Donna Douglas; Elly May on 'Hillbillies,' starred with Elvis
NEW YORK - Donna Douglas, 82, who played the buxom tomboy Elly May Clampett on the hit 1960s sitcom The Beverly Hillbillies, died Thursday of pancreatic cancer in Baton Rouge, La.
NEW YORK - Donna Douglas, 82, who played the buxom tomboy Elly May Clampett on the hit 1960s sitcom The Beverly Hillbillies, died Thursday of pancreatic cancer in Baton Rouge, La.
She was best known for her role in the CBS comedy about a backwoods Ozark family who moved to Beverly Hills after striking it rich from oil discovered on their land.
The series, which ran from 1962 to 1971, also starred the late Buddy Ebsen and Irene Ryan as well as Max Baer Jr., who turns 77 on Sunday.
As Elly May, she seemed blissfully unaware of her status as a bumpkin blond bombshell. Typically she was clad in a snug flannel shirt and tight jeans cinched with a rope belt, and she seemed to prefer her critters to any beau.
Chosen from more than 500 other actresses, Ms. Douglas said she felt at ease playing the role because, like her character, she grew up a poor Southern tomboy. Her childhood in Pride, La., came in handy when she was asked during her audition to milk a goat.
"I had milked cows before," she recalled in a 2009 interview. "I figured they were equipped the same, so I just went on over and did it."
The show was not only assailed by critics, but by the network president who put it on the air: "I HATED it," Michael Dann confided much later. "After screening the pilot, I don't think I ever watched another segment."
The public, however, felt quite the opposite: It ran for nine seasons, often in the Top 10. In their own way, the Clampetts were a forerunner of the '60s counterculture.
It wasn't much of a stretch for Douglas to fit into the troupe, said her cousin, Charlene Smith.
"She was always happy, and she really loved animals - just like her character on The Beverly Hillbillies. She was a wonderful lady, a very good Christian lady."
Ms. Douglas, whose birth name was Doris Smith, began her career with beauty pageants - she was Miss Baton Rouge and Miss New Orleans - followed by a trip to New York to pursue a career in entertainment.
While modeling didn't appeal to her - "I didn't want to be that skinny" - television did. Ms. Douglas was featured as the Letters Girl on The Perry Como Show in 1957 and as the Billboard Girl on The Steve Allen Show in 1959.
She landed a featured role in the 1959 film Career, starring Dean Martin and Shirley MacLaine, and a bit part in the film musical Li'l Abner.
Ms. Douglas starred in one of the most memorable episodes of Rod Serling's The Twilight Zone - titled "Eye of the Beholder," it was the one in which her head is wrapped in bandages for most of the half-hour after plastic surgery aimed at fixing her "ugliness," which in fact was beauty in a universe of monsters. And she starred opposite Elvis Presley in the 1966 movie Frankie and Johnny. After The Beverly Hillbillies, Ms. Douglas worked in real estate, recorded country and gospel music albums, and wrote a book for children that drew on biblical themes.