Angie Dickinson
Angie Dickinson (born Angeline Brown; September 30, 1931) is an American actress whose career spans over six decades, marked by prominent roles in Westerns, crime thrillers, and television dramas.[1][2] Born in Kulm, North Dakota, to Leo Henry Brown, a newspaper publisher and mobster, and Frederica Hehr, Dickinson moved to California as a child and began her entertainment career through beauty pageants and modeling before transitioning to acting in the 1950s.[3][2] She gained early recognition for her supporting role as Feathers in Howard Hawks's Rio Bravo (1959), establishing her as a versatile performer capable of blending toughness with allure in male-dominated genres.[4][5] Dickinson's filmography includes key appearances alongside the Rat Pack in Ocean's 11 (1960) and a lead role in Brian De Palma's erotic thriller Dressed to Kill (1980), for which she won a Saturn Award for Best Actress.[6][7] Her television breakthrough came with the starring role of Sergeant Suzanne "Pepper" Anderson in Police Woman (1974–1978), the first hour-long dramatic series to feature a woman in the lead, earning her a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Television Series – Drama.[4][7][8] Throughout her career, Dickinson received multiple Emmy nominations and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, reflecting her enduring impact on both screen and small-screen entertainment despite the era's gender barriers in action-oriented roles.[9][4]Early Life
Family Background and Childhood
Angeline Brown, known as Angie to family and friends, was born on September 30, 1931, in the small farming community of Kulm, North Dakota, to Leo Henry Brown and Frederica (née Hehr) Brown.[10][11] Her father, of German descent with the original family surname Braun, worked as a publisher and editor for local weekly newspapers, including The Kulm Messenger in Kulm and later The Edgeley Mail in nearby Edgeley.[1][3][12] As the middle of three daughters—alongside sisters Mary Lou and Janet—Dickinson grew up in a devout Roman Catholic, working-class household during the lingering effects of the Great Depression, which strained small-town economies like Kulm's agriculture-dependent region.[13][3] The family's routine involved weekly newspaper production, providing young Angie with direct exposure to writing, editing, and community storytelling; her father was described as a talented writer with a sly humor, traits that permeated the home environment.[14][11] In 1942, when Dickinson was 11, the family relocated to Burbank, California, seeking better opportunities amid wartime shifts, though the move marked the end of their North Dakota roots and immersion in newspaper operations.[1][10] This transition from rural Midwest life to Southern California's burgeoning suburbs shaped her early adaptability, with the family's modest circumstances persisting in the new setting.[3]Education and Formative Experiences
Dickinson attended Bellarmine-Jefferson High School in Burbank, California, graduating in 1947 at the age of 15.[4] [15] During her high school years, she participated in local beauty contests, which honed her stage presence and self-assurance in public settings.[16] After high school, Dickinson briefly attended Glendale Community College before transferring to Immaculate Heart College in Los Angeles, earning a business degree in 1954.[2] [14] She then took a secretarial position at an aerospace firm, reflecting an initial practical career path influenced by her father's background in publishing.[15] [16] In 1953, while working, Dickinson entered a local preliminary for the Miss America contest on short notice, placing second and gaining exposure that underscored her natural charisma and adaptability.[1] These pageant experiences, combined with her clerical role, fostered self-reliance and interpersonal skills that later facilitated her transition from administrative work to entertainment pursuits.[16]Career
Initial Steps in Entertainment
Dickinson's entry into entertainment stemmed from her participation in beauty pageants rather than familial connections or formal training in the industry. After working as a secretary in a Burbank airplane parts factory for three and a half years following college, she entered a local contest affiliated with the Miss America pageant in 1953, securing second place just one day after the entry deadline.[1] This achievement, along with being named one of five finalists in NBC's nationwide Beauty Parade contest that August, drew the notice of television producers amid the expanding postwar broadcast landscape, where live variety programming proliferated to capitalize on growing household television ownership.[17] Lacking industry nepotism—her family background was in civil engineering and printing—she demonstrated self-reliance by leveraging these pageant exposures for initial visibility, transitioning from non-acting publicity stunts to on-air opportunities without prior entertainment experience.