Sue Casey
While other actresses would have long given up a stalled career out of pure frustration after decades of mostly uncredited extra/bit parts and little reward, perennial starlet Sue Casey somehow found the stamina to maintain for six decades! In films from 1946, the voluptuous brunette, at most, became a campy vixen in a few 1960s "drive-in" bombs, yet has always held a remarkably appreciative outlook as to how things turned out.
Successfully establishing herself as a wholesome commercial actress, she pitched everything from cereal to automobiles in over 200 assignments. Light TV guest parts also came her way in episodes of The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour (1957), The Baileys of Balboa (1964), The Dick Van Dyke Show (1961), The Farmer's Daughter (1963), The Beverly Hillbillies (1962) and Family Affair (1966), among others. As for the big screen, nothing changed. Obscure bit/extra parts continued with Bells Are Ringing (1960), The Ladies Man (1961), Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961), Two Weeks in Another Town (1962), A New Kind of Love (1963) and The Carpetbaggers (1964).
Finally, after nearly two decades of pursuing her dream in Hollywood, Casey nabbed a leading role! As bad girl "Vicky Lindsay" in what is arguably one of film's biggest "turkeys" of all time, The Beach Girls and the Monster (1965), she attained a notoriety that led to minor cult status. The film had a non-existent budget and was received poorly in every way, shape and form upon its initial release. Casey even had to do her own hair and makeup and was forced to pick out her vixen character's clothes from her own closet. The actors were never paid until the movie was sold years later to TV (retitled as "Monster from the Surf") and that was a mere pittance. Over the years, however, the movie has reportedly gained a cult following. Two other easily dismissed co-starring roles in unmemorable campy films followed. She played a hillbilly mom in the fugitive drama Swamp Country (1966) (which starred pearly-toothed pre-Carol Burnett hunk Lyle Waggoner) and a manipulative mom and art forger in Catalina Caper (1967) (which starred former Disney star Tommy Kirk after his fall from studio grace, and (again) Lyle Waggoner).
In later years, she developed a successful real estate business. She found acting work (often without an agent) intermittently on film and TV. Featured in a couple of higher-scaled movie musicals -- as a lady attendant to Vanessa Redgrave's Queen Guinevere in Camelot (1967) and as one of John Mitchum's two wives in Paint Your Wagon (1969) -- her final film resume would add such films as The Main Event (1979), Evilspeak (1981), Whitesnake: Live... in the Still of the Night (2005) and A Very Brady Sequel (1996). In American Beauty (1999), an Oscar winner for "Best Picture" and "Best Actor", lead actress Annette Bening (a Best Actress nominee for the role), plays a desperate realtor trying to sell Casey's well-to-do character a house.
Acting
Movie
American Beauty
as Sale House Woman #2
1999
Movie
Rear Window
as Sunbather (uncredited)
1954
Movie
Breakfast at Tiffany's
as Party Guest (uncredited)
1961
Movie
An American in Paris
as Dancer (uncredited)
1951
TV
Boy Meets World
as Katherine
1993
Movie
Paint Your Wagon
as Sarah Woodling
1969
Movie
A Very Brady Sequel
as Art Patron #1
1996
Movie
The Secret Life of Walter Mitty
as (uncredited)
1947
Movie
The Ladies Man
as Woman (uncredited)
1961
TV
The Beverly Hillbillies
as Roberta Graham
1962
TV
Diagnosis: Murder
as Mrs. Davis
1993
Movie
Evilspeak
as Mrs. Caldwell
1981
TV
The Dick Van Dyke Show
as Clarisse Calvada
1961
Movie
The Flame and the Arrow
as Angela (uncredited)
1950
Movie
Annie Get Your Gun
as Cowgirl (uncredited)
1950
Movie
Road to Bali
as Handmaiden (uncredited)
1952
Movie
Camelot
as Lady Sybil
1967
Movie
The Main Event
as Brenda
1979
TV
The Lucy Show
as Miss Holloway
1962
Movie
The Las Vegas Story
as Woman (uncredited)
1952
Movie
A New Kind of Love
as Woman (uncredited)
1963
Movie
Living It Up
as Showgirl (uncredited)
1954
Movie
It's a Great Feeling
as Model (uncredited)
1949
Movie
We're Not Married!
as Girl in Hector's Daydream (uncredited)
1952