banner-img-qieb2zlf9hu1phi4a79fzijwvtyangepsq4kdk95ms

Jill Ireland

 

Jill Ireland was born in London in 1936.   Her flm debut was in 1955 in “Simon and Laura”.   Her other films include “Carry on Nurse”, “Robbery Under Arms” and “Three Men in a Boat”.   In the early 60’s she went to Hollywood with her then husband David McCallum.   After her divorce, she married actor Charles Bronson and made many films with him including “The Mechanic”, “Hard Times”, “Breakout” and “Love and Bullets”.   Jill Ireland died in Malibu in 1990.

TCM Overview{

Attractive blonde professional dancer turned actor who made her screen debut in 1955. Ireland has often been paired with actor/husband Charles Bronson and was formerly married to actor David McCallum. Late in life she attracted considerable attention and respect for her lengthy and courageous battle with breast cancer, as well as with her other personal and family misfortunes.

Her IMDB entry:

Jill Ireland was an Anglo-American actress best-known for her appearance as “Leila Kalomi”, the only woman Mr. Spock ever loved (in the Star Trek (1966) episode, Star Trek: This Side of Paradise (1967)) and for her many supporting roles in the movies ofCharles Bronson, her second husband. She is also known for her battle with breast cancer, having written two books on her fight with the disease and serving as a spokesperson for the American Cancer Society.

She was born Jill Dorothy Ireland on April 24, 1936 in London, England, to a wine merchant and his wife, Dorothy, who was fated to outlive her daughter. Young Jill started her entertainment career as a dancer and made her credited screen debut, in 1955, inMichael Powell‘s Oh… Rosalinda!! (1955), after a bit part in another movie. Two years later, she married actor David McCallum, with whom she co-starred in the Stanley Bakeraction picture, Hell Drivers (1957). In the mid-1960s, they moved to the United States so McCallum could star as agent “Ilya Kuryakin” in the TV series, The Man from U.N.C.L.E.(1964). She got steady work on American TV and would co-star with her husband in five episode of the series in 1964, 1965 and 1967.

Ireland divorced McCallum, with whom she had three sons, in 1967. The following year, she married Charles Bronson, who was several years away from superstar status. They had first met when McCallum introduced them on the set of The Great Escape (1963). With Bronson, she had two children, a daughter born to the couple, and an adopted daughter.

They first co-starred together in the French movie, Rider on the Rain (1970) (“Rider on the Rain”), in 1970 (she had first played an uncredited bit part in his movie, Lola (1970), released that same year), a movie that made Bronson a major star in Europe. They starred in 13 more pictures in the next 17 years, a period during which Bronson rivaledClint Eastwood as the biggest movie star in the world in the early and mid-1970s before his star waned in the 1980s. Ireland only appeared in one TV episode, one TV-movie and one theatrical picture that didn’t star Bronson in that time.

She was diagnosed with cancer in her right breast in 1984 and underwent a mastectomy. She wrote about her battle with the disease and her advocacy for the the American Cancer Society led to the organization giving her its Courage Award. Ireland was presented with the award from President Ronald Reagan.

Jill Ireland died of breast cancer at her home in Malibu, California on May 18, 1990. She was 54 years old.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: Jon C. Hopwood

The above IMDB entry can also be accessed online here.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *