Mamie Van Doren

Mamie Van Doren (born Joan Lucille Olander; February 6, 1931) is an American actress, singer, model, and sex symbol who rose to prominence in the 1950s and 1960s. A blonde bombshell, she is known as one of the "Three M's"  along with Marilyn Monroe and Jayne Mansfield, who were friends and contemporaries. In 1953, Van Doren, then named Joan Lucille Olander, signed a seven-year contract with Universal, which hoped that she would be their version of Marilyn Monroe. During her time at Universal, she starred in teen dramas, exploitation films, musical, and comedy films among other genres. She has married five times, but notably had intimate affairs with many other Hollywood actors. She was one of the leading sex symbols in the 1950s.

Van Doren was born and raised in Rowena, South Dakota, but her parents moved to Sioux City, Iowa and eventually to Los Angeles, California in 1942 before she married Jack Newman. In 1949, at the age of eighteen, she won Miss Palm Springs and Miss Eight Ball. As Miss Eight Ball, she was discovered by film producer Howard Hughes, who put her in the RKO films His Kind of Woman (1951), Two Tickets to Broadway (1951), and Jet Pilot (1957) with minor roles. In 1950, she was dating heavyweight boxer Jack Dempsey in New York City and was engaged with him. However, she left him to go to back to Los Angeles. On January 20, 1953, Van Doren signed a contract with Universal, who wanted Van Doren to be their equivalent of Marilyn Monroe. While at Universal, she changed her name to Mamie Van Doren, with the "Van Doren" part coming from Universal telling her she was more Dutch than Swedish, and the "Mamie" part coming from then First Lady Mamie Eisenhower.

During her time at Universal, Van Doren starred in movies such as The Second Greatest Sex (1955), Running Wild (1955) and The All American (1953). Outside of Universal, she starred in Untamed Youth (1957), Teacher's Pet (1958), High School Confidential (1958), Born Reckless (1958), The Beat Generation (1959), and Sex Kittens Go To College (1960). She starred on television shows such as What's My Line?, The Jack Benny Program, and The Bob Cummings Show. After Universal decided not to renew her contract in 1959, Van Doren struggled to find work as a free agent. She starred in many B movies, such as Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women (1968), The Las Vegas Hillbillys (1966) with Jayne Mansfield, and, most notably, 3 Nuts in Search of a Bolt (1964) with Tommy Noonan. Van Doren had previously denied Noonan's offer to star in Promises! Promises! (1963), and was replaced. However, she starred as Saxie Symbol in 3 Nuts in Search of a Bolt, which, according to Van Doren, was inspired by the success of ''Promises! Promises!'' This film challenged the Hays Code, and the same year, she appeared in the June 1964 Playboy magazine with nude photos of her on the shoot of the film.

Van Doren went to Vietnam during the Vietnam War to entertain troops in the 1970s. Partially due to the deaths of Van Doren's friends Jayne Mansfield and Marilyn Monroe, Van Doren decided to retire from acting. She struggled to find work as she found the blonde bombshell image was embarrassing. In 1987, Van Doren released her autobiography, Playing the Field: My Story, which brought some attention back to her. Van Doren also fought against serophobia in the 1980s. On February 1, 1994, Van Doren received her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. In 1998, Van Doren created her website describing herself as “the first authentic kitten on Cyberspace". On her website, she posed nude in photos and videos, told stories, and wrote many updates on her life. She continued her website until it shut down in the 2010s. In 2022, Van Doren released her second book, China & Me, and has recently started writing a third autobiography, Secrets of the Goddess.

