Laura Devon (May 23, 1931 – July 19, 2007) was an American actress and singer known for her roles in 1960s films and television series.[1][2] Born Mary Lou Briley in Chicago, Illinois, she was raised in a Detroit suburb. Her father was Merrill Devon, an automotive engineer of Swedish, Scottish, and Irish descent.[3][1]Devon graduated from the University of Michigan with majors in journalism and political science before pursuing performing arts, starting with stage musicals such as The Boy Friend.[4] In 1961, while singing at the London Chop House nightclub in Detroit, she was discovered by a 20th Century Fox talent agent, Bob Goldstein, who arranged a screen test; however, she ultimately signed with Universal Pictures. She released one single, "I Walk a Little Faster."[4][5] She relocated to Southern California in the early 1960s, launching a short-lived acting career that featured her film debut in Vincente Minnelli's Goodbye Charlie (1964).[2]Throughout the decade, Devon appeared in supporting and leading roles in films including Howard Hawks's Red Line 7000 (1965) alongside James Caan, Gunn (1967) with Craig Stevens, and A Covenant with Death (1967) with George Maharis.[2] On television, she guest-starred in acclaimed anthology series such as The Twilight Zone, Route 66, and The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, and was part of the ensemble cast in The Richard Boone Show (1963–1964).[2][3]In her personal life, Devon married actor Brian Kelly in 1962, with whom she divorced in 1966; she later wed composer Maurice Jarre from 1967 to 1984; she had a son from a previous relationship, screenwriter Kevin Jarre (b. 1954), whom Jarre adopted.[1][6][5] She retired from acting after her marriage to Jarre and passed away from heart failure at her Beverly Hills home at age 76.[2][1]
Early life and education
Family background and childhood
Laura Devon was born Mary Lou Briley—sometimes referred to as Mary Laura Briley—on May 23, 1931, in Chicago, Illinois.[4][1] Her father, Merrill Devon, was an automotive engineer of Swedish, Scottish, and Irish descent, while her mother was of Dutch descent. She had a sister, Patricia Briley.[7][8]The family relocated to the affluent Detroit suburb of Grosse Pointe, Michigan, where Devon spent her formative years in a middle-class environment that fostered her early inclinations toward the performing arts.[4][1] By age 14, she began singing in local nightclubs, marking the onset of her interest in entertainment that would shape her future path.[4][7] This suburban upbringing, amid the industrial backdrop of mid-20th-century Michigan, provided a stable foundation before her pursuits extended beyond amateur performances.[1]
Academic pursuits
Devon attended University High School in the Grosse Pointe section of Detroit, where she developed an early interest in performance.[4]Following high school, she graduated from the University of Michigan with majors in journalism and political science.[4][1]This academic background informed her early nightclub performances in Detroit, although she did not pursue further formal studies in music and theater.[7]
Entertainment career
Singing beginnings and discovery
Laura Devon began her entertainment pursuits as a singer, performing semi-professionally in Detroit nightclubs during her teenage years to gain experience prior to formal professional engagements. A native of the city, she built a local reputation through these early appearances, which laid the foundation for her later career in the industry.[2][1]In 1961, while performing at the London Chop House in Detroit, Devon caught the attention of talent scout Bob Goldstein from 20th Century Fox, who promptly arranged a screen test for her. This discovery sparked interest from multiple studios, with Universal Pictures ultimately signing her to a contract ahead of Fox. Under the agreement, Devon received intensive training in singing, acting, and dance over her first year, preparing her for broader opportunities in entertainment.[3]Devon's sole professional recording came in 1967 with the release of a single featuring "I Like the Look" on the A-side and "Dreamsville" on the B-side, both songs composed by Henry Mancini for the film Gunn. Issued by RCA Victor as catalog number 47-9256, this release represented her brief foray into recorded music and highlighted her vocal talents in a cinematic context.[9][10]
