Suzy Parker

About Suzy Parker

Who is it?: Actress
Birth Day: October 28, 1932
Birth Place:  Long Island City, New York, United States
Died On: May 3, 2003(2003-05-03) (aged 70)\nMontecito, California, U.S.
Birth Sign: Scorpio
Other names: Suzy Parker Dillman
Occupation: Model, actress
Years active: 1947–1970
Spouse(s): Charles Staton (m. 1950; div. 1953) Pierre de la Salle (m. 1958; div. 1961) Bradford Dillman (m. 1963; her death 2003)
Children: 4

Suzy Parker Net Worth

Suzy Parker was born on October 28, 1932 in  Long Island City, New York, United States, is Actress. Suzy Parker was born on October 28, 1932 in Long Island City, New York, USA as Cecilia Ann Renee Parker. She was an actress, known for Kiss Them for Me (1957), The Best of Everything (1959) and Funny Face (1957). She was married to Bradford Dillman, Pierre de la Salle and Charles Ronald Staton. She died on May 3, 2003 in Montecito, California, USA.
Suzy Parker is a member of Actress

💰Suzy Parker Net worth: $14 Million

Some Suzy Parker images

Biography/Timeline

1895

Suzy Parker was born Cecilia Ann Renee Parker in Long Island City, New York, to George (1895–1958) and Elizabeth Parker (1897–1965), who married in 1916. She had three older sisters: Dorian (1917–2008), Florian (1918–2010), and Georgiabell (1921–1988). Elizabeth believed she was undergoing menopause, but then discovered she was several months pregnant with Cecilia/Suzy.

1925

Parker met Journalist Pierre de la Salle (Pitou, born July 12, 1925) at a Jacques Fath party outside of Paris. She and Dorian were modeling together and separately on this trip. She returned to the United States and asked Ronald for a divorce, but he would only agree to a quick divorce if Parker gave him a large monetary settlement, paid for plastic surgery on his nose and paid for his acting lessons. She agreed, and their divorce was finalized in Mexico in 1953. Ronald was killed years later in an automobile accident. Parker and Pierre continued to date for years despite Pierre's numerous infidelities. She also was paying for his high cost-of-living expenses. They married about 1957 or 1958, but the couple kept it a secret.

1944

Parker and two of her sisters were tall, all measuring between 5 ft 10 in (178 cm) and 6 ft 1 in (185 cm). Sister Dorian (who modelled under the name Dorian Leigh) was the sole exception, standing 5 ft 5 in (165 cm). In 1944, Dorian worked as an advertising copy Writer when a coworker encouraged her to go to the Conover Modeling Agency. Dorian was one of the top Models in the world, arguably referred to as the "world's first supermodel" (along with Lisa Fonssagrives).

1950

Parker was married three times. In 1950, she and her high-school sweetheart, Ronald Staton (some sources cite Charles), drove to Georgia to secretly marry. Parker said that she married him in a bikini with a raincoat on top, adding, "He was very good-looking, and it [the marriage] was just a sheer disaster." The young couple drove back to Florida where she was still living with her parents who were upset because of her age and because Ronald was part Cherokee. They moved to Pennsylvania and rented a house near where Dorian was living with her husband and children. Parker was already modeling in the United States and Europe while Ronald was attending the University of Pennsylvania as a freshman.

1955

She was the first model to earn $200 per hour and $100,000 per year. Vogue declared her one of the faces of the confident, post-war American woman. By 1955, she owed income taxes on her modeling income from previous years, amounting to more than $60,000 in back taxes and rapidly accumulating penalties, an enormous amount at the time. Jerry Ford paid her tax bill and found her assignments. She worked also non-stop for Vogue, Revlon, Hertz, Westinghouse, Max Factor, Bliss, DuPont, Simplicity, Smirnoff, and Ronson shavers, to name a few. She also was on the covers of about 70 magazines around the world, including Vogue, Elle, Life, Look, Redbook, Paris Match and McCall's.

1957

Her first film role was in Kiss Them for Me (1957), playing the main interest of Cary Grant's character. Soon after she accepted a cameo role in Funny Face (1957), on screen for two minutes in a musical number described as "Pink Number". Her other films include: Ten North Frederick (1958), The Best of Everything (1959), A Circle of Deception (1960 - during which she met Future husband Bradford Dillman), Flight from Ashiya (1964) and Chamber of Horrors (1966). She also played dramatic roles in TV shows such as Burke's Law and The Twilight Zone plus appearances as herself on a number of quiz shows such as I've Got a Secret.

1958

A self-described tomboy in her teens, Parker broke several bones as a result. Parker also broke bones in the 1958 car accident that killed her father. In 1964, she was nervously rehearsing for her famous appearance in the well-known Twilight Zone episode "Number 12 Looks Just Like You" when she was in another car accident.

1960

In 1960, Parker met actor Bradford Dillman on the set of their 1960 movie, A Circle of Deception. She was still married to de la Salle but no longer living with him. Bradford was ending his first marriage and dating Juliette Greco at the time. Parker obtained a divorce and married Bradford in 1963 on board a boat at sea. She changed her name to Suzy Parker Dillman following the marriage.

1963

After marrying Dillman in 1963, then receiving injuries in a car accident in 1964, Parker mostly retired from modeling and acting to be a stepmother to Jeffrey and Pamela. Parker enjoyed being a stay at home mother and like her sister Dorian, who was a Cordon Bleu-level chef, Parker was an excellent cook.

1965

Parker had three more children with Bradford: daughter Dinah (born 1965) and sons Charlie (born 1967) and Christopher (born 1969). The family lived in Bel Air, Los Angeles, until Dinah was bitten by a rattlesnake in the yard and almost died. They then moved to Montecito in the Santa Barbara area, where Suzy remained until her death in 2003.

1970

Parker's last role was in a 1970 episode of Night Gallery. She did, in a way, make one other film "appearance" in The Beatles' 1970 documentary film Let It Be, in which the band performed their song "Suzy Parker". The song, one of the few credited as written by all four Beatles, was part of their Academy Award-winning score for the original songs they performed in the film.

1977

After recovering from her injuries, Parker became pregnant and de la Salle left. She said, "He didn't want to be a father. I already hired a nanny... he was gone, history." She gave birth to their daughter Georgia Belle Florian Coco Chanel de la Salle in December 1959, whose godmother was close friend Coco Chanel. Parker named her daughter after her older sisters Georgiabell and Florian and purposely left Dorian Leigh's name off. Dorian and Parker feuded for many years, as Parker was fed up with Leigh's promiscuous lifestyle and her not taking care of her children. A March 14, 1977, People magazine article featured Parker trying to launch her then 17-year-old daughter Georgia as a model. However, Georgia modeled only a few times during and after college.

1990

Parker had long suffered from allergies and, in the 1990s, developed ulcers. During surgery for an ulcer, her vital signs disappeared on the operating table, but she was resuscitated. She never fully recovered and developed more ulcers and diabetes. She had multiple hip surgeries, and then her kidneys began to fail. She spent the last five years of her life in and out of the hospital.

2003

Parker decided to end dialysis treatments. She returned home and died at age 70 surrounded by family at her orchard in Montecito on May 3, 2003. Her husband, Bradford Dillman, died in 2018 at age 87.