Early life
Van Doren was born Joan Lucille Olander on February 6, 1931 in Rowena, South Dakota, nine miles out of Sioux Falls. She is the daughter of Warner Carl Olander (1908–1992) and Lucille Harriet Bennett (1912–1995). Olander and Bennett had met at a Swedish Lutherian Church, which had been partially built by them. They married in August 1930. She was named after Joan Crawford, who Van Doren's mother was a fan of. She is of three-quarters Swedish, and also mixed Irish, and German. Van Doren's father, Warner Olander worked as a rock quarry to take care of her family, and was paid $0.35 cents a load, and sometimes $7.00. According to Van Doren, the town consisted of a church, school, railroad station, and a connected filling station, grocery store, a grain elevator, and a hardware store owned by her great uncle. Her maternal grandmother was Swedish, as she was born in Gothenburg, Sweden.

In 1939, Van Doren's parents moved to Sioux City, Iowa since her father got a better job as a mechanic. This led to a young Van Doren moving to her maternal grandparents, the Bennett's, 160-acre farm in Rowena. Van Doren later reflected on this, saying in her 1987 autobiography Playing the Field "It was the Depression, times were that hard." She described in her memoir that her grandmother, whom she called "Dah", was an important household figure, while her grandfather, "Pa", would take Van Doren into town weekly. She additionally lived with her maternal uncle on the farm. Van Doren also recalls in her autobiography her first experience flying a plane on the ranch. Van Doren would walk a mile and a half to a two room schoolhouse on the ranch, often in different types of weather including snow, rain, and wind.

Van Doren grew up sickly on the ranch. Van Doren recalled having her temperature rise to 106°F (41.1°C). However, she was still brought to school when sick by her grandmother, who wanted only herself on the ranch. She additionally had three operations before the age of seven. She almost died at four from a hemorrhage, and had a bump removed from her face, which caused Van Doren to be bullied in school. This removal left a small scar on Van Doren's face.

Van Doren moved to Sioux City in 1939 to live with her parents, where she watched movies with actors such as Clark Gable, Carole Lombard, Spencer Tracy, Fred Astaire, Katharine Hepburn, Jean Harlow, Mae West, and Ginger Rogers. Van Doren dreamed to be a movie star at this time: "The other thing the movies seemed to promise was love. In every one of those celluloid fairy tales, the heroine lived happily ever after in the company of the man she loved. How I yearned for that. It was then that I set my heart on becoming a Hollywood star."

In May of 1942, when Van Doren was nine, she moved to Los Angeles with her family during World War II, only a few miles away from Hollywood. Her family quickly moved to an apartment, as many people were moving to the West Coast for the war effort at the time for jobs such as defense plants. After staying at a boardinghouse, Van Doren and her family moved to an apartment on Raymond Avenue, where Van Doren, a child, had to sneak through a door. Van Doren and her family soon moved to a bigger apartment in Los Angeles.

According to Van Doren, a man exposed himself to her while she was in a car heading to her home. In her 1964 book My Naughty, Naughty Life!, she reminisces the event saying "For weeks – and occasionally even years later – that man returned to me in my sleep, leaving me a neurotic young girl and even upsetting me as a woman. For several months after that experience I found myself hating boys, and looking upon men as animals. But I'm glad that hatred never lasted.

After her thirteenth birthday, Van Doren was able to convince the manager of Hollywood Pantages Theatre to make her an usherette, which allowed her to watch popular movies at the time. Van Doren often spent time at a drugstore, inspired by the myth of the discovery of Lana Turner at Schwab's Pharmacy. At this point, Van Doren had already dyed her hair platinum blonde. After being commented on by Nils Thor Grunlund, known by his initials NTG, that she looked similar to Jean Harlow, she was able to be on his Hollywood TV show for a minor role. However, her parents were worried that she would get in trouble and feared that she would go on to be killed like Black Dahlia, who was, as stated by Van Doren, one of their closest friends. Despite that, Van Doren went on Grunlund's show, coated in white pancake makeup and brown lipstick. Van Doren stated that Grulund's show was a prototype to the modern talk show. While making the show, she was known as Little Joanie, the Flower Girl. Van Doren and her mother became friends with Grunlund. Van Doren also sang with Ted Fio Rito's Band. At the Montecito Hotel in Palm Springs, in the summer of 1949, Van Doren was suggested to be Miss Palm Springs, sponsored by the Montecito Hotel. She won the title, and at the Los Angeles Press Club, she was asked to be the club's beauty queen, Miss Eight Ball. The previous year, Marilyn Monroe had been crowned the title Van Doren was crowned the title. Due to this, Van Doren had dropped out of Los Angeles High School, which she had hated.

