Arlene Martel (April 14, 1936 – August 12, 2014) RIP

Arlene Martel

The Official Arlene Martel Website

Arlene Martel (April 14, 1936 – August 12, 2014) was an American actress and acting coach. Prior to 1964, she was frequently billed as Arline Sax, Arlene Sax or Tasha Martel.

In 1962, Martel made her first of two appearances on Perry Mason, as Fiona Cregan in “The Case of the Absent Artist”. Later, she guest starred as Sandra Dunkel in “The Case of the Dead Ringer” (1966) when Raymond Burr played a dual role, that of Mason and as the actual murderer, Grimes. Martel appeared in the Star Trek episode “Amok Time” (1967) as T’Pring and the original The Outer Limits episode “Demon with a Glass Hand” (1964).

Martel played the princess Sarafina on Have Gun – Will Travel, the evil witch Malvina on Bewitched, the French Underground contact Tiger in five episodes of Hogan’s Heroes, a female cosmonaut on I Dream of Jeannie, a Hungarian immigrant Magda on The Fugitive episode “The Blessings of Liberty” (1966), and, memorably, as the nurse who repeatedly utters the sinister phrase “Room for one more, Honey!” at the entrance to a hospital morgue and as the stewardess at the door of a doomed airplane in the Twilight Zone episode “Twenty-Two“. She also appeared in the season-one episode of The Twilight Zone “What You Need“.

She was billed (as Arline Sax) as a featured actress in the episode of Route 66 called “The Newborn,” in which she gives birth. She also made guest appearances onThe Man from U.N.C.L.E.The UntouchablesMission: Impossible (season 4, episode 20, 1970), appeared as Asastia in Here Come the Brides (1970, episode “To The Victor”), The Wild Wild WestBattlestar Galactica, the 1968 movie Angels from Hell, and two appearances on The Monkees. She played Interpol agent Violette in The Six Million Dollar Man episode “The Last of the Fourth of Julys” (season 1, episode 10, 1974). She appeared as a featured actress in the Gunsmoke episode titled “The Squaw” (1975).

Martel received top billing when she starred as the lady commandant in charge of the Russian road crew in Zoltan, Hound of Dracula (1978), although it was only abit part lasting less than five minutes of the 97 minute movie. She also received credit in a font so large that it was almost twice as large as that used for Reggie Nalder or Michael Pataki, the leads who occupied most of the screen throughout the movie. She appeared in the Star Trek webisode “Of Gods and Men” in the final scene as a Vulcan priestess initiating a marriage ceremony between Uhura and Vulcan native Stonn (a character from the episode “Amok Time”, played by original actor Lawrence Montaigne).

Martel played Gloria, mistress of murderer Tony Goodland (Bradford Dillman) in the Columbo episode “The Greenhouse Jungle” (1972).

 

 

Personal life[edit]

Martel married and divorced three times. Her first marriage was to Robert Palmer. Her second marriage was to actor Jerry Douglas. She had three children: Adam Palmer, Avra Douglas, and Los Angeles Times editor Jod Kaftan.

Death[edit]

Martel died on August 12, 2014. The death was announced via her friend Marc Cushman, whose book series These Are The Voyages about the production of Star Trek had recently been published; Martel’s last public appearance had been with Cushman in Santa Monica, California, to promote the book. The announcement was made via Cushman’s Facebook page, noting the actress had recently suffered a heart attack.[1]

References[edit]

External links[edit]

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