Audrey Long
Audrey Long (April 14, 1922 – September 19, 2014) was an American actress best known for her supporting roles in low-budget films, particularly film noir and Westerns, during the 1940s and early 1950s.[1][2] Born in Orlando, Florida, to British immigrant parents, Long was the daughter of C.S. Long, an Episcopal minister who became a U.S. Navy chaplain, leading the family to relocate frequently across the United States.[1] She graduated from Los Gatos High School in California and trained in acting under Dorothea Johnson before receiving a scholarship to study at the Max Reinhardt Drama School.[1] Long began her Hollywood career in 1941 when she signed a contract with Warner Bros., initially appearing in uncredited bit parts in films such as The Male Animal (1942) and Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942).[1][2] She gained more prominent notice in the mid-1940s with roles in Westerns like Tall in the Saddle (1944), where she starred opposite John Wayne, and later transitioned to film noir, delivering memorable performances as the ill-fated wife in Desperate (1947) and the sophisticated socialite in Born to Kill (1947).[1][2] Over her career, she appeared in approximately 33 films and television shows, often in B-movies produced by studios like RKO and Monogram Pictures, before retiring from acting after her final role in Indian Uprising (1952).[1][2] In her personal life, Long married talent agent Edward Rubin in 1945, a union that ended in divorce in 1951.[1] The following year, she wed British author Leslie Charteris, creator of The Saint series, and accompanied him on extensive travels around the world until his death in 1993.[1] After retiring from the screen, Long lived primarily abroad and maintained a low profile, with her remains cremated and mingled with Charteris's upon her death in Virginia Water, Surrey, England, at age 92.[1]Early Life
Family Background and Childhood
Audrey Long was born Audrey Gwendoline Long on April 14, 1922, in Orlando, Florida, to English-born parents.[3][4] Her father, Christopher Stanley Long (also known as C.S. Long), was an Episcopal minister of English descent who later became a chaplain in the United States Navy.[5][3] Due to her father's naval career, the family relocated frequently across North America during her early years, including stints in Canada, Honolulu (Hawaii), Virginia, San Francisco, and other areas of California.[6][3] Long grew up alongside her younger brother, John Stanley Long, who was born in Hawaii, in this mobile environment, which exposed the family to diverse settings and required constant adaptation to new communities and schools.[6][7][5] Raised in a strict Episcopal household influenced by her father's profession, Long's childhood emphasized religious discipline and moral values amid the challenges of frequent moves.[4][3] These travels inadvertently introduced her to varied cultural influences, including early encounters with local theater productions that began to cultivate her interest in drama.[6][7] The family eventually settled in Northern California, providing a more stable base for her later formative years.[7][3]Education and Early Aspirations
Audrey Long's early education was shaped by her family's frequent relocations due to her father's career as a U.S. Navy chaplain, exposing her to diverse schooling environments across states. She attended St. Margaret's School in Tappahannock, Virginia, where she fondly recalled her school days, and Disputanta High School in Virginia. Later, during her time in California, she enrolled at Los Gatos High School, graduating in the early 1940s.[8][9][3] At Los Gatos High School, Long developed an interest in the performing arts through participation in school plays and local theater. She joined the nearby Saratoga Players, a community group, where she performed roles such as Helena in A Midsummer Night's Dream, honing her dramatic skills and earning recognition for her poise and talent. This proximity to Hollywood, though several hours north in the Bay Area, sparked her aspirations for stage and screen work, as the glamour of the film industry permeated Southern California culture and inspired her ambitions beyond traditional academics. She also took acting lessons from respected coach Dorothea Johnson during this period.[3][1] Upon high school graduation, Long opted to pursue modeling in Hollywood instead of attending college, securing work as a Powers model for magazines and advertisements in the late 1930s and early 1940s. Her assignments included photoshoots that showcased her elegance, often featured in publications highlighting fashion and beauty. This early modeling experience not only provided financial independence but also built her confidence in front of the camera, aligning with her growing desire to transition into professional acting. Her performances with the Saratoga Players ultimately led to a scholarship at the Max Reinhardt Drama School in Hollywood, where she studied under the renowned director and further nurtured her theatrical aspirations.[10][11][3]Acting Career
Debut and Early Roles
