Constance Ford

American actress and model (1923–1993)
Thumbnail for Constance Ford

Constance Ford was an American actress and model. She portrayed Ada Lucas Hobson on the long-running daytime soap opera Another World, from 1967 until shortly before her death in 1993. She also appeared in nearly two dozen movies from 1956 to 1974, with her most noteworthy role being the matriarch Helen Jorgenson in A Summer Place (1959).

Constance Ford was born Cornelia M. Ford on July 1, 1923, in The Bronx, to parents Cornelia R. (née Smith) and Edwin J. Ford. Her siblings were Arthur, John, and Evelyn. Ford was a graduate of St. Barnabas Grammar and High School, and she attended Hunter College. She studied acting at HB Studio in New York City. Ford initially worked as a model for the Montgomery Ward catalog when she was 15 years old. Her face became famous in the Elizabeth Arden 1941 advertising campaign for Victory Red lipstick, which featured a Philippe Halsman photo showing her face against the American flag. She acted on Broadway from 1949, appearing in such productions as the musical Say Darling and Nobody Loves an Albatross. She also played the prostitute in the original Broadway production of Death of a Salesman.

She began her television career in 1950, with performances on live television dramas such as Studio One, Armstrong Circle Theatre, Goodyear Television Playhouse, and other acclaimed series. As a Warner Bros. contract player, she had her most famous role as Sandra Dee's heartless mother in A Summer Place (1959), in which her abused husband Richard Egan had a memorable scene telling her off for her outdated prejudices, and Ford arranges for Dee to be tested for her virginity. Another shocking scene had Ford slapping Dee so hard that she fell into a Christmas tree, which toppled over on her. In Rome Adventure (1962), she played Daisy Bronson, owner of a bookstore in Rome, opposite Suzanne Pleshette and Troy Donahue, being kinder to him than she had been in A Summer Place. In House of Women, she played an aggressive but ultimately sympathetic female prisoner who gets into a catfight with prison matron Jeanne Cooper. She played the tough-as-nails nurse alongside Joan Crawford in The Caretakers (1963). She also had a memorable walk-on playing a flirtatious but bored society matron who makes a play for Warren Beatty in All Fall Down.

She made three memorable appearances on Perry Mason, including the role of a woman with split personality in the 1958 episode "The Case of the Deadly Double", and as Frances Walden in "The Case of the Potted Planter" (1963) and defendant Sylvia Thompson in "The Case of the Shifty Shoebox" (also 1963). In 1960, she played heartless Connie Walworth ("You haven't got the flair, dear ...") for director Mitchell Leisen in the "Worse Than Murder" episode of Thriller. She was often featured in episodes of Kraft Television Theater, Appointment with Adventure, State Trooper, Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre (as Laura Lovett, opposite Jack Palance in the 1956 episode, "Lariat"), Bat Masterson, The Phil Silvers Show, Have Gun – Will Travel, Rawhide, Wanted: Dead or Alive, Tombstone Territory (episode "Silver Killers"), Gunsmoke (in the episode "Wagon Girls" and as title character in the episode "Poor Pearl" in 1956), Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Target: The Corruptors!, and The Twilight Zone episode "Uncle Simon". She also appeared on the NBC interview program Here's Hollywood.

In 1954, she made her soap-opera debut as Lynn Sherwood on Woman With A Past on CBS. On Search for Tomorrow, Ford was Rose Peterson, an employee of the mob, who was hired to discredit leading character Joanne Tate. Her on-screen brother was played by Don Knotts. On The Edge of Night, Ford played the murderous theatre owner Eve Morris.

Date of Birth23rd July 1923
Date of Death26th February 1993
Age at Death69 Years
Zodiac SignLeo
CountryUnited States of America
Current CityThe Bronx
Birth PlaceThe Bronx
Death PlaceManhattan
NationalityUnited States of America
CitizenshipUnited States of America
Education
HB Studio
Occupationactor, model, television actor, film actor, stage actor

Actresses from United States of America born in 1923