Acting roles in television and film
Laura Devon began her acting career with guest appearances on television in the early 1960s, following her discovery in the entertainment industry. Her television debut came in the episode "Fisher of Men" of the anthology series Insight in 1960. She followed this with supporting roles in episodes of The New Breed (1961, as Ann Fetterson in "No Fat Cops") and Route 66 (1962, Season 3, Episode 1, "One Tiger to a Hill," as Toika Gustafson), marking her first significant on-screen part. Additional early guest spots included The Twilight Zone (1963, "Jess-Belle," as Ellwyn Glover).As her career progressed, Devon secured more prominent television roles that showcased her versatility in dramatic and suspenseful narratives. She guest-starred in the Western series Stoney Burke (1963, as Stacy Morgan in "Forget No More"). Further notable appearances encompassed The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, Rawhide (in the episode "Canliss"), and Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre, where she portrayed characters requiring emotional depth and poise.Devon's transition to film began with her debut in Goodbye, Charlie (1964, directed by Vincente Minnelli, as Rusty Sartori), a comedic fantasy that highlighted her charm alongside Tony Curtis and Debbie Reynolds. She continued with leading and supporting parts in Red Line 7000 (1965, directed by Howard Hawks, as Julie), a racing drama co-starring James Caan; Chamber of Horrors (1966, as Marie Champlain), a thriller featuring Patrick O'Neal; A Covenant with Death (1967, directed by Lamont Johnson, as Rosemary); and Gunn (1967, as Edie), a detective story with Craig Stevens. Her final credited role was a guest appearance on The Invaders (1967, Season 1, Episode 11, "The Betrayed," as Susan Carver), blending science fiction elements with her established dramatic style.Spanning just seven years from 1960 to 1967, Devon's acting career unfolded under a contract with Universal Studios, where she underwent intensive training in acting, voice, and dance before her breakout roles. Working with acclaimed directors like Hawks and Johnson, she became noted for her poised, model-like presence that lent elegance to dramatic and thriller genres, often drawing on her prior singing background to inform her expressive characterizations. The brevity of her on-screen tenure stemmed from her decision to prioritize family life after 1967, leading to her retirement from acting.
Personal life
Marriages
Laura Devon married actor Brian Kelly, known for his role in the television series Flipper, on June 23, 1962, at the Blessed Sacrament Roman Catholic Church in Hollywood.[7] The couple, both aged 31 at the time, had met earlier while living in Detroit, where their romance began before they both pursued opportunities in Hollywood; they dated for approximately one year prior to the wedding and honeymooned in Honolulu for three weeks.[11][12] This low-profile ceremony occurred amid media reports that understated Devon's age as 23, and the marriage aligned with the early peak of her television career, including guest roles on shows like The Lieutenant.[7] The union ended in divorce in January 1966.[7]Following her divorce from Kelly, Devon wed French composer Maurice Jarre, an Academy Award winner for the score of Lawrence of Arabia (1962), on December 30, 1967, at the Wayfarer's Chapel in Palos Verdes Estates, California.[7][13] The couple had been dating for about a year, having begun their relationship in early 1966, and the intimate ceremony was attended solely by Devon's sister as maid of honor, reflecting its private nature.[14] This marriage coincided with Devon's decision to retire from acting shortly thereafter, marking a shift away from her entertainment pursuits during what would have been a continued career ascent.[5] The partnership lasted until their divorce on March 14, 1984.[4]
Family and relationships