Audrey Long transitioned from modeling to acting in the early 1940s, leveraging her experience as a Power's fashion model to secure her first studio contract. After completing dramatic training at the Max Reinhardt Drama School in Hollywood on a scholarship, which honed her poise during screen tests, she signed with Warner Bros. while still a teenager. This educational background provided the foundation for her professional entry into the film industry.[12][13] Long made her screen debut in an uncredited role as a student in the Warner Bros. comedy The Male Animal (1942), directed by Elliott Nugent and starring Henry Fonda and Olivia de Havilland. Later that year, she appeared in another uncredited part as a receptionist in the musical biography Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942), a high-profile production directed by Michael Curtiz and featuring James Cagney as George M. Cohan. These minor appearances marked her initial foray into Hollywood, where she navigated the competitive landscape of bit roles typical for newcomers under studio contracts.[11][14] Following a brief stint on Broadway in 1943 with a supporting role in Irwin Shaw's Sons and Soldiers opposite Stella Adler and Gregory Peck, Long signed a contract with RKO Pictures, shifting to more prominent supporting parts in B-movies. Her first RKO film was the crime drama A Night of Adventure (1944), directed by Gordon Douglas, where she portrayed Erica Drake Latham, a fashion designer who enlists her estranged lawyer husband (played by Tom Conway) to defend a nightclub owner accused of murder; the low-budget production exemplified the quick-paced, formulaic output of RKO's second-feature unit. In 1945, she took on the dual role of Jo Anne Benson/Joan Parker, a magazine writer entangled in romantic and professional rivalries, in the RKO musical Pan-Americana, directed by John H. Auer and featuring a cast including Phillip Terry and Robert Benchley amid South American travelogue elements.[13][11][15][16] As an RKO contract player, Long faced the challenges of low-budget filmmaking, including tight schedules and limited resources that constrained creative opportunities, while transitioning from modeling's poised presentations to the demands of on-screen performance in genre-driven B-productions. These early roles established her as a reliable supporting actress in musicals and mysteries, building experience amid the studio system's hierarchical structure.[3][12]Notable Films and Genres
Audrey Long made her mark in the Western genre with her starring role opposite John Wayne in Tall in the Saddle (1944), directed by Edwin L. Marin for RKO Pictures. In the film, Long portrays Clara Cardell, a timid yet resilient Eastern woman caught in a love triangle and a web of ranch intrigue after arriving in a lawless Arizona town, where Wayne's character, Rocklin, investigates a murder. Her performance, noted for its subtle charm and contrast to the more fiery Ella Raines, contributed to the film's blend of humor, romance, and action, earning it a solid 72% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes from critics who praised its engaging B-Western pacing.[17][18] Long's transition to film noir in 1947 showcased her ability to embody vulnerable yet determined women in high-stakes narratives. In Anthony Mann's Desperate, produced by RKO, she plays Anne Randall, the pregnant wife of truck driver Steve Brodie's character, who kills a gangster in self-defense during a warehouse heist and flees with her across the Midwest, evading both police and vengeful mobsters. The plot unfolds as a tense cat-and-mouse chase, with Anne's character highlighting noir tropes of inescapable fate and moral compromise as she endures threats to her safety and unborn child. Critics have lauded the film's stark visuals and relentless pace, with Long's earnest portrayal adding emotional depth to the B-noir's gritty realism, reflected in its 100% Rotten Tomatoes score (albeit from a small sample) and 6.7/10 IMDb user rating.[19][20] Similarly, in Robert Wise's Born to Kill (also RKO), Long stars as Georgia Staples, the naive, wealthy half-sister of Claire Trevor's scheming Helen Brent, who unwittingly marries the psychopathic killer Sam Wilde (Lawrence Tierney) after he murders his lover in Reno. As the story spirals into jealousy, blackmail, and further violence in San Francisco high society, Georgia represents the innocent ensnared by fatal attraction, a classic noir archetype of class contrast and doomed romance. The film's acerbic tone and lack of redeemable characters have cemented its status as a quintessential noir, with an IMDb rating of 7.2/10 and praise for its brutal exploration of human depravity.