Van Doren met sportswear and shirt manufacturer Jack Newman around 1949, with Newman one of her father's friends which she watched boxing matches with. They had a honeymoon in San Francisco, and soon got engaged to Newman. Van Doren said in her book, Playing the Field "When Jack asked me to marry him, I swiftly agreed. He was my ticket out of my parents' house and into womanhood. We eloped to Santa Barbara, where I lied about my age to the judge who married us." She married him in 1950 at the Santa Barbara Town, and she initially enjoyed sexual relations with him. Additionally, Van Doren enjoyed Newman's wealthy lifestyle, as Newman had lived in a luxury apartment in Beverly Hills, California. According to Van Doren, Newman quickly got jealous of Van Doren due to her often being glanced in the outfits Newman purchased for her. However, she divorced him after six months due to his abusive behavior, including a time that Van Doren described in her memoir in which he threatened to throw her off a second-story balcony, which was quickly disbanded by neighbors and a time where Newman shredded Van Doren’s favorite hat.

1950–1953: Howard Hughes, first films, Jimmy McHugh and stage girl
Film producer Howard Hughes discovered Van Doren when she was crowned Miss Palm Springs, and, according to Van Doren, the first question he asked her was "Are you a virgin?" Van Doren recalls that Howard Hughes was controlling and she dated him. According to an interview in 2005, Hughes took Van Doren to a place on Vermont Street to have a braless photoshoot in a white sweater. Van Doren would often meet Howard Hughes at the Garden of Allah Hotel. Hughes provided Van Doren a four film contract deal for RKO.

In 1950, Hughes provided Van Doren with a bit part in Jet Pilot (1957) at RKO Radio Pictures, which was filmed from 1949 to 1950, but released in 1957. The film, which starred John Wayne and Janet Leigh, was her film debut. She recalls that she had a good experience with Janet Leigh, who allowed Van Doren to fly in her jet. Her line of dialogue consisted of one word, "Look!" and she appears uncredited in the film. Van Doren additionally had a small role in Footlight Varieties (1951) as the girl in the theater in the final scene of the film. Van Doren had another role, in Two Tickets to Broadway (1951). The film starred Tony Martin and Janet Leigh, who previously been in Jet Pilot with Van Doren.

Van Doren did a few more bit parts in movies at RKO, including His Kind of Woman (1951) starring Robert Mitchum, Jane Russell and Vincent Price. The film was shot on the backlot of the David O. Selznick Studio. About her appearance in this movie, Van Doren said "If you blinked you would miss me. I look barely old enough to drive." She was on the film for three months, and because of the money she earned, bought an MG car. Van Doren also met Gloria Swanson who asked her "Is that your real color of hair?" Van Doren was coached by Natasha Lytess, who had also coached Marilyn Monroe. Monroe and Van Doren met several times when Van Doren was being coached by Lytess. However, Van Doren stopped her lessons with Lytess because "Natasha spent most of our lessons talking, however, and there was very little time left, after her long-winded speeches on the art of acting, to actually perform for her".

In her memoir, Van Doren recollects her relationship with Charles Fischetti, an American mobster and the cousin of Al Capone, whom she met in Las Vegas. Money was often sent to Van Doren from Chicago by Fischetti. Van Doren planned a trip to Chicago to see Fischetti, but she never got to see him due to his sudden death from a heart attack in 1951.

