Jocelyn Lane(I)
- Actress
- Producer
Jocelyn Lane is one of the most stunningly beautiful, and overlooked,
actresses to grace the screen. Born Jocelyn Bolton in Austria to
British parents in 1937, she was the younger sister of Mara Lane, who was
considered one of the most beautiful models in the UK during the early
1950s. Either because, or in spite of, her glamorous older sister,
Jocelyn had established herself as a popular model and cover girl by
the time she was 18, using the stage name Jackie Lane. During this
period she kept extremely busy as a cover girl, appearing on hundreds
of magazine covers around the world. Jackie was not above fibbing about
her age; in a 1957 photo pictorial by Russ Meyer in "Modern Man", the
20-year-old Jackie is referred to as "Mara's 18-year-old sister". Soon
Mara became yesterday's news and Jackie's extraordinary beauty found
her heralded as the "British Bardot". Her movie roles during this
period are international, and often confused with those of Jackie Lane, who
played Dorothea "Dodo" Chaplet opposite William Hartnell's Doctor Who during
part of 1966. Our Jackie moved to Hollywood in the mid-1960s, and began
using her birth name, perhaps to avoid confusion with the "other"
Jackie Lane who remained in England. There seems to have been some
trouble getting the new name to stick. In the October 4, 1964, "Life"
magazine, where she was the feature model in the article "The End of
[Hollywood's] Great Girl Drought", she is already billed as Jocelyn
Lane. Yet early publicity for the Elvis Presley musical Tickle Me (1965) still refers
to her as Jackie, as does her January 1966 cover photo on "Popular
Photography" magazine. Although Jocelyn feigned a convincing American
accent, her aloof, haughty screen persona did not endear her to US
audiences, despite several showy leading roles in popular B-films. She
retired from the screen in the early 1970s, ultimately marrying Spanish
royalty. However, she remains in the memory, literally becoming a
fixture of her cinematic times. One image of her, used on the poster of
her film Hell's Belles (1969), features a ground-level shot of the 32-year
old-Jocelyn (looking all of 22) in a black leather miniskirt and boots,
staring haughtily at the camera, has become an icon of 1960s pop
culture.