[2] Her earliest television work involved guest appearances on variety shows, marking a shift toward performance roles. Following the pageants, Dickinson secured a spot on The Colgate Comedy Hour, an NBC variety program, which provided her first exposure to a national audience and prompted her to enroll in acting classes.[18] On December 31, 1954, she made her acting debut in the Death Valley Days episode "The Jackass Mail," portraying a minor character in the anthology Western series.[10] These initial gigs positioned her within the 1950s anthology-dominated TV ecosystem, where short-form dramas filled airtime on networks eager to produce affordable content during the medium's rapid commercialization post-World War II. Subsequent minor roles in anthology series further honed her presence without yet yielding stardom. She appeared in multiple episodes of Matinee Theatre, accumulating at least eight installments by 1955, often in supporting parts that showcased her poise amid the era's live-broadcast demands.[4] In 1956, Dickinson guest-starred as Ann in the Schlitz Playhouse of Stars episode "Always the Best Man," contributing to her gradual accumulation of credits in a competitive field reliant on episodic turnover rather than long-term contracts.[19] These appearances, typical of the period's factory-like production of television drama, built her resume through persistence, reflecting the causal pathway from pageant notoriety to bit-player status in an industry prioritizing photogenic newcomers over established pedigrees.Television Breakthroughs
Dickinson entered television in the mid-1950s through guest roles in anthology series, formats that emphasized dramatic versatility and attracted high ratings during the era's live-broadcast dominance.[20] These appearances allowed emerging performers like Dickinson to gain exposure across diverse narratives, from westerns to suspense, in a medium where episodic success depended on compelling character work amid limited production resources.[21] She featured in eight episodes of the NBC anthology Matinee Theatre starting in 1955, including roles that highlighted her poise in varied dramatic scenarios.[4] In February 1956, Dickinson appeared as Shaw in the General Electric Theater episode "Try to Remember," hosted by Ronald Reagan, alongside Kim Hunter.[22] Her television momentum continued with a guest spot on CBS's Perry Mason in the March 8, 1958, episode "The Case of the One-Eyed Witness," portraying Marian Fargo, a suspect in a blackmail-murder plot; this performance drew notice from industry figures, underscoring her ability to convey depth in legal dramas. By the mid-1960s, Dickinson secured roles in established western series, guest-starring as Annie Carlson in The Virginian's September 21, 1966, episode "Ride to Delphi," involving themes of rustling and family secrets on NBC.[23] These early television credits, accumulated in a field where female actors often competed for limited parts against entrenched male leads, established Dickinson's reliability in ratings-competitive anthology and genre programming, paving her path to broader recognition without relying solely on physical appeal.[24]Film Roles and Hollywood Ascendancy
Angie Dickinson's film debut occurred in an uncredited bit part as a party guest in the musical Lucky Me (1954), directed by Jack Donohue and starring Doris Day.[25] Following this, she appeared in minor supporting roles in Westerns such as Man with the Gun (1955), The Return of Jack Slade (1955), and Hidden Guns (1956), which provided initial exposure but limited prominence in the waning studio system.[18] Her breakthrough came with the role of Feathers, a flirtatious saloon girl, in Howard Hawks' Western Rio Bravo (1959), opposite John Wayne as Sheriff John T. Chance.[26] At age 27, Dickinson's performance leveraged her physical allure and comedic timing in scenes emphasizing romantic tension with Wayne's character, contributing to the film's commercial success and establishing her as a rising star amid Hollywood's shift from rigid studio contracts to freelance talent.[27] Hawks' direction highlighted her as a capable foil in the ensemble, marking a pivot from bit player to featured actress in genre fare.[28] In Ocean's 11 (1960), Dickinson portrayed Beatrice Ocean, the wife of Danny Ocean (Frank Sinatra), aligning her with the Rat Pack's heist comedy and reinforcing her image as a glamorous blonde counterpart to the group's masculine camaraderie.[29] The film's ensemble dynamic, blending caper elements with celebrity interplay, capitalized on her poised sensuality to drive audience appeal, solidifying box-office viability through star power during a period of industry contraction post-antitrust rulings.[30] Dickinson transitioned to leading roles in international settings with Jessica (1962), directed by Jean Negulesco, where she played an American midwife whose beauty disrupts a Sicilian village, emphasizing her dramatic range alongside comedic social satire.[31] The following year, in Captain Newman, M.D. (1963), she supported Gregory Peck as Lieutenant Francie Corum, a nurse in a WWII neuropsychiatric ward, blending empathy and allure to underscore themes of healing, which further demonstrated her versatility in character-driven narratives as Hollywood increasingly favored such vehicles over spectacle.[32] These mid-1960s films reflected her ascent by pairing acting skill with marketable attractiveness, sustaining career momentum amid the erosion of the classic studio era.[33]Police Woman and Peak Television Fame
