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American actress (1937–1990) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ina Balin (née Rosenberg; November 12, 1937 – June 20, 1990) was an American stage, film, and television actress.[1] She is best known for her role in the film From the Terrace (1960), for which she received two Golden Globe Award nominations and won one for Most Promising Newcomer – Female.
Ina Balin | |
---|---|
Born | Ina Rosenberg November 12, 1937 Brooklyn, New York, U.S. |
Died | June 20, 1990 52) New Haven, Connecticut, U.S. | (aged
Education | New York University |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1957–1990 |
Children | 3 (adopted) |
Balin was born in Brooklyn, New York to Jewish parents. Her father, Sam Rosenberg, was a dancer, singer, and comedian who worked in the Borscht Belt.[2] He later quit show business to join his family's furrier business. Her mother was a Hungarian-born professional dancer who escaped a troubled family life by marrying at age 15. Sam Rosenberg was her third husband by age 21. They, too, divorced when Ina and her brother, Richard Balin, were still quite young. The siblings were placed in boarding schools until their mother married a fourth time, then to shoe magnate Harold Balin, who later adopted Ina and Richard. [2]
Balin graduated from high school at age 15 after having spent five years at a boarding school in Pennsylvania.[3]
Balin first appeared on television on The Perry Como Show. She guest-starred on dozens of television shows, including Wonder Woman; Adventures in Paradise; Bonanza; The Lieutenant; The Dick Van Dyke Show; The Six Million Dollar Man; Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea; Battlestar Galactica; Get Smart; Hart to Hart; It Takes a Thief; Ironside; Twelve O'Clock High; The Loner; Quincy, M.E.; The Streets of San Francisco;[4] Magnum, P.I.; and Mannix.
She appeared with Joseph Cotten, Fernando Lamas, and Dean Jagger in the 1969 television movie The Lonely Profession.
Balin did summer stock, which led to roles on Broadway. She first starred on Broadway in Compulsion, portraying Ruth.[5] In 1959, she had the role of Alice Black in the comedy A Majority of One.[6]
In 1959, Balin landed her first film role in The Black Orchid.[5] She was Paul Newman's love interest in the 1960 screen adaptation of From the Terrace. In 1961, she appeared as Pilar Graile in The Comancheros with John Wayne and Stuart Whitman. Co-starring with Jerry Lewis in the 1964 hit comedy The Patsy, Balin also had a secondary part in 1965's The Greatest Story Ever Told. She also co-starred with Elvis Presley in his 1969 film Charro! She co-starred in the 1971 film The Projectionist. She also co-starred in the 1982 comedy The Comeback Trail, and she appeared in The Young Doctors, the 1961 hospital drama with Ben Gazzara and Fredric March.[citation needed]
In 1959, Balin won the Theatre World Award for her performance in the Broadway comedy A Majority of One.[7] In 1961, in recognition of her critically acclaimed performance in From the Terrace, she won the New Star of the Year-Actress Golden Globe Award and was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress — Motion Picture.[8]
In 1966, Balin toured Vietnam with the USO on the first of many trips to the war-torn region. In 1975, she aided in the evacuation of orphans during the fall of Saigon. Eventually, she adopted three of these orphaned children. In 1980, she played herself in The Children of An Lac, a television movie based on her experiences.[9]
Balin, a former cigarette smoker,[10] died on June 20, 1990, at Yale–New Haven Hospital in New Haven, Connecticut, aged 52, from complications of chronic lung disease, including pulmonary hypertension (a condition of increased blood pressure in the arteries of the lungs).[1][11] She had been at the hospital seeking a lung transplant.[11]
A single mother, she was survived by her father, Sam Rosenberg; her three adopted children, Nguyet Baty, Ba-Nhi Mai, and Kim Thuy; a brother, Richard Balin; and two grandchildren.[1] Ba-Nhi Mai and Kim Thuy were raised by Hollywood talent agent Ted Ashley and his wife Page (née Cuddy).[12]
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