Mary Ellen " Mala" Powers (December 20, 1931 – June 11, 2007) was an American actress.
Powers later told a reporter, "I've worked in show business since I've been seven."
At age 19, while on a USO entertainment tour in Korea in 1951, she contracted a blood disease and nearly died. She was treated with chloromycetin, but a severe allergic reaction resulted in the loss of much of her bone marrow. Powers barely survived, and her recovery took nearly nine months.
She began working again in 1952, including the lead in Rose of Cimarron (1952) and co-starring roles in City Beneath the Sea (1953) and City That Never Sleeps (1953), but she still was taking medication.
Following her recovery, she appeared in Bengazi (1955) and such as Rage at Dawn (1955), The Storm Rider (1957), and Sierra Baron (1958), and science-fiction films, including The Unknown Terror (1957), The Colossus of New York (1958), Flight of the Lost Balloon (1961), and Doomsday Machine (1972). She had larger roles in Tammy and the Bachelor (1957) and Daddy's Gone A-Hunting (1969). In 1957, she was cast in Man on the Prowl.
She appeared in more than 100 TV episodes, including Appointment with Adventure, Crossroads, Mr. Adams and Eve, The Restless Gun, Wagon Train, Bourbon Street Beat, The Rebel, Maverick (in an episode called "Dutchman's Gold" with Roger Moore), The Everglades, Bonanza, The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (The Virtue Affair), , Bewitched, The Wild Wild West, The Silent Force, Cheyenne (episodes "Alibi for the Scalped Man" (1960) and "Trouble Street" (1961)), and the episode "Till Death Do Us Part", with Steve McQueen. In 1962, she portrayed Loretta Opel, a woman with leprosy, in the episode "A Woman's Place" on CBS's Rawhide.
On Perry Mason, Powers made five appearances in the 1950s and 1960s. She was cast as defendant Clair Allison in the 1959 episode "The Case of the Deadly Toy". She also played defendant June Sinclair in the 1960 episode "The Case of the Crying Cherub". Her most memorable role was as defendant Janet Brent, friend of Perry's secretary Della Street (Barbara Hale), in the 1962 episode "The Case of the Weary Watchdog". In 1964, she portrayed Helen Bradshaw in "The Case of the Frightened Fisherman", and in 1966, she played murder victim Elaine Bayler in "The Case of the Scarlet Scandal".
Powers played the recurring character Mona during the final season of Hazel (1965–66). In 1971, Powers was cast in 15 episodes of the television series The Man and the City. Powers narrated Follow the Star, a Christmas album from RCA Records.
Powers was a successful children's author of Follow the Star,Mala Powers and Suzy-Jane Tanner (1980) Follow the Star, Celestial Arts Follow the Year, and Dial a Story. She also revised and edited two books by Enid Blyton after the author's death.
From 1993 to 2006, Mala Powers taught the Chekhov technique at the University of Southern Maine’s summer acting programme as part of the Michael Chekhov Theatre Institute, where she instructed both actors and acting teachers. Throughout this period, Powers co-founded the National Michael Chekhov Association with her colleagues Wil Kilroy and Lisa Dalton. Kilroy and Dalton continue to teach the curriculum originally developed by the trio in Maine.
Powers was the Michael Chekhov estate executrix. She was patron of the Michael Chekhov Studio in London.
She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6360 Hollywood Boulevard. She was cremated at the Hollywood Hills Forest Lawn Memorial Park and her ashes returned to family.
Artistry
Personal life
Death
Radio appearances
Command Performance
Partial filmography
External links
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