Anne Kimbell
Anne Kimbell Relph, known professionally as Anne Kimbell was an American actress most active on screen during the 1950s. Kimbell is best known as the star of the 1954 science fiction film, Monster from the Ocean Floor.
Beginning in the early 1990s, Kimbell preserved the Jones Theater in Westcliffe, Colorado, and founded the Westcliffe Center for the Performing Arts.
Early years
Kimbell was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, to Andrew and Kathryn Banks. She moved to Hollywood, California with her family when she was three years old. At the age of four, she was cast in her first radio role on The Children's Radio Workshop in Los Angeles, which began her radio and voice acting career. She joined the Screen Actors Guild when she was just twelve years old.She studied theater in New York City under Lee Strasberg. Kimbell later received her Bachelor of Arts in English from the University of Virginia and her master's degree in women's studies from George Washington University in Washington D.C.
Film
Kimbell's earliest film credits included 1945's Roughly Speaking, where she played Rosalind Russell's daughter, and Growing Up, as John Garfield's on-screen sister.Kimbell starred in the lead role in 1954's Monster from the Ocean Floor, the first film produced by Roger Corman, as well as the British comedy, Girls at Sea, in 1958.
She also co-starred in several other films, including Feudin' Fools in 1952, and The Bob Mathias Story.
Television
Kimbell's television credits included recurring roles and guest spots on General Electric Theater, G.E. Summer Originals, Chevron Theatre, The Adventures of Kit Carson, Crossroads, and the BBC's Sunday Night Theatre.Stage
During the 1950s, Kimbell co-starred in the Broadway production of The Seven Year Itch alongside Eddie Bracken and the touring production of Arms and the Man with Marlon Brando. In 1956 she was the leading lady for the summer at Denver's Elitch Theatre, where she reprised her role in The Seven Year Itch. Kimbell starred in the 1957 London production of Roar Like a Dove, which was produced by actress Vivien Leigh.Personal life
Kimbell met her future husband, James F. Relph, a United States Foreign Service officer, while appearing on stage in London. The couple married in London. She effectively retired from film to join Relph at his diplomatic postings in Switzerland, Germany, Chad, and Tunisia.Kimbell and her family returned to California during the early 1980s. During her later life, Kimbell divided her time between her home in Westcliffe, Colorado, and a second home in Laguna Beach, California.