Danielle Cory, an RKO worker and friend of Van Doren, suggested that Van Doren work on stage for the play Billion Dollar Baby, which began her career onstage as a showgirl. The show was held at the Proser Cafe Theatre, near Jack Dempsey's restaurant. Cory additionally suggested that Van Doren should audition for Alberto Vargas to be one of the "Vargas Girls" in Esquire. Vargas ended up picked Van Doren as one of his models.

In New York City, she met boxer Jack Dempsey at the Jack Dempsey's Broadway Restaurant. Dempesy frequented the Billion Dollar Baby show, and held a celebration for the cast. Dempsey requested to have a dinner with Van Doren, and they later had it at the Stork Club, and had a conversation with Sherman Billingsley, the founder of the Stork Club. As Dempsey was treated as a celebrity, the couple was able to go to many other clubs, such as Copacabana and the 21 Club. Dempsey eventually got engaged to Van Doren, but Van Doren eventually decided to move back to Hollywood because she thought it would be better for her career. According to Barry Lowe, Van Doren was "near penniless, out of work, and frightened for the future." due to Billion Dollar Baby not being successful.

At the request of Sammy Fain, Van Doren met songwriter Jimmy McHugh. McHugh had an interest in Van Doren's career, and became her manager. Van Doren has stated that since she was managed by McHugh, who was dating gossip columnist Louella Parsons, that Parsons disliked Van Doren. McHugh told Van Doren that he would put Van Doren into a drama school, and additionally arranged for her to be at Ben Bard's Theater. Bard had an acting school, and plays that were attended by film scouts, casting agents, and directors. Van Doren was in Bard's theater productions, such as Once in a Lifetime, and At War with the Army. At Bard's school, Van Doren was given advice to by Carolyn Jones, and she was taught by Aaron Spelling in private, which broke Bard's school rules. Van Doren would also go to many of McHugh's parties, attended by Darryl F. Zanuck, Louis B. Mayer, and Buddy Adler. This allowed Van Doren to do a screen test for Paramount Pictures.

As stated by Van Doren in her autobiography, Playing the Field, Van Doren decided to do a scene from The Big Knife for her Paramount screen test. Van Doren later stated that during the audition "I played the scene with as much intensity as I had ever played a role, feeling the character's pain and anguish so acutely that it became my own". After the audition, according to Van Doren, McHugh told her "They're going to offer you a contract". However, Paramount made the decision to not sign Van Doren a few days later. Van Doren stated Paramount told her the reason was that she looked too similar to Marilyn Monroe. However, Van Doren believes that she that she was not signed was because Parsons pressured Paramount into not signingher.

1953–1960: Films at Universal Studios, Paramount, and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Van Doren performed in the Bliss-Hayden Theater, as McHugh had called the Harry Hayden, manager of the theater, and made time for Van Doren to perform. While performing, Van Doren caught the attention of Phil Benjamin, a Universal casting director, who was in the audience. Benjamin called McHugh, and Van Doren met Benjamin at Universal's studio. Benjamin believed that Van Doren was fit for a singer in the then upcoming Universal film Forbidden (1953), starring Tony Curtis. Van Doren met the director of Forbidden, Rudolph Maté, and requested that Van Doren would sing I Can't Give You Anything but Love, Baby, one of McHugh's songs. Maté approved, and Van Doren filmed the scene shortly after, where she acted as a singer. During the filming, Van Doren recalled seeing Milton Rackmil, the head of Decca Reccords.

On January 20, 1953, Van Doren signed a seven year contract with Universal. Van Doren, whose signing day coincided with the Inauguration of Dwight D. Eisenhower, was given the first name "Mamie" after Eisenhower's wife, Mamie Eisenhower. She was given the last name "Van Doren" after Van Doren was told by the studio that she looked more Dutch than Swedish. Universal had intended for Van Doren to be their "answer to Marilyn Monroe." However, unlike other Marilyn Monroe lookalikes, Van Doren did not portray the "dumb blonde" role in films.

