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Patricia Owens (17 January 1925, Golden, British Columbia - 31 August 2000, Lancaster, California) was a Canadian-born American actress, working in Hollywood. She appeared in about 40 films and 10 TV episodes in a career lasting from 1943 to 1968.
Canadian-born actress Patricia Owens moved to England with her parents in 1933, and ten years later, at age 18, she made her motion-picture debut in Val Guest's musical comedy Miss London Ltd. The following year, she had a small role in Harold French's social satire English Without Tears. Her career continued in this manner for the next few years, Owens getting ever-larger roles in generally better movies (though not always—the same year in which she worked in the Launder-Gilliat production of The Happiest Days of Your Life, one of the funniest movies ever made in England, she also appeared in the abysmal Old Mother Riley, Headmistress).
Her career took a giant step upward when she was seen by a 20th Century Fox executive while performing in a theatrical production of Sabrina Fair and was offered a screen test. The result was a contract with the studio and a move to Hollywood. Her first American film was Island in the Sun (1957) for Fox, and then Owens was loaned out to Warner Bros. to play opposite Marlon Brando in the drama Sayonara (1957), one of the most critically acclaimed movies of the year. Owens spent the rest of 1957 working mostly on loan-out, but it was a 1958 Fox production that secured her place in motion picture history—as Helene Delambre, the wife of scientist Andre Delambre in The Fly (1958), co-starring with David Hedison and Vincent Price. Owens carried much of the film's story and drama, which were told in flashback from her character's point-of-view. The Fly was one of the most successful science fiction movies of the decade; the image of Owens unmasking her stricken husband and screaming at what she sees—and the shot of her horrified visage seen in a "fly's eye" view—became one of the defining moments in the genre.
Unfortunately for Owens, she never got another movie half as good as The Fly, from Fox or anyone else, and in 1961 was reduced to working in the threadbare, backlot POW/jungle chase drama Seven Women from Hell. Owens made occasional television appearances, on series such as Perry Mason and Burke's Law, but these were relatively infrequent. Owens also starred in one of the 17 episodes of Alfred Hitchcock Presents directed by Hitchcock himself, "The Crystal Trench" (1959). By 1965, she was working in Black Spurs, one of producer A.C. Lyles' B-Westerns, renowned for their use of aging genre stars, and Owens retired from movies after portraying Richard Egan's love interest in the low-budget espionage thriller The Destructors (1968). Her last professional appearance was in a 1968 episode of Lassie.
She was the third wife of screenwriter and producer Sy Bartlett.
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1968
as Charlie
1965
as Clare
1963
as Sharon O'Brien
1963
as Ellen Sheppard
1961
as Margaret Brandon
1961
as Katherine
1961
as Grace Ingram
1961
1960
as Sheila Lincoln
1959
as Rusty Haynes
1959
as Joy
1959
as Joyce
1958
as Lucy Martin
1958
as Helene Delambre
1958
as Peggy
1957
as Eileen Webster
1957
as Jean Martin
1957
as June Burgess
1957
as Sylvia Fleury
1957
as Sally Parker
1956
as Betty Hartley
1955
as Stella Ballister
1955
as Nora
1954
as Blonde (as Pat Owens)
1954
1954
as Winnie
1954
as Mary (segment "Final Twist' story)
1953
as Lady Vivien (uncredited)
1953
as Joan
1953
as Betty Hartley
1952
as Party Girl (Joyce)
1952
as Self
1952
as Willow, Opal's Companion (as Pat Owens)
1951
as Mabel Dawn (as Pat Owens)
1950
as Angela Parry
1950
as Anna Hastings
1949
1948
1944
as (uncredited)
1943
as Miss London