- Source: Ramsay Ames
Ramsay Ames (born Ramsay Phillips, March 30, 1919 – March 30, 1998) was a leading 1940s American B movie actress, model, dancer, pin-up girl and television hostess. As a dancer, she was billed as Ramsay D'el Rico.
She is also credited as Ramsey Ames.
Career
Of Spanish/English descent, Ames was born on Long Island. Athletic in high school, she excelled as a swimmer. Ames first was recognized as a dancer/singer before moving into sultry-eyed 1940s film roles.
Ames became part of a dance team under the name Ramsay D'el Rico and appeared as a model at the Eastman Kodak-sponsored fashion show at the 1939 New York World's Fair. An injury forced her to alter her dance career plans. She took up singing and became the vocalist with a top rhumba band.
During a trip to California to visit her mother, Ramsay had a chance meeting at the airport with Columbia Pictures President Harry Cohn. The meeting resulted in a screen test and then her movie debut in Two Señoritas from Chicago (1943). I
From there, she moved to Universal Pictures, where she was featured in such films as Calling Dr. Death and Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves. In 1944, she appeared in the film The Mummy's Ghost, where she played a young woman possessed by the soul of an Egyptian princess. She later appeared in a Monogram Pictures drama, Below the Deadline (1946), and in Republic serials including The Black Widow (1947) and G-Men Never Forget (1948).
After her career subsided in the 1940s, Ames and her husband lived in Spain, where she had her own television interview show and occasionally took on support roles in films produced in Europe.
According to director William Witney, some of Republic Pictures' stuntmen suffered more injuries running on rooftops to get a better look at Ramsay Ames walking across the backlot than were hurt performing dangerous action sequences in the studio's westerns.
Personal life
Ames was wed to Man of La Mancha playwright Dale Wasserman, a Tony Award-winning musical writer., and the couple later lived in a villa called "La Mancha" on the Costa del Sol. She later divorced him.
Selected filmography
Soundtrack (5 credits)
Two Señoritas from Chicago (1943) (performer: "Coca Chica")
Crazy House (1943) (performer: "Tropicana" - uncredited)
Hat Check Honey (1944) (performer: "Nice To Know You")
The Gay Cavalier (performer: "One Kiss and Ride", "The Gay Caballero") (1946) (writer: "One Kiss and Ride", "The Gay Caballero")
Philo Vance Returns (1947) (performer: "Tell Me")
Archive footage (5 credits)
The Mummy's Ghost (1966) (as Amina)
Sombra, the Spider Woman (1966) (as Ruth Dayton)
Code 645 (1966) (as Frances Blake)
Mummy Dearest: A Horror Tradition Unearthed (1999) (for her role as Amina Mansouri in The Mummy's Ghost)
Svengoolie (2012)
Pictorials
Yank (USA) 24 December 1943
Yank (USA) 20 April 1945
Yank (USA) 4 May 1945
See also
Pin-ups of Yank, the Army Weekly
References
= Further reading
=Screen Sirens Scream (USA)2000, pg. 3-11, by: Paul Parla/Charles P. Mitchell "Reminiscences Of The Doomed Ananka"
Filmfax (USA)July 1998, Iss. 67, pg. 46-49, by: Paul Parla/Charles P. Mitchell, "Bride Of The Mummy"
Fantastyka (France)July 1998, Iss. 16, pg. 36-38, by: Paul Parla/Charles P. Mitchell, "Souvenirs D'Ananka La Mandite"
Movie Collectors World (USA)28 November 1997, Iss. 539, pg. 86-88, by: Paul Parla/Charles P. Mitchell, "Reminiscences Of The Doomed Ananka"
Scary Monsters Magazine (USA)June 1997, Iss. 23, pg. 47-50, by: Paul Parla, "I Shall Make You Immortal"
Classic Images (USA)June 1996, Iss. 252, pg. 28-29, by: Paul Parla, "Ramsay Ames-Sultry Latin Beauty"
External links
Ramsay Ames at IMDb
Answers.com biography
Entry at bmi.com