Cheryl Holdridge | |
Birthname: | Cheryl Lynn Phelps |
Birth Date: | 20 June 1944 |
Birth Place: | New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S. |
Death Place: | Santa Monica, California, U.S |
Othername: | Cheryl Reventlow Post |
Occupation: | Actress |
Yearsactive: | 1955–2000 |
Spouse: | |
Parents: | Herbert Charles Holdridge (adoptive father) |
Family: | John H. Holdridge (adoptive brother) |
Cheryl Lynn Holdridge (née Phelps; June 20, 1944 – January 6, 2009)[1] was an American actress, best known as an original cast member of The Mickey Mouse Club.[2]
Holdridge's mother, Julie, married Herbert Charles Holdridge, a retired Brigadier General. He adopted Cheryl in 1953 and gave her his surname.[3] Her stepbrother was diplomat John H. Holdridge, who served as U.S. Ambassador to Singapore and Indonesia.
Holdridge first performed professionally at the age of nine in the New York City Ballet's version of The Nutcracker in Los Angeles. Her first screen appearance was as an uncredited extra in the 1956 film production of Carousel.
She auditioned for Walt Disney's The Mickey Mouse Club in the spring of 1956, and was hired for the show's second season.
After the show's run ended, Holdridge returned to Van Nuys High School and graduated from Grant High School with the winter 1961 class.[4] She was cast in two episodes of Leave It to Beaver in 1959 as Gloria Cusick; she later played an occasional, recurring role as Wally Cleaver's girlfriend, Julie Foster. She reprised her role as Julie Foster in two guest appearances in The New Leave It to Beaver in 1985 and 1987.
From 1960, Holdridge made guest appearances on over twenty different shows, including The Rifleman, Wagon Train, The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, My Three Sons, Bewitched, Bringing Up Buddy, The Dick Van Dyke Show and Bachelor Father.
Holdridge was offered the role of Elly May on The Beverly Hillbillies but her studio would not release her from her contract to accept the role, and lost the lead role in Gidget Goes to Rome to Cindy Carol for looking too mature.[5] Holdridge was also screen tested for a role in Spencer's Mountain that would eventually go to Mimsy Farmer.[6]
Holdridge retired from acting in 1964 to marry race car driver Lance Reventlow, to whom she was wed until his death in 1972. Holdridge was offered a movie contract from Universal Studios but declined after Reventlow proposed. She stated “I had to choose between my career and my personal life. Lance doesn't want me to quit acting, but it wouldn't be right for me to be tied to a studio."[7] In 1967 Holdridge was reported to be planning on writing a book about Barbara Hutton and Reventlow. She watched an installment of Poor Little Rich Girl, based on Hutton, with its producer Lester Persky at his Bel Air home.[8] The book never materialized.
After the death of her third husband, Holdridge made a cameo appearance in the 2000 feature film, The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas. In 2005, she appeared at Disneyland for 50th anniversary celebrations of both the opening of the park and The Mickey Mouse Club. She was cast in televised documentary specials about Cary Grant (2005) and Barbara Hutton (2006), and also appeared in a special feature interview for a Disney DVD.