Angie Dickinson starred as Sergeant Suzanne "Pepper" Anderson, an undercover officer in the Los Angeles Police Department's Criminal Conspiracy Unit, in the NBC series Police Woman, which aired from September 13, 1974, to March 23, 1978, spanning four seasons and 91 episodes.[34] Created by Robert L. Collins, the program marked NBC's first hour-long drama led by a female detective, featuring Dickinson in varied disguises—from prostitute to nun—to infiltrate criminal operations involving drugs, prostitution, and organized crime.[35] The series blended procedural action with elements of empowerment through Anderson's resourcefulness and marksmanship, often highlighting Dickinson's physical appeal in action sequences and undercover roles, which contributed to its appeal amid 1970s cultural shifts toward female leads in law enforcement narratives.[36] Police Woman drew millions of weekly viewers, achieving solid ratings without consistently cracking the top 15 Nielsen rankings, yet sustaining strong audience loyalty through its formulaic episodes that prioritized plot-driven investigations over deep character development.[37] Dickinson's portrayal earned her three Primetime Emmy Award nominations for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series (1975, 1976, 1977) and a Golden Globe win for Best Actress in a Television Series – Drama in 1975, signaling robust public demand despite mixed critical reception that sometimes critiqued the show's reliance on sensationalism.[38] The series' syndication success extended its reach, with reruns persisting on classic television networks, amplifying its cultural footprint.[10] The role solidified Dickinson's television stardom, positioning Police Woman as a causal precursor to increased female representation in procedural dramas by demonstrating viability for women in authoritative, action-oriented leads.[39] Anecdotal evidence from law enforcement recruitment data in the late 1970s linked the show to heightened interest among women pursuing police careers, reflecting its influence on real-world perceptions of gender roles in policing.[40] While not revolutionary in scripting, its procedural format and Dickinson's commanding presence established a template for subsequent series featuring female detectives, underscoring audience preference for competent, glamorous heroines over stereotypically vulnerable ones.[41]Later Career Phases and Retirement
Following the conclusion of Police Woman in 1978, Dickinson continued with selective film roles in the 1980s, including the lead in Brian De Palma's thriller Dressed to Kill (1980), where she portrayed a vulnerable psychiatrist entangled in a murder mystery.[2] She reprised her role from the 1974 film in the sequel Big Bad Mama II (1987), a crime comedy emphasizing her established persona as a tough, charismatic outlaw figure.[6] These projects reflected a shift toward supporting or genre-specific parts amid Hollywood's evolving landscape, which increasingly favored younger leads for action-oriented narratives. Television work remained sporadic through the 1990s and early 2000s, with Dickinson appearing in miniseries like Hollywood Wives (1985), adapting Jackie Collins' novel, and Wild Palms (1993), a surreal Oliver Stone-produced drama.[2] Guest spots and smaller film roles followed, such as in the ensemble heist remake Ocean's Eleven (2001), Big Bad Love (2001) opposite Debra Winger, Elvis Has Left the Building (2004) as a supporting character, and a 2004 episode of Judging Amy.[6] Her output diminished notably after these, culminating in the Hallmark Channel television movie Mending Fences (2009), her final credited acting role.[18] Dickinson effectively retired from acting following Mending Fences, at age 78, citing in interviews a desire to step away after decades in the industry and personal life adjustments, including the profound impact of her daughter Nikki's death from an overdose in 2007.[10] This withdrawal aligned with broader industry dynamics, where opportunities for women over 70 in lead roles are rare due to casting preferences emphasizing youth and physical demands, though Dickinson has not publicly attributed her decision solely to ageism.[42] By the 2010s, she focused on private life rather than pursuing further projects. As of October 2025, Dickinson, now 94, lives privately in Beverly Hills, California, with no new acting commitments announced.[6] She has occasionally addressed health speculations in media, emphasizing routines like daily exercise and diet that sustain her vitality into her nineties, countering unsubstantiated rumors of decline.[43]Personal Life
