Joanna Venetia Invicta Stevenson (10 March 1938 – 26 September 2022) was an English actress.
Early life
Born in 1938 in London, England, as Joanna Venetia Invicta Stevenson, she was the daughter of film director Robert Stevenson and actress Anna Lee. The family moved to Hollywood within a year of her birth after her father signed a contract with film producer David O. Selznick.[1] When her parents divorced in 1944, she stayed with her father and new stepmother, Frances.[2] After an education in exclusive Californian private schools,[3] her theatrical debut was with her mother in Liliom, a play produced by the Sombrero Theater, in Phoenix, Arizona, in April 1955 and with the husband-and-wife team of Fernando Lamas and Arlene Dahl.[4]
A one-time Miss Los Angeles Press Club,[5] Stevenson was placed on contract by RKO Pictures in November 1956.[6]Hedda Hopper named Stevenson on her list of top movie newcomers in January 1957, alongside Jayne Mansfield. Hopper said of Stevenson, then 18, she is "the most purely beautiful of all the new crop of stars."[7]
Stevenson's publicity machine continued to promote her. She was reported enjoying riding horses as an activity[10] and playing table tennis.[6] In November 1957, she won $300 in prizes at a horse show and participated at the National Horse Show at the Cow Palace in San Francisco.[11] Around this time, she became the face on Sweetheart Stout cans and bottles; the brand marked the 50th anniversary of using her image in 2008.[12]
The same photo of Stevenson has appeared on cans and bottles of Sweetheart Stout beer since 1958.[12][15]
Personal life
Marriages and relationships
Stevenson with Russ Tamblyn on their wedding day, 1956
Stevenson married MGM actor-dancer Russ Tamblyn on Valentine's Day, 1956, shortly after her half-brother, actor Jeffrey Byron, was born to her mother. She was 17 when Tamblyn and she had their wedding in the Wayfarers Chapel in Palos Verdes.[16] Stevenson and Tamblyn divorced in April 1957,[2] but the two remained friends.[17] A widely reproduced photograph shows Stevenson calmly walking down a Los Angeles street, seemingly unaware that Tamblyn is doing a spectacular backward aerial handspring a few inches away from her.[citation needed]
Stevenson had a year-long affair with actor Audie Murphy, which began when they co-starred in Seven Ways from Sundown in 1960.[18]
Stevenson remarried, to Don Everly, in 1962 and retired from acting and modelling. She had often complained about how much she hated acting.[18] The couple had two daughters, Stacy and Erin Everly, both model/actresses, and a son, Edan Everly, a musician. She divorced Don Everly in 1970 and never remarried. Erin, the ex-wife of rocker Axl Rose, was the inspiration for several Guns N' Roses songs, including "Sweet Child o' Mine", where she also appeared in the video.[citation needed]
Friendships and publicity romances
Despite not having a starring role in a film before 1958, Stevenson was incredibly popular in fan magazines. She was labelled "the most photogenic girl in the world" and went on rounds of dates;[19] however, most of the men she went out with were only friends to her.
In his 2005 autobiography, Tab Hunter Confidential: the Making of a Movie Star, Tab Hunter, with whom she frequently dated,[19] admitted that she was a large part of his and his then-boyfriend, Anthony Perkins's, social life, "acting as a 'beard' when we double-dated."[20] Although their relationship was an open secret in Hollywood,[21] Stevenson acted as a confidant for Perkins during the course of their romance. "[C]ertainly, we all knew Tony [Perkins] was gay," Stevenson admitted to a Perkins biographer. "...We were real friends, and he would sleep over at my house in the same bed. But there was never, ever any... well, you know. If you have a friend of the opposite sex who's gay, it's just up in the air."[22]
Death
Stevenson died on 26 September 2022, at a health care facility in Atlanta from Parkinson's disease.[23]