thumb|Lance Reventlow and Cheryl Holdridge's wedding portraitIn May 1960, Holdridge went on a live tour to Australia with other former Mouseketeers. While there, she became involved with Lucky Starr, an Australian singer.[9] They met when Starr was 19 and Holdridge was still 15 years old. Starr was quoted as saying he fell in love with her and when the relationship ended, the two remained friends and would write to each other regularly.[10]
Prior to her first marriage, Holdridge had dated Elvis Presley, Tony Dow, Ricky Nelson, Tim Considine, Fabian Forte, Bobby Rydell, Don Grady, Tommy Kirk,[11] and Michael Anderson Jr.[12]
Holdridge's first marriage, on November 8, 1964, was to sportsman and playboy Lance Reventlow,[13] only child of Barbara Hutton, heir to the Woolworth fortune. Holdridge decided to retire from acting after becoming engaged to Reventlow and would later explain “because that’s what you did then. You married and stayed home.”[14] It was reported that towards the end of their marriage the couple were estranged and met only occasionally,[15] with Holdridge contemplating divorce.[16] At an event in 1971, Holdridge refused to be addressed as Mrs. Lance Reventlow and stated "Lance and I are the best of friends. We just don't live together."[17] Reventlow died in 1972, in the crash of a small plane in which he was a passenger in Aspen, Colorado. The bulk of Reventlow's estate went to Holdridge, which was estimated around $50 million.[18]
Between her first two marriages it was reported Holdridge dated film producers Robert Cohn (son of Jack Cohn)[19] and Andrew Wald (son of Jerry Wald),[20] and author Michael Crichton.[21] Her second husband was Albert James "Jim" Skarda, whom she married in 1974. He ran a car rental service in Aspen.[22] Skarda was indicted for being the ringleader in an international drug smuggling operation. According to a sealed indictment, Skarda put up $100,000 in 1983 to begin importing thousands of pounds of marijuana from Columbia to the United States. Holdridge pledged their Aspen home to pay for his $500,000 bond.[23] They divorced in 1988. She maintained a second home in Aspen and lived there for six months out of the year from the late 1960s to the mid-1990s.[24]
Her third husband, Manning J. Post (1918 - 2000), a prominent California Democratic Party fundraiser and controller, was 26 years her senior. Post had a used car business before becoming a TV and film producer.[25] Post was then treasurer for the California presidential campaigns of John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson and headed the inaugural campaign committee for Jimmy Carter.[26] Post would then go on to be a fundraiser for the political campaigns of Jesse Unruh and Joel Wachs.[27] He died at the age of 82.[28]
Holdridge died at her Santa Monica home[29] on January 6, 2009, from lung cancer, aged 64.[14]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1956 | Carousel | Young Girl #2 | Uncredited |
1959 | A Summer Place | Girl in dormitory at Briarwood School for Girls | Uncredited |
2000 | The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas | Genevieve | |
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1956–1958 | The Mickey Mouse Club | Mouseketeer Cheryl | |
1957–1980 | The Wonderful World of Disney | Mouseketeer Cheryl | 2 episodes |
1958 | Madge Markham | 2 episodes | |
1958 | The Eve Arden Show | Episode: "Safari" | |
1959–1963 | Leave It to Beaver | Gloria Cusick Julie Foster | 8 episodes |
1960–1961 | Bachelor Father | Lila Meredith | 4 episodes |
1960–1964 | My Three Sons | Judy Doucette Juliet Johnson | 3 episodes |
1961 | Westinghouse Playhouse | Mona Morgan | Episode: "A Date for Buddy" |
1961 | Bringing Up Buddy | Sharon | Episode: "Buddy and the Teenager" |
1962 | Life with Archie | Betty | Television pilot |
1961–1962 | The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet | Joyce Maynard Norma Lane | 4 episodes |
1962 | The Rifleman | Sally Walker | Episode: "Young Man's Fancy" |
1962 | The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis | Daphne Winsett | Episode: "The Big Blunder and Egg Man" |
1962 | King of Diamonds | Chick Hendricks | Episode: "Rain on Wednesday" |
1962 | Dennis the Menace | Helen Franklin | Episode: "Dennis' Lovesick Friend" |
1962 | The Donna Reed Show | Pat Walker | Episode: "Mary, Mary Quite Contrary" |
1963 | Hawaiian Eye | Mary Anne Sayer | Episode: "Go Steady with Danger" |
1963 | Ripcord | Angie Carter | Episode: "The Inventor" |
1964 | The Dick Van Dyke Show | Joan Delroy | Episode: "The Third One from the Left" |
1964 | Mr. Novak | Betty | Episode: "The Private Life of Douglas Morgan, Jr." |
1964 | Dr. Kildare | Nurse Reynolds | Episode: "Quid Pro Quo" |
1964 | The Eleventh Hour | Judy Gormley | 3 episodes |
1964 | Insight | Sally | Episode: "Boss Toad" |
1964 | Wagon Train | Annabelle | Episode: "The Race Town Story" |
1964 | Bewitched | Liza Randall | Episode: "The Girl Reporter" |
1964 | Archie | Betty | Second TV Pilot for Archie |
1964 | Take Me to Your Leader | Unaired TV Pilot | |
1984–1987 | The New Leave It to Beaver | Julie Foster | 2 episodes |