[21][22][23] Long demonstrated versatility in other low-budget productions, often for studios like Republic and Columbia Pictures. In Wanderer of the Wasteland (1945, Republic), she supported James Warren as a frontier woman aiding a young cowboy's quest for vengeance against his father's killer, emphasizing her adeptness in adventure-driven Westerns with an IMDb rating of 6.2/10. She followed with Adventures of Gallant Bess (1948, Columbia), portraying the romantic interest to Cameron Mitchell's ranch hand who tames a wild stallion amid rodeo rivalries, a lighthearted horse opera that underscored her appeal in family-oriented oaters despite its modest 4.9/10 IMDb score. Her final notable role came in Indian Uprising (1952, Columbia), as Norma Clemson, the daughter of an Indian agent entangled in Apache territory conflicts with George Montgomery's cavalry captain, blending romance and historical tension in a routine Western rated 5.9/10 on IMDb.[24][25][26] Throughout her peak years from 1945 to 1952, Long specialized in portraying strong, resilient women navigating tense, perilous narratives in both Westerns and film noirs, often in economical RKO and Republic Pictures features that prioritized story over spectacle. While she received no major awards, her roles in classics like Desperate and Born to Kill have earned her enduring recognition in noir enthusiast circles for contributing to the genre's atmospheric intensity and psychological depth.Retirement from Acting
Audrey Long completed her final film role in Indian Uprising (1952), portraying Norma Clemson opposite George Montgomery in this Columbia Pictures Western.[13][11] This marked the end of her on-screen career at the age of 30, following a decade of work primarily in B-movies, including successes in film noir and Western genres.[13][11] Several factors contributed to Long's abrupt retirement in 1952, including a perceived shift in Hollywood's production priorities toward larger-scale projects amid changing studio dynamics, her growing desire for a more private life away from the public eye, and her impending marriage to British author Leslie Charteris.[13][11] Long herself later reflected on the decision, stating, "I decided it was more fun being Mrs. Leslie Charteris than being a movie star," emphasizing her preference for personal fulfillment over continued stardom.[13] After 1952, she steadfastly avoided returning to screen work, even turning down subsequent offers, as her focus shifted entirely to her marriage and life outside the industry.[13] Over the course of her decade-long career, Long appeared in over 30 films, establishing a solid legacy in low-budget productions.[11] In retrospect, Long's B-movie contributions, particularly her poised performances in thrillers and oaters, have been praised for their sincerity and professionalism, with colleague Warren Douglas noting, "Audrey was one of those wonderful little performers of the Forties who loved her profession and respected it by giving all she could to it."[11] She never returned to acting, citing the satisfaction of her post-Hollywood life as the primary reason, which allowed her to prioritize privacy and family without the demands of the spotlight.[13][11]Personal Life
First Marriage
Audrey Long married Edward Rubin, a dialogue director and production executive at RKO Pictures, on January 16, 1945, at the height of her emerging career in Hollywood.[12] The couple's union was facilitated by their shared professional ties within the industry, as Rubin worked on RKO productions while Long held a studio contract there, providing mutual support for her roles in B-movies and thrillers.[4] Their marriage faced strains from Long's demanding schedule, including postponed honeymoons to accommodate filming commitments.[6] The couple separated on January 5, 1950, and their divorce was finalized on April 16, 1951, with Long citing desertion as grounds.[28] No children were born during the marriage, and the period of marital instability coincided with Long's involvement in film noir projects, amid broader career pressures in the competitive Hollywood environment.Marriage to Leslie Charteris and Travels
Audrey Long married author Leslie Charteris on April 26, 1952, in Montecito, California, shortly after her retirement from acting and divorce from Edward Rubin, which enabled this new chapter in her personal life.[29][11] The union, lasting 41 years until Charteris's death, represented a stable and enduring partnership marked by mutual support and creative synergy.[30] The couple initially resided in Hollywood before embarking on extensive travels across Europe, Asia, and the United States for both pleasure and business related to Charteris's writing.[3] These journeys included frequent visits to the Bahamas, Ireland, and the south of France, where they owned a house, enriching their experiences and providing material for Charteris's stories.[6] In the 1960s, they relocated to England, settling in Surrey to establish a more permanent base.[31] Long played a significant role in inspiring Charteris's ongoing work on The Saint novels, offering plot ideas during their travels that contributed to eight new books in the series.[6][32] The couple had no children together, yet their close collaboration fostered a profound bond, with Long supporting Charteris's literary endeavors while drawing on her own background in the entertainment industry.[33] In their Surrey home, Long and Charteris blended elements of her acting past—such as her appreciation for narrative storytelling—with his prolific writing career, creating a domestic life centered on creativity and companionship that lasted until his death on April 15, 1993.[6][30]Later Years and Death
