindication but exposing trial flaws that could bias outcomes toward non-paternity in era-limited forensic contexts.[25][28] Absent conclusive biological exclusion or affirmative proof, the suit underscored testimony's primacy and vulnerabilities, debunking any presumption of straightforward relational causation without rigorous evidentiary safeguards.[25]Later Activities and Contributions
Non-Entertainment Ventures
After her acting roles concluded in the early 1960s, Terry Huntingdon maintained a low public profile outside entertainment, with no documented involvement in prominent business enterprises, real estate dealings, or advocacy initiatives in available biographical accounts.[20][29] Freelance modeling provided occasional residuals tied to her pageant visibility, but such activities did not extend into structured non-entertainment operations.[30] Empirical gaps persist in public records regarding entrepreneurial or civic pursuits beyond the 1960s, reflecting a shift toward private life rather than public or commercial endeavors.[2]Published Memoir and Reflections
In 2013, Terry Huntingdon Tydings published her memoir California Girl: Miss USA 1959, a self-published account issued by Outskirts Press on September 6 of that year.[4] The 170-page book provides a first-person narrative of her early life, pageant successes, and subsequent career challenges, beginning with her high school years in California and culminating in reflections on her experiences in entertainment and personal adversities.[19] Tydings recounts her crowning as Miss California on June 27, 1959, followed by her selection as Miss USA less than a month later, and her representation of the United States at the Miss Universe pageant, emphasizing the transition from small-town prominence to national exposure.[1] The memoir candidly addresses the beauty industry's demands, including the physical and psychological toll of pageantry and modeling, as well as her ventures into acting and the interpersonal conflicts that arose, such as legal disputes over paternity and their impact on her public image.[4] Tydings presents these events through a lens of personal resilience, critiquing the era's expectations for women in the spotlight while attributing her perspectives to direct experiences rather than external ideologies.[1] Themes of self-determination recur, with the author reflecting on how early achievements shaped her navigation of Hollywood's competitive landscape and private setbacks, without romanticizing the glamour often associated with such pursuits.[31] Reception for the self-published work has been modest, with reader reviews on commercial platforms noting its straightforward, unvarnished tone as a strength for factual recounting, though some critique its limited editorial polish typical of independent publishing.[1] Available primarily through online retailers like Amazon and Barnes & Noble, the book serves as a primary source for Tydings' self-assessment of her legacy, prioritizing chronological detail over broader cultural analysis.[32] No major literary awards or widespread critical acclaim followed its release, aligning with its niche appeal to pageant history enthusiasts and those interested in mid-20th-century American entertainment anecdotes.[1]Personal Life
Marriages and Relationships
Huntingdon engaged in a romantic and sexual relationship with attorney Arthur Crowley in 1961, involving multiple instances of intercourse from May 1 to August 30.[25] In April 1975, she married former U.S. Senator Joseph Tydings of Maryland, adopting the hyphenated surname Huntingdon Tydings thereafter.[33][34] The marriage ended in divorce.[35]Family and Legacy
Terry Lynn Huntingdon gave birth to a daughter, Elizabeth Paige, on May 14, 1962.[26] The child's paternity became a matter of public legal dispute when Huntingdon filed suit against Hollywood attorney Arthur J. Crowley, alleging him as the father; blood tests conducted during proceedings excluded Crowley, leading to a jury verdict in his favor affirmed on appeal by the California Supreme Court in 1966.[25][36] No further children are documented in public records. Information on Elizabeth's adult life, marriages, or any grandchildren remains private and unavailable in verifiable sources, limiting documented intergenerational family continuity. Huntingdon raised her daughter amid the fallout from the suit's media attention, which highlighted challenges for unmarried mothers in the early 1960s entertainment industry. Huntingdon's familial legacy endures through this sole offspring, underscoring her navigation of scandal as a young titleholder; while the controversy overshadowed aspects of her pageant success, it exemplified early precedents for public figures addressing unwed parenthood without institutional support structures common today.[25] Her trailblazing Miss USA 1959 win, as California's first, indirectly influenced family narratives in beauty competitions by normalizing complex personal histories among participants.Health and Later Years
Huntingdon, born on May 8, 1940, turned 85 years old in 2025 and has maintained a low public profile in her later decades following her early career in pageants and acting.[2] Married to former U.S. Senator Joseph D. Tydings until his death on December 8, 2018, she resided primarily in Maryland, associated with the Tydings family political circles, though details of her post-1970s personal residence remain private.[8] No major public health disclosures or events have been reported for her in recent years, consistent with a retirement focused away from entertainment and media scrutiny.[37] Her last noted public engagement was a 2012 interview reflecting on a 1962 film role, indicating sustained but infrequent visibility.[37]Professional Output
Filmography
Terry Huntingdon's acting career in the late 1950s and early 1960s primarily consisted of guest appearances on television series and supporting roles in feature films.[3] Her credits, drawn from production records and cast listings, are as follows:| Year | Title | Role | Medium |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1959 | Perry Mason | Kitty Wynne | Television |
| 1960 | The Untouchables | Flo Ingalls | Television |
| 1960 | The Law and Mr. Jones | Model | Television |
| 1961 | Route 66 ("Effigy in Snow") | Skier | Television |
| 1961 | Sail a Crooked Ship | Young Lady Pilgrim | Film (uncredited) |
| 1962 | Five Finger Exercise | Helen | Film |
| 1962 | The Three Stooges Meet Hercules | Hecuba | Film |
Bibliography
- California Girl: Miss USA 1959. Outskirts Press, 2013. ISBN 978-1-4787-1643-3.[19][1]
- The Massacre: Covert Assaults on the American Electorate. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2015. ISBN 978-1-5053-4759-3.[39][40]
References
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Terry_Lynn_Huntingdon_as_Miss_California.jpg
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Miss_USA_1959_and_runners-up.jpg