Marriages and Romantic Associations
Angie Dickinson's first marriage was to Gene Dickinson, a college football star who later played semi-professionally, on June 2, 1952; the union ended in divorce in 1960 after eight years.[44][45] Dickinson retained her married surname for professional use following the separation.[10] Her second marriage, to composer Burt Bacharach, began in 1965 and lasted 16 years until their divorce in 1981, characterized by mutual professional respect amid growing personal incompatibilities.[46][47] Dickinson engaged in several high-profile romantic relationships during her Hollywood years, including a decade-long on-and-off liaison with Frank Sinatra starting around 1954, which nearly culminated in marriage in 1964 but reflected the era's informal, consensual adult dynamics among entertainers rather than coercive power imbalances.[47][48][49] She later described Sinatra as the love of her life, underscoring a pattern of intense but non-committal attachments in her personal history.[47] Other reported associations included actors Dean Martin and David Janssen, consistent with the social circles of mid-20th-century show business.[50]Family Challenges and Daughter's Tragedy
Angie Dickinson and Burt Bacharach's only child, Lea Nikki Bacharach, was born prematurely on July 12, 1966, three months early, which contributed to immediate health complications and developmental challenges from infancy.[51] Nikki exhibited early signs of social withdrawal, emotional volatility, and hypersensitivity to environmental changes, symptoms later diagnosed as Asperger's syndrome, a neurodevelopmental form of autism spectrum disorder characterized by difficulties in social interaction and restricted interests rather than a purely psychological condition.[52][53] The diagnosis was not made until adulthood, after years of misattributed struggles including periods of institutionalization in psychiatric facilities totaling around a decade, where she endured labels of brain damage and inadequate support for her underlying neurological realities.[51][54] Nikki's lifelong difficulties stemmed from a combination of her premature birth's physiological impacts and the inherent neurological features of Asperger's, leading to an inability to cope independently despite therapeutic interventions and family efforts; she remained unmarried, childless, and increasingly isolated.[55][56] On January 4, 2007, at age 40, she died by suicide at her condominium in Thousand Oaks, California, via suffocation using a plastic bag and helium, an act her parents framed as a deliberate escape from the progressive brain deterioration caused by her condition.[57][58] In a joint statement, Dickinson and Bacharach noted, "Nikki quietly and peacefully committed suicide to escape the ravages to her brain brought on by Asperger's, a form of autism," highlighting the inexorable toll of untreated developmental origins over transient mental health narratives.[57][59] Dickinson, who had no other children, publicly expressed profound grief in subsequent reflections, detailing in a 2010 Los Angeles Magazine essay the causal chain from Nikki's prematurity and autism symptoms to her isolation and fatal decision, while critiquing systemic failures in recognizing neurodevelopmental realities amid evolving diagnostic understandings.[51] She recounted Nikki's preoccupation with assisted suicide literature like Final Exit and emphasized the limits of interventions against innate neurological deficits, advocating for candid acknowledgment of such factors in family outcomes rather than oversimplified blame on parenting or society.[58] This loss underscored Dickinson's resilience, as she continued her professional life without further attempts at parenthood, attributing Nikki's trajectory to verifiable biological and early-life antecedents.[51][53]Health Status and Current Residence
As of October 2025, Angie Dickinson, born September 30, 1931, is 94 years old and confirmed alive, with recent public acknowledgments of her birthday highlighting her enduring presence despite a markedly private existence.[60][61] She maintains a reclusive lifestyle, minimizing public appearances and media interactions in favor of personal solitude.[62] Dickinson resides in a longtime Beverly Hills, California, home, where she lives alone accompanied by her cats, fostering a peaceful routine insulated from external demands.[63][64] Reports from 2023 onward describe no relocation, underscoring her attachment to this upscale enclave as a stable base post-retirement.[65] Regarding health, Dickinson has disclosed habits supporting her vitality into advanced age, such as clean eating and avoiding unnecessary risks, as shared in a 2023 interview when she was 91.[43] Sensational online narratives exaggerating mobility limitations or terminal conditions—often from unverified video content—lack corroboration from direct statements or medical disclosures, with empirical indicators pointing instead to sustained independence amid age-related seclusion.[66] No verified reports indicate acute deterioration as of late 2025.Public Image, Legacy, and Recognition