Laura Devon gave birth to her only child, a son named Kevin Jarre, on August 6, 1954, in Detroit, Michigan, from a relationship with Cleland B. Clark, a photographic illustrator, prior to the start of her acting career.[15][16] Clark and Devon divorced soon after, and Kevin spent part of his childhood in Wyoming with his father before moving to Los Angeles with his mother in the early 1960s.[17]During Devon's marriage to composer Maurice Jarre from 1967 to 1984, Jarre adopted her 13-year-old son, legally changing his surname to Jarre and integrating him into the family.[18][15] This made Kevin the stepbrother to Jarre's other children, electronic music pioneer Jean-Michel Jarre and actress Stéfanie Jarre.[18]Following her retirement from entertainment in the late 1960s, Devon resided quietly in Beverly Hills, where she focused on family life and provided personal support to her son as he pursued a successful career as a screenwriter, including acclaimed scripts for films like Glory (1989) and Tombstone (1993).[2][15] She maintained a high degree of privacy in her personal relationships after her divorces, avoiding public scrutiny and centering her later years around close family bonds.[4]
Later years and death
Retirement from public life
Following her marriage to composer Maurice Jarre on December 30, 1967, Laura Devon retired from acting, ending her brief career in film and television.[19]Jarre adopted Devon's son from her earlier marriage to Cleland B. Clark, Kevin Jarre, who was 13 at the time and later pursued a career as a screenwriter.[19][15]From the late 1960s onward, Devon resided in Beverly Hills, California, leading a low-profile life away from public attention and making no further professional appearances in entertainment.[2]She and Jarre divorced in 1984, after which Devon continued her private existence in Beverly Hills, with limited public records of her activities beyond family matters.[19]
Illness and passing
In her later years, Laura Devon battled heart failure, which ultimately led to her death on July 19, 2007, at the age of 76 in her Beverly Hills home.[2][1]Her son, screenwriter Kevin Jarre, confirmed the news of her passing to the press.[2]Following her death, private funeral services were arranged, and Devon was interred at Westwood Village Memorial Park in Los Angeles, California.[1]
Filmography and discography
Film credits
Laura Devon's film career was brief, spanning from 1964 to 1967 with five feature films, after which she did not appear in any additional theatrical releases.[3][2]Her debut came in the comedy Goodbye Charlie (1964), directed by Vincente Minnelli, where she played Rusty Sartori alongside Tony Curtis, Debbie Reynolds, and Pat Boone in a gender-bending story about reincarnation.[20][21]In 1965, she starred as Julie Kazarian in the racing drama Red Line 7000, directed by Howard Hawks, co-starring James Caan, Charlene Holt, and Gail Hire.[22][23]Devon portrayed Marie Champlain in the psychological thriller Chamber of Horrors (1966), directed by Hy Averback, featuring Patrick O'Neal, Cesare Danova, and Wilfrid Hyde-White as a madman terrorizes victims with horrific gadgets.[24][25]She played Rosemary Berquist in the courtroom drama A Covenant with Death (1967), directed by Lamont Johnson, opposite George Maharis, Katy Jurado, and Earl Holliman in a tale of an innocent man facing execution.[26][27]Her final film role was Edie Hart in the neo-noir mystery Gunn (1967), directed by Blake Edwards, alongside Craig Stevens, Edward Asner, and Sherry Jackson, adapting the private eye series with lounge singer intrigue.[28]
Television appearances
