Barbara Rush Movies and Career Information
Jan 04, 1927
Denver
Actor
Barbara Rush (born January 4, 1927) is an American stage, film, and television actress. A student at the University of California, Santa Barbara, Barbara Rush performed on stage at the Pasadena Playhouse before signing with Paramount Pictures. She made her screen debut in the 1951 movie The Goldbergs and went on to star opposite the likes of James Mason, Marlon Brando, Paul Newman, Richard Burton, Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra and Kirk Douglas. In 1954 she won the Golden Globe Award for "Most Promising Newcomer - Female" for her performance in It Came from Outer Space. Rush began her career on stage and it has always been a part of her professional life. In 1970, she earned the Sarah Siddons Award for dramatic achievement in Chicago theatre for her leading role in Forty Carats and brought her one-woman play A Woman of Independent Means to Broadway in 1984. She began working on television in the 1950s. She later became a regular performer in TV movies, miniseries, and a variety of other shows including Peyton Place and the soap opera All My Children. In 1962, she guest starred as Linda Kinkcaid in the episode "Make Me a Place" on the NBC medical drama about psychiatry, The Eleventh
- Barbara Rush Movies before 2012
- Strangers When We Meet 1960
- Magnificent Obsession 1954
- It Came From Outer Space 1953
- When Worlds Collide (1951) 1951
- What Makes Sammy Run?
- Young Philadelphians
- Bigger Than Life (1956)
- Captain Lightfoot (1955)
- When Worlds Collide
- Hombre