Portrayal as Sex Symbol and Industry Perceptions
Angie Dickinson emerged as a prominent sex symbol in Hollywood during the 1950s and 1960s, largely due to her physical attributes, particularly her legs, which became a focal point of media attention and industry marketing. Universal Studios reportedly insured her legs for one million dollars, underscoring their perceived commercial value in an era when female stars' appearances drove audience draw. She received the Golden Garter Award in 1962 for possessing "Hollywood's Greatest Gams," reflecting how her blonde archetype aligned with prevailing male-oriented aesthetics in film promotion. In 1999, Playboy magazine ranked her number 42 on its list of the "100 Sexiest Stars of the Century," affirming her enduring appeal within metrics emphasizing visual allure over the mid-20th century.[14] Dickinson demonstrated agency in capitalizing on her sex symbol status to secure roles and financial stability amid limited opportunities for women in Hollywood, where physical appeal often determined casting and earnings potential. By embracing yet selectively navigating her image—rejecting the more caricatured platinum blonde personas of contemporaries like Marilyn Monroe to preserve broader acting prospects—she achieved independence that contrasted with the era's constraints on female performers. Industry contemporaries dubbed her the "Thinking Man's Sex Symbol," suggesting perceptions of her allure as sophisticated rather than merely ornamental, which facilitated transitions into authoritative roles without fully escaping typecasting.[67][68] Criticisms of her portrayal centered on risks of reductive objectification, with some feminist viewpoints in later decades framing such emphasis on female sexuality as exploitative reinforcement of the male gaze, potentially limiting narrative depth for women on screen. However, Dickinson's own reflections countered this by expressing enjoyment of her sex symbol role provided it coexisted with recognition of her acting skills, noting in a 2019 interview that she relished the attention but sought to avoid sole identification with it. Empirical outcomes, including sustained career longevity into the 1970s, indicate that her strategic use of allure yielded versatile opportunities rather than permanent entrapment in tropes, as evidenced by her avoidance of "dumb blonde" stereotypes through deliberate role choices.[49][10]Awards, Nominations, and Honors
Dickinson earned a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Television Series – Drama for her role in Police Woman in 1976.[38] She received three consecutive Primetime Emmy Award nominations for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series for the same role, in 1975, 1976, and 1977.[69] Additionally, she garnered Golden Globe nominations for Best Actress in a Television Series – Drama in 1977 and 1978.[70] In film, Dickinson won the Saturn Award for Best Actress for her performance in Dressed to Kill in 1981.[71] She received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in the television category on September 10, 1987, located at 7000 Hollywood Boulevard.[4] Reflecting her North Dakota roots, Dickinson was awarded the Theodore Roosevelt Rough Rider Award by the state of North Dakota on December 2, 1992, recognizing her achievements as a native who honored her origins through her career.[3] Later honors included three nominations from TV Land Awards for her Police Woman character: Favorite Crimestopper in a Drama in 2003 and 2005, and Favorite Lady Gumshoe in 2007.[9][71]| Year | Award | Category | Work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1976 | Golden Globe | Best Actress in a Television Series – Drama | Police Woman | Won |
| 1975–1977 | Primetime Emmy | Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series | Police Woman | Nominated (three times) |
| 1981 | Saturn Award | Best Actress | Dressed to Kill | Won |
| 1987 | Hollywood Walk of Fame | Television | Career | Honored |
| 1992 | Theodore Roosevelt Rough Rider Award | — | Career and heritage | Won |
| 2003, 2005, 2007 | TV Land Award | Favorite Crimestopper / Lady Gumshoe | Police Woman | Nominated (three times) |
Controversies, Criticisms, and Personal Reflections
