Candice Rialson(1951-2006)
- Actress
Lovely, radiant, enticing, and charismatic blonde Candice Rialson was
perhaps the most dynamic and personable actress to appear in enjoyably
trashy drive-in pictures throughout the 1970's. Rialson was born on December 18, 1951 in Santa Monica, California and grew up in Orange County, California. She was crowned Miss Hermosa Beach at age 18. After making her film
debut in an uncredited bit as a bikini-clad beauty on the beach in
Le Piège à pédales (1969), the
pert 'n' perky Candice enlivened a bunch of choice down 'n' dirty
exploitation features: She was a naive, innocent hitchhiker who runs
afoul of kinky perverts in the bizarre
La fille en laisse (1973), one of
Gloria Grahame's slutty daughters in the
sleazy
Mama's Dirty Girls (1974), a
hapless lass with a talking and singing vagina (!) in the outrageously
bawdy Le sexe qui chante (1977), a small-town
tramp in the immensely entertaining
Lutte au finish (1977),
and a stuck-up starlet in the nifty
Les risque-tout (1977). Following her winningly
easy 'n' breezy turns in the amiably silly soft-core comedies
Candy Stripe Nurses (1974)
and
Summer School Teachers (1975)
for legendary B-movie filmmaker
Roger Corman, Candice expertly essayed her
best, most substantial, and appealing role as "Candy Wednesday", a
bubbly aspiring actress who winds up working for the chintzy schlock
movie studio "Miracle Pictures" ("If it's a good film, then it's a
Miracle") in the very clever and hilarious junk film parody
Hollywood Boulevard (1976).
Moreover, Rialson also had bit parts in the mainstream features
La sanction (1975),
L'Âge de cristal (1976) and
La Dernière Folie de Mel Brooks (1976) and made guest
appearances on the TV shows
Maude (1972),
Shaft (1973),
Switch (1975),
Adam's Rib (1973), and
L'île fantastique (1977).
After doing yet another minor part as a nurse playing with a rake in Qui a tué le président? (1979), Candice Rialson voluntarily quit acting at the end of the 1970's, got married, settled down in Studio City, California, and had one child. However, she remained a cult favorite of 1970's exploitation film fans. Quentin Tarantino, in particular, was such a strong admirer of Rialson's work that he reportedly patterned the Bridget Fonda character in Jackie Brown (1997) after her. Candice Rialson passed away at age 54 from liver disease on March 31, 2006. She is much loved and missed by her many fans the world over.
After doing yet another minor part as a nurse playing with a rake in Qui a tué le président? (1979), Candice Rialson voluntarily quit acting at the end of the 1970's, got married, settled down in Studio City, California, and had one child. However, she remained a cult favorite of 1970's exploitation film fans. Quentin Tarantino, in particular, was such a strong admirer of Rialson's work that he reportedly patterned the Bridget Fonda character in Jackie Brown (1997) after her. Candice Rialson passed away at age 54 from liver disease on March 31, 2006. She is much loved and missed by her many fans the world over.