In January 1953, Van Doren took college courses from professors at University of California while training to be an actress at Universal. She also took lessons for horseback riding, diction, scene study, ballet. On February 26, 1953, Van Doren went on a date with Rock Hudson, arranged by Universal, for the 10th Golden Globe Awards. According to Van Doren herself, she had an encounter with Joan Crawford, who "drunkenly tried to flirt with Rock [Hudson]." Midway through the event, Van Doren had a conversation with Monroe while doing her lipstick. In her autobiography, Van Doren describes engaging in sexual activity with Hudson at her parents house after the event had ended.

Van Doren's first major role was in The All American (1953), a college football film directed by Jesse Hibbs. The film centers around a college quarterback, whose life takes a turn after his parents die in a car accident. Van Doren later said that Hibbs encouraged her to fondle him, and often put her hand at his groin during rehearsals. The film also starred Tony Curtis, Lori Nelson, and Richard Long. In The All American, Van Doren played Susie Ward, an ambitious waitress initially looking to find a wealthy spouse near a university. Susie Ward is a sultry, flirtatious and manipulative person, who tricks an inebriated person into proposing to her. This would help shape her future roles as a "bad girl", rather than being a "dumb blonde". Due to good reviews from Universal-International executives, Van Doren was sent on tour to promote the film.

Van Doren's second major film was the 1954 film Yankee Pasha. The film was based on Edison Marshall's 1947 novel of the same name, which Universal had recently purchased. Yankee Pasha centers around a man who sails the ocean, played by Jeff Chandler, to find his true love, a woman forced into slavery, who was portrayed by Van Doren. The eight week shooting schedule exhausted Van Doren, resulting in weight loss. Van Doren has said that she was attracted to Joseph Pevney, director of Yankee Pasha. She had a relationship with him, and Van Doren said that she would embrace Pevney in his office.

In Playing the Field, Van Doren claimed that she auditioned for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, hoping to get the role of Ado Annie in Oklahoma!, a movie based on the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical. Despite Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II liking her audition, she was denied the role which was given to Gloria Grahame instead.

Van Doren appeared opposite an uncredited and unknown Clint Eastwood in Star in the Dust. Though Van Doren garnered prominent billing alongside John Agar and Richard Boone, she appears rather briefly, as the daughter of a ranch owner. By this time, Van Doren had grown tired of Universal, which was casting her in non-breakthrough roles. Van Doren began accepting bigger and better roles in better movies from other studios.

Van Doren went on to star in several bad girl movies that later became cult films. She also appeared in some of the first movies to feature rock 'n' roll music and became identified with this rebellious style, and she made some rock records. One of her rock 'n' roll films, Untamed Youth, was later featured in the 1990 Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode "Untamed Youth".

Some of Van Doren's more noteworthy movies include Teacher's Pet (1958) at Paramount Pictures, Born Reckless (1958) at Warner Brothers, High School Confidential (1958), and The Beat Generation (1959), the latter two at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. But Van Doren was just as well known for her provocative roles. She was in prison for Girls Town (1959), which provoked censors with a shower scene where audiences could see Van Doren's naked back. As Eve in The Private Lives of Adam and Eve (1960) she wore only fig leaves, and in other films, like The Beautiful Legs of Sabrina (1959), Sex Kittens Go to College (1960), and Vice Raid (1960) audiences understood the nature of the films from the titles.



Many of Van Doren's film roles showcased her ample curves, and her onscreen wardrobe usually consisted of tight sweaters, low-cut blouses, form-fitting dresses, and daring (for the era) swimsuits, but she and such other blonde bombshell contemporaries as Jayne Mansfield, Cleo Moore, Sheree North, Anita Ekberg, Barbara Lang, Joi Lansing, Greta Thyssen, and Barbara Nichols did not attain the same level of superstar status as Marilyn Monroe. Marilyn, Mamie, and Mansfield were known as "The Three M's", but by comparison, where Monroe succeeded in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes and Mansfield had big success replacing Van Doren in Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?, Universal stuck Van Doren with Francis the Talking Mule in Francis Joins the WACS (1954).