Post-Retirement Activities
Following the death of her husband Leslie Charteris in 1993, Audrey Long continued to reside in their home in Surrey, England, where the couple had settled in the 1960s after years of extensive travels, leading a quiet and private life devoted to personal pursuits and estate management. She became particularly known for her dedication to gardening, tending to the grounds of their property with great care as a primary hobby that provided solace in her widowhood.[6] Long maintained occasional involvement in literary circles connected to Charteris's iconic creation, The Saint, by overseeing aspects of his literary estate, including contributions to a television series adaptation, while supporting the charitable initiatives of The Saint Club; however, she never returned to public performing or sought the spotlight in any professional capacity. She also managed the couple's shared assets, notably an Irish estate valued at nearly €400,000 upon her passing, which included likely investments and royalties from Charteris's works and was probated in 2017 to benefit her daughter.[6][31] The extensive travels undertaken during her marriage with Charteris shaped a reflective lifestyle in her later years, allowing her to reminisce privately about their global adventures while embracing seclusion. For over six decades after retiring from acting in 1952, Long consistently upheld a low public profile, focusing on these personal and administrative endeavors until her death in 2014.[6]Death and Memorial
Audrey Long died on September 19, 2014, at the age of 92 in Virginia Water, Surrey, England, from natural causes following a long illness.[34] She had resided in Surrey with her husband since the 1960s until his death in 1993.[31] Long was cremated after her death, and in accordance with her will, her ashes were placed in a shared urn containing the remains of her late husband, Leslie Charteris, inscribed with the words "Love Never Dies." The urn was interred under a commemorative tree.[31] Her funeral was a private affair, with limited public details released. Media obituaries, including one in The Hollywood Reporter, emphasized her contributions to 1940s film noir and her long marriage to Charteris, the creator of The Saint.[13] Minor tributes in film enthusiast circles followed, such as the Hollywood Reporter announcement and mentions on dedicated websites like LeslieCharteris.com, which highlighted her noir roles and personal life.[34]Filmography
Feature Films
Audrey Long appeared in 32 feature films between 1942 and 1952, primarily in supporting and leading roles in B-movies across genres such as Westerns, film noir, and musicals.[14][13][2] The following table lists her credits chronologically, including uncredited appearances where applicable.| Year | Title | Role | Studio |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1942 | The Male Animal | Student (uncredited) | Warner Bros. |
| 1942 | Yankee Doodle Dandy | Dietz and Goff's receptionist (uncredited) | Warner Bros. |
| 1942 | Eagle Squadron | Nurse | Universal |
| 1942 | Pardon My Sarong | Girl (uncredited) | Universal |
| 1942 | Tomorrow We Live | Girl | Universal |
| 1942 | The Big Shot | Telephone Operator | Warner Bros. |
| 1943 | The Hard Way | Katie - First Telephone Operator | Warner Bros. |
| 1944 | A Night of Adventure | Erica Drake Latham | RKO Radio Pictures |
| 1944 | Tall in the Saddle | Clara Cardell | RKO Radio Pictures |
| 1945 | Wanderer of the Wasteland | Jeanie Collinshaw | Republic Pictures |
| 1945 | A Game of Death | Ellen Trowbridge | RKO Radio Pictures |
| 1945 | Pan-Americana | Jo Anne Benson | RKO Radio Pictures |
| 1946 | Three Little Girls in Blue | Myra | 20th Century Fox |
| 1947 | Desperate | Mrs. Anne Randall | RKO Radio Pictures |
| 1947 | Born to Kill | Georgia Staples | RKO Radio Pictures |
| 1948 | Song of My Heart | Princess Amalya | Republic Pictures |
| 1948 | Miraculous Journey | Mary | Monogram Pictures |
| 1948 | Homicide for Three | Iris Duluth | Monogram Pictures |
| 1948 | Stage Struck | Nancy Howard | Monogram Pictures |
| 1948 | Adventures of Gallant Bess | Penny Gray | Republic Pictures |
| 1948 | Perilous Waters | Judy Gage | Monogram Pictures |
| 1948 | Duke of Chicago | Jane Cunningham | Monogram Pictures |
| 1949 | Post Office Investigator | Clara Kelso | Monogram Pictures |
| 1949 | Alias the Champ | Lorraine Connors | Monogram Pictures |
| 1949 | The Red Danube | Countess Cressanti (uncredited) | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
| 1950 | David Harding, Counterspy | Betty Iverson | RKO Radio Pictures |
| 1950 | The Petty Girl | Mrs. Connie Manton Dezlow | Columbia Pictures |
| 1951 | Cavalry Scout | Claire Conville | Monogram Pictures |
| 1951 | Blue Blood | Sue Buchanan | Monogram Pictures |
| 1951 | Sunny Side of the Street | Gloria Pelley | Columbia Pictures |
| 1951 | Insurance Investigator | Nancy Sullivan | Monogram Pictures |
| 1952 | Indian Uprising | Norma Clemson | Columbia Pictures |