Laura Devon's television career featured over 20 guest and supporting roles from 1960 to 1967, including an ensemble cast role in The Richard Boone Show (1963–1964, NBC) and recurring appearances in Dr. Kildare (1961, 1965–1966, NBC), with a focus on anthology dramas, westerns, and science fiction series broadcast on major networks like CBS, ABC, and NBC. Other notable guest roles included Bonanza (1963, NBC), The Virginian (1964, NBC), The Rogues (1964, NBC), The Big Valley (1965, ABC), and I Spy (1965, NBC).[3][2]In 1960, she appeared in the Insight episode "Fisher of Men" as Karen Gilbert, which aired on CBS and explored themes of faith and family conflict.[29]Her 1961 role came in The New Breed's premiere episode "No Fat Cops," portraying Ann Fetterson in a crimedrama about police work, broadcast on ABC on October 3.[30]Devon's 1962 appearances included Route 66, where she played Toika Gustafson in the season 3 premiere "One Tiger to a Hill," aired on CBS on September 21, depicting post-wartrauma in a road-trip narrative.[31]In 1963, she guest-starred in Stoney Burke as Stacy Morgan in "Forget No More," a rodeo-themed drama on ABC that aired March 25, involving a search for a missing father.[32] She also appeared in The Twilight Zone's "Jess-Belle" as Ellwyn Glover, broadcast on CBS on February 14, in a supernatural tale of love and witchcraft set in Appalachia.[33] Later that year, in The Alfred Hitchcock Hour episode "Death and the Joyful Woman," Devon portrayed Kitty Norris on NBC, airing April 12 in a suspense story of jealousy and murder at a winery.[34]She was part of the ensemble cast in The Richard Boone Show (1963–1964, NBC), an anthology series featuring rotating repertory players.[35]By 1964, Devon featured in Rawhide's "Canliss" as Augusta Canliss, the wife of a gunfighter played by Dean Martin, in a CBS western episode that aired October 30, highlighting redemption and family tensions on the trail.[36] She also starred in Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre's "Clash of Cymbals" as aspiring pianist Laura Macon, an NBC drama about ambition and romance that aired December 4.[37]Devon's later television roles included 1967 appearances in Coronet Blue, playing Ava Lou Springer in "Where You from and What You Done?," a CBS mystery involving identity and clairvoyance that aired July 25.[38] That same year, she appeared in The Invaders episode "The Betrayed" as Susan Carver, broadcast on ABC on December 5, in a science fiction thriller about alien infiltration and paranoia.[39]
Year
Show
Episode
Character
Air Date
Network
1960
Insight
"Fisher of Men"
Karen Gilbert
1960
CBS
1961
The New Breed
"No Fat Cops"
Ann Fetterson
October 3, 1961
ABC
1962
Route 66
"One Tiger to a Hill"
Toika Gustafson
September 21, 1962
CBS
1963
Stoney Burke
"Forget No More"
Stacy Morgan
March 25, 1963
ABC
1963
The Twilight Zone
"Jess-Belle"
Ellwyn Glover
February 14, 1963
CBS
1963
The Alfred Hitchcock Hour
"Death and the Joyful Woman"
Kitty Norris
April 12, 1963
NBC
1963–1964
The Richard Boone Show
Various
Ensemble cast
1963–1964
NBC
1964
Rawhide
"Canliss"
Augusta Canliss
October 30, 1964
CBS
1964
Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre
"Clash of Cymbals"
Laura Macon
December 4, 1964
NBC
1965–1966
Dr. Kildare
Various (e.g., "Why Won't Anybody Listen?", "A Life for a Life")
Various
1965–1966
NBC
1967
Coronet Blue
"Where You from and What You Done?"
Ava Lou Springer
July 25, 1967
CBS
1967
The Invaders
"The Betrayed"
Susan Carver
December 5, 1967
ABC
Musical recordings
Laura Devon's musical output was limited to a single professional release, a 7-inch vinyl single issued in 1967 by RCA Victor.[40][41] The A-side, "I Like the Look," featured music composed by Henry Mancini with lyrics by Leslie Bricusse, while the B-side, "Dreamsville," had music by Mancini and lyrics by Ray Evans and Jay Livingston.[42] Both tracks originated from the soundtrack of the film Gunn (also known as Peter Gunn), in which Devon performed the songs as part of her role.The recording occurred during Devon's contract with Universal Pictures, aligning with her background in nightclubsinging that initially drew industry attention.[43] Produced under RCA Victor's auspices, the single represented her brief foray into vocal artistry but did not lead to any full-length albums or additional releases.[5] No chart success was achieved, underscoring its status as an obscure entry in her career.[44]Today, the single remains a rare collector's item, available primarily through specialty vinyl markets and online auctions, with no known official reissues in digital formats.[45] It exemplifies Devon's vocal talents, which were more prominently showcased in her acting roles than in standalone musical endeavors.