After Universal Studios chose not to renew her contract in 1959, Van Doren became a free agent and struggled to find work. Some of her later movies were foreign and independent productions, which did little to keep her image in the public's eye. Many of the productions were low-budget B movies with some having gained a cult following for their high camp value.

1960s
The first of these later films was Sex Kittens Go to College (1960), which co-starred Tuesday Weld. Following the completion of the Argentine film The Blonde from Buenos Aires (1961), Van Doren took time off from her career. She came back in The Candidate (1964), soon followed by Freddy in the Wild West, both of which were low-budget films that left little impact. In 1964, Tommy Noonan convinced Van Doren to appear in 3 Nuts in Search of a Bolt. Van Doren had turned down Noonan's previous offer to star opposite Jayne Mansfield in Promises! Promises!, and was replaced with Marie McDonald. In 3 Nuts in Search of a Bolt, Mamie did a beer-bath scene but is not seen nude. She posed for Playboy to promote the film.

Van Doren next appeared in The Las Vegas Hillbillys (1966) released by Woolner Brothers. This film co-starred Mansfield; this was the only time two of "The Three M's" appeared together in a film. A sequel was titled Hillbillys in a Haunted House, but Van Doren turned this role down, and was replaced by Joi Lansing. She then appeared in The Navy vs. the Night Monsters (1966), a science fiction movie. In 1967, she appeared in You've Got to Be Smart, and starred in the science fiction film Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women (1968), the following year, directed by Peter Bogdanovich.

Van Doren also developed a nightclub act and did live theater. She performed in stage productions of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes and Dames at Sea at the Drury Lane Theater in Chicago as well as appeared in Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? and The Tender Trap at the Arlington Park Theater. In the 1970s, Van Doren performed a nightclub act in Las Vegas.

Van Doren was never a Playboy Playmate, but she posed twice for the magazine in 1964 to promote her movie 3 Nuts in Search of a Bolt (1964). By this point in her career, her figure measured 38DD-26-36 (self-described in 1997). She said "I don't even want to say double-D because they're even bigger than that."

In 1964, Van Doren was a guest at the Whisky a Go Go on the Sunset Strip in West Hollywood, California when The Beatles were at the club visiting with Jayne Mansfield, and an inebriated George Harrison accidentally threw his drink on her when trying to throw it on some bothersome journalists. During the Vietnam War, she did tours for U.S. troops in Vietnam for three months in 1968, and again in 1970. In addition to USO shows, she visited hospitals, including the wards of amputees and burn victims.

1970s
In 1970, Van Doren had a supporting role in the western comedy The Arizona Kid. In 1975, she starred in the film That Girl From Boston, adapted from a Robert Rimmer novel, but the film was never released. Since then, Van Doren has appeared only in cameos in low-budget films. Van Doren's last film appearance was a role in the direct-to-video drama  The American Tetralogy  (2013). Van Doren's guest appearances on television include Jukebox Jury, What's My Line, The Bob Cummings Show, The Jack Benny Show, Fantasy Island, Burke's Law, Vega$ and L.A. Law.Van Doren released Playing the Field (1987), her autobiography, which brought much attention and proved to be her biggest media splash in over 25 years. She has consistently denied in interviews ever having breast implants. In 2006, Mamie posed for photographs for Vanity Fair with Pamela Anderson as part of its annual Hollywood issue. In an interview with Fox News in February 2020, Van Doren announced that she was working on a follow-up to her autobiography. She remarked that "...a lot has happened between 1987 and 2020. So now I'm writing about what it's like getting older and appreciating life a little more as you go along, as well as getting smarter as you get older. There's so much to write about."

21st century
The title of her follow-up book was announced in December 2021 as "China & Me: Wind Flapping, Feather Pulling, and Love on the Wing", a memoir about her pet parrot China. Van Doren describes the story as "a look behind the curtain into my everyday life. It's often funny, but, like so many things in life, it has its moments of sadness. Over the decades I've integrated a wild animal into a human household, played matchmaker to find him a mate, and cared for his offspring. I'm blessed to have had China as companion, confessor, and straight man all these years; and he's still with me today." The book was published in September 2022.