Dickinson's decade-long intermittent romantic involvement with Frank Sinatra, beginning around 1954 and intertwined with the Rat Pack's notorious lifestyle of heavy drinking, gambling, and associations with organized crime figures, drew moral condemnation from conservative commentators who viewed it as emblematic of Hollywood's moral decay in the mid-20th century.[14][47] She has reflected on this era without remorse, describing Sinatra as the "love of her life" and framing such relationships as consensual adult choices rather than exploitative dynamics.[47] In a 2019 CBS Sunday Morning interview, Dickinson critiqued post-#MeToo reinterpretations of pre-1960s Hollywood norms, asserting that women like herself navigated sexual advances through personal agency and verbal assertiveness—"I didn't wanna say no to Frank Sinatra"—rather than institutional victimhood narratives, a stance that elicited backlash from advocates prioritizing retrospective consent frameworks over individual accountability.[49] Critics within the industry have faulted Dickinson for career decisions reinforcing typecasting, particularly her lead role in Police Woman (1974–1978), which she later expressed regret over for limiting her to action-oriented "tough girl" archetypes despite its commercial success.[49] Peers and reviewers argued this perpetuated superficial portrayals of female leads, though Dickinson countered by emphasizing her deliberate embrace of sensual roles as empowering expressions of autonomy, rejecting blame on systemic sexism in favor of self-directed choices.[49] Her participation in nude scenes for Big Bad Mama (1974) at age 43 further fueled debates on age-appropriate sensuality in film, with some outlets decrying it as exploitative amid shifting standards, while Dickinson maintained it aligned with her unapologetic career ethos.[72] The 2007 suicide of Dickinson's daughter, Lea Nikki Bacharach, at age 40—following lifelong struggles with undiagnosed Asperger's syndrome, emotional dysregulation, and institutionalizations—prompted public scrutiny over parental influences from high-profile Hollywood upbringings.[59][55] Dickinson attributed Nikki's challenges primarily to innate neurodevelopmental factors rather than environmental pressures like fame or divorce from Burt Bacharach in 1976, a perspective echoed in Bacharach's memoir highlighting genetic and diagnostic oversights over external blame.[73] In reflections on autism advocacy, Dickinson stressed early intervention's limitations against inherent conditions, critiquing overly optimistic Hollywood narratives on such disorders while underscoring personal resilience in facing irremediable tragedies.[58] Unsubstantiated claims of feuds with co-stars or directors, circulating in sensational online videos alleging disdain for figures like Lee Marvin, lack corroboration from primary interviews or contemporaneous reports, appearing instead as aggregated clickbait without evidentiary support.[74] Dickinson's broader reflections portray Hollywood's hedonism as a voluntary arena demanding self-reliance, where she opted out of victim-centric discourse to prioritize accountability—a subtly contrarian view amid industry trends toward collective grievance.[49]Works
Feature Films
- 1957: China Gate, directed by Samuel Fuller; Dickinson portrayed a supporting role as a Eurasian woman aiding anti-Communist forces.[75]
- 1959: Rio Bravo, directed by Howard Hawks; Dickinson played Feathers, a saloon singer who develops a romance with the sheriff portrayed by John Wayne; the film earned $5.75 million in U.S. and Canada rentals.[76][77]
- 1960: Ocean's 11, directed by Lewis Milestone; Dickinson appeared as Beatrice Ocean, the ex-wife of the lead character played by Frank Sinatra, alongside Dean Martin and Sammy Davis Jr.; it grossed $5.5 million at the box office.[78][79]
- 1961: The Sins of Rachel Cade, directed by Gordon Douglas; Dickinson starred as a missionary nurse in the Belgian Congo opposite Peter Finch.[80]
- 1962: Jessica, directed by Jean Negulesco; she played a widowed midwife facing village suspicion in Sicily, co-starring Maurice Chevalier.[80]
- 1963: Captain Newman, M.D., directed by David Miller; Dickinson portrayed Lt. Corum, a nurse in a psychiatric ward, with Gregory Peck and Tony Curtis.[81]
- 1964: The Killers, directed by Don Siegel; she appeared as Sheila, a femme fatale involved in a murder plot, starring alongside Lee Marvin and John Cassavetes.[80]
- 1965: The Art of Love, directed by Norman Jewison; Dickinson played a role in this comedy with James Garner and Dick Van Dyke.[80]
- 1966: The Chase, directed by Arthur Penn; she featured as Lois, in a ensemble cast including Marlon Brando and Robert Redford.[81]
- 1967: Point Blank, directed by John Boorman; Dickinson had a supporting role as Chris, the sister-in-law of the protagonist played by Lee Marvin.[82]
- 1971: Pretty Maids All in a Row, directed by Roger Vadim; she starred as a teacher in this thriller, with Rock Hudson; the film was a box-office disappointment.[81]
- 1974: Big Bad Mama, directed by Steve Carver; Dickinson led as Wilma McClatchie, a bank-robbing mother during the Great Depression, co-starring William Smith.[82]
- 1980: Dressed to Kill, directed by Brian De Palma; Dickinson portrayed Kate Miller, a housewife entangled in a thriller murder mystery with Michael Caine; the film grossed $31.9 million worldwide on a $6.5 million budget.[83][84]
- 2004: Elvis Has Left the Building, directed by Joel Zwick; Dickinson appeared in a cameo as herself in this comedy road movie starring Kim Basinger.[85]