The daughter of an ambitious but relatively benign "stage mama," Los Angeles-native Jill St. John was acting on stage at age 5, and on radio from the time she could read; in the late '40s Jill was a regular on the marathon soap opera One Man's Family. Jill's mother changed the girl's name from Oppenheim to St. John when she was 11, and (via surgery) changed her nose from Romanesque to turned-up when Jill was 16. By that time, Jill had been attending UCLA for two full years; she was assessed by experts as having an IQ of 162. Jill wanted to be a comedienne like her idol, Kay Kendall; but when she was signed for a 20th Century-Fox contract in 1958, it was on the basis of her pulchritude rather than her comic timing. After a series of non-descript heroines in such pictures as Holiday for Lovers (1959) and The Lost World (1960), Jill came into her own on the TV guest star circuit. She was most frequently seen on the specials of comedian Bob Hope (ever the connoiseur of feminine beauty) and was also shown to good advantage in a couple of Frank Sinatra films. Virtually all of Jill's film assignments contrived to get her into the skimpiest of swimwear; in the 1971 James Bond film Diamonds are Forever, Jill spent at least three-quarters of the picture in brief bikinis. Though not as active on screen in the '80s and '90s as she'd been before, Jill kept busy as the "in house" cooking expert on the daytime TV series Good Morning America and as the food columnist of the USA Weekend newspaper supplement; she has also published several well-received cookbooks. Jil's hobbies have ranged from collecting model trains to dating such high-profile celebrities as Henry Kissinger. Thrice married, Jill St. John was wed in 1990 to actor Robert Wagner, a longtime friend and coworker.
| Title | Year | Editors' Rating | User Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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Cary Grant: A Class Apart
Interviewee |
2004 | |||
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Bond Girls Are Forever
Actor |
2002 | |||
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Man of Faith
Actor |
2002 | |||
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The Trip
Actor |
2002 | |||
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Something to Believe In
Actor |
1998 | |||
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The Player
Actor |
1992 | |||
| 1989 | ||||
| 1986 | ||||
| 1982 | ||||
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Matt Houston
Actor |
1982 | |||
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Rooster
Actor |
1982 | |||
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The Act
Actor |
1982 | |||
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The Concrete Jungle
Actor |
1982 | |||
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Hart to Hart
Actor |
1979 | |||
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Telethon
Actor |
1977 | |||
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Brenda Starr
Actor |
1976 | |||
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Sitting Target
Actor |
1972 | |||
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Diamonds Are Forever
Actor |
1971 | |||
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Mooch Goes to Hollywood
Actor |
1971 | |||
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Foreign Exchange
Actor |
1970 | |||
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The Spy Killer
Actor |
1969 | |||
|
Banning
Actor |
1967 | |||
|
Eight on the Lam
Actor |
1967 | |||
| 1967 | ||||
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The King's Pirate
Actor |
1967 | |||
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Tony Rome
Actor |
1967 | |||
| 1966 | ||||
|
The Liquidator
Actor |
1966 | |||
|
The Oscar
Actor |
1966 | |||
|
Honeymoon Hotel
Actor |
1964 | |||
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Come Blow Your Horn
Actor |
1963 | |||
| 1963 | ||||
|
Who's Minding the Store?
Actor |
1963 | |||
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Tender Is the Night
Actor |
1961 | |||
| 1961 | ||||
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The Lost World
Actor |
1960 | |||
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Holiday for Lovers
Actor |
1959 | |||
| 1959 | ||||
|
Summer Love
Actor |
1958 | |||
|
Thunder in the East
Actor |
1953 |