In an interview with Closer in January 2021, she also reflected on the #MeToo movement, 'I've thought a lot about that. There are some things I would question, but I've also always been behind any woman with a problem because I have had plenty of them myself. [In my time] if I wanted to go to bed with someone, I'd go to bed with them, but I never did it for a movie. [A predator] would know that he was in for a fight if he ever came around me. [It would be] nails out, kicking and screaming.'

Van Doren had a website from the late 90s to the early 2010s. In recent years, Van Doren has made use of Twitter. Van Doren had a theater section, where she would post various movies. She also showed many nude and semi-nude images taken by Julie Strain. Van Doren started her own blog on which she regularly writes about a very diverse array of topics. As of July 2023 she is still posting to her blog. She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 7057 Hollywood Boulevard. In 2005, a Golden Palm Star on the Palm Springs Walk of Stars was dedicated to her.

Personal life


Van Doren has been married five times. In 1949, she married sportswear manufacturer Jack Newman; she divorced him later that same year. Her second marriage was to bandleader, composer and actor Ray Anthony whom she married in 1955. They had one son, Perry Ray Anthony, born March 18, 1956. The couple divorced in 1961. When Van Doren's early 1960s, highly publicized, on-again off-again engagement to baseball player Bo Belinsky ended in 1964, she married baseball player Lee Meyers in 1966. They divorced in 1968. Her fourth marriage was to businessman Ross McClintock in 1972. They met while working on President Nixon's re-election campaign; the marriage was annulled in 1973. Since 1979, she has been married to Thomas Dixon, an actor and dentist.

In her autobiography, Van Doren acknowledged that she had numerous affairs with celebrities, including Clark Gable, Howard Hughes, Burt Reynolds, Jack Dempsey, Steve McQueen, Clint Eastwood, Johnny Rivers, Robert Evans, Eddie Fisher, Warren Beatty, Tony Curtis, Steve Cochran, and Joe Namath. Claiming fidelity to each lover, she said "I don't wear panties anymore – this startles the Hollywood wolves so much they don't know what to pull at, so they leave me alone."

Filmography

 * Footlight Varieties (1951)
 * His Kind of Woman (1951)
 * Two Tickets to Broadway (1951)
 * Forbidden (1953)
 * The All American (1953)
 * Hawaiian Nights (1954)
 * Yankee Pasha (1954)
 * Francis Joins the WACS (1954)
 * Ain't Misbehavin' (1955)
 * The Second Greatest Sex (1955)
 * Running Wild (1955)
 * Star in the Dust (1956)
 * Untamed Youth (1957)
 * The Girl in Black Stockings (1957)
 * Jet Pilot (1957)
 * Teacher's Pet (1958)
 * High School Confidential (1958)
 * Born Reckless (1958)
 * Guns, Girls, and Gangsters (1959)
 * The Beat Generation (1959)
 * The Beautiful Legs of Sabrina (1959)
 * The Big Operator (1959)
 * Girls Town (1959)
 * Vice Raid (1960)
 * College Confidential (1960)
 * Sex Kittens Go to College (1960)
 * The Private Lives of Adam and Eve (1960)
 * The Blonde from Buenos Aires (1961)
 * The Candidate (1964)
 * Freddy in the Wild West (1964)
 * 3 Nuts in Search of a Bolt (1964)
 * The Las Vegas Hillbillys (1966)
 * The Navy vs. the Night Monsters (1966)
 * You've Got to Be Smart (1967)
 * Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women (1968)
 * The Arizona Kid (1970)
 * That Girl from Boston (1975)
 * Free Ride (1986)
 * The Vegas Connection (1999)
 * Slackers (2002)
 * The American Tetralogy (2012)