Barbara Ruick
Barbara Ruick was an American actress and singer.
Early years
Ruick was the daughter of actors Lurene Tuttle and Melville Ruick, and grew up acting out scenes with dolls, employing her mother as an audience.Ruick attended North Hollywood High School. She did little acting in high school but joined a school band at the age of 14. Ruick sang with the band at dances and benefits.
Career
Early in her career, Ruick sang in clubs and acted in Little Theater productions. She achieved success in radio, then signed as a contract player with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. She was heard in the original radio version of Dragnet. She also recorded several songs for MGM Records. In the 1950s, Ruick starred as Kay in the first LP recording of the songs from George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin's 1926 Broadway musical Oh, Kay!. This studio cast recording was released by Columbia Records and conducted by Lehman Engel.She landed a job on Hollywood Screen Test, a talent show which aired on ABC from 1948 to 1953. Ruick appeared on the Kraft Television Theatre, soap operas, and The College Bowl, which was hosted by Chico Marx. She also performed for fifteen weeks on The Jerry Colonna Show. In 1955, she was a regular on The Johnny Carson Show.
She made guest appearances on The Millionaire, The Public Defender, The Brothers Brannagan, The 20th Century Fox Hour, and Climax Mystery Theater.
In 1951, Ruick was signed by MGM for a role in the film Invitation. She had bit parts in her first four films, one of them being The Band Wagon, and then graduated to supporting roles. Her best remembered roles both came from Rodgers and Hammerstein. She played Carrie Pipperidge in the film version of Carousel and Esmerelda, one of the wicked stepsisters, in the 1965 TV version of Rodgers and Hammerstein's Cinderella.
She released several singles of her singing on the MGM label in 1952 and 1953, including some with arrangements by Nelson Riddle.