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Home » Horror News » R.I.P.: Julie Strain, B-movie legend and Penthouse Pet, has died at age 58
Last January, it was mistakenly announced that B-movie legend and 1993 Penthouse Pet of the Year Julie Strain had passed away. The announcement was quickly retracted – but in a sad twist of fate, friends and family are confirming that Strain has passed away almost one year to the day after that erroneous report. She was 58 years old.
It's been twelve years since Strain appeared in a movie, but in her nineteen years of acting she racked up over 130 credits, including an appearance in the Exorcist spoof Repossessed , Steven Seagal's Out for Justice , the Jean-Claude Van Damme film Double Impact , Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult , Beverly Hills Cop III , and the horror films Witchcraft IV: The Virgin Heart , Psycho Cop Returns , The Devil's Pet , Sorceress , Sorceress II: The Temptress , the Bare Wench franchise, How to Make a Monster , Thirteen Erotic Ghosts , and Blood Gnome , among others.
Her most well-known roles came in Heavy Metal 2000 and the Andy Sidaris films Fit to Kill , Day of the Warrior , and L.E.T.H.A.L. Ladies: Return to Savage Beach , as well as Christian Drew Sidaris's Enemy Gold and The Dallas Connection . Her half-sister Lizzy Strain followed her into acting, and the sisters both appeared in the films Bleed , Delta Delta Die! , Birth Rite , Bloodsucking Strippers , No Pain No Gain , Tales from the Crapper , Evil Ever After , Azira: Blood from the Sand , Chantal , The Devil's Muse , and Magus .
It was revealed in 2018 that Strain was suffering from degenerative dementia, an affliction that was tied to head trauma she received from a horse riding accident when she was in her twenties. That accident also gave her retrograde amnesia, which wiped much of her youth from her memories.
Strain was married to Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles co-creator Kevin Eastman for over a decade. Her longtime companion Dave had been taking care of her during her final years, and he was holding her hand when she passed away early Sunday morning.
Our condolences go out to Strain's family, friends, and fans.
 
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Left: Julie London as Dixie McCall on 'Emergency!' in the '70s. Right: Detail of the cover of London's 1959 album 'Swing Me An Old Song.' Sources: Wikimedia Commons; Amazon.com
Julie London as a screen seductress in an undated publicity photo, and in her career-launching Esquite photo from 1943. Sources: eBay; julielondon.org
Left: London in 'Nabonga,' 1944. Right: London on the cover of her first album, 'Julie Is Her Name,' 1955. Sources: julielondon.org; eBay
Left: Gary Cooper and Julie London in 'Man Of TheWest,' 1958. Right: with Rock Hudson in 'The Fat Man,' 1951. Source: IMDB
Julie London in full pin-up mode on the covers of her albums 'Calendar Girl' and 'Julie.' Sources: eBay; Amazon.com
On the show Emergency! Source: (pinterest)
Left: Publicity still of London and Edmond O'Brien from 'The 3rd Voice' (1960). Right: London on the cover of her 1959 album 'Your Number, Please.' Sources: eBay; Amazon.com
Which Julie London do you remember? Successful as both a singer and actress, Julie London had at least two phases of her career: there was Julie the sultry singer of torch songs, and there was Julie ER Nurse -- Dixie McCall -- on the hugely successful TV series Emergency! You could probably add in a brief career as a WWII-era model and pinup, and tack on a fourth era as a Golden Age of Hollywood actress alongside such stars as Robert Mitchum, Rock Hudson, and Gary Cooper. 
Julie London, born Nancy Gail Peck on September 26, 1926, was the daughter of vaudevillians and sang most of her life. A fateful meeting with Henry Waxman, a photographer for Esquire, while she was working as a clerk in a menswear store, launched her career in the public eye -- Waxman photographed a 17-year-old London draped in a wet sheet and the image was published in Esquire 's November 1943 issue. Like many young women who appeared in Esquire at the time, London became a popular pin-up girl for the G.I.s serving in World War II.
A still-teenaged London began her career as an actress in 1944 in Nabonga , a movie about a giant gorilla whose name was not King Kong. 
When London was 15, she had met Jack Webb in a nightclub. She would later marry Webb, who was then predominantly a radio star, in 1947 and quit her career to be a full-time wife and mother. They divorced in 1953 after having two children. Six months after her divorce, she met Bobby Troup, the songwriter who wrote “Route 66,” and whom she would marry in 1959.
London was in several other films, including The Fat Man with Rock Hudson, but appeared more frequently on television shows. But she was primarily known as a singer in the '50s and '60s, with a famously sexy voice who released around 30 albums over the course of her career. In 1955, she released her first album on the Liberty label, Her Name is Julie. That album included her biggest hit, "Cry me a River". The song was written by Arthur Hamilton and was originally intended for Ella Fitzgerald. He eventually offered it to London; the song was a top 10 hit, and it became her best-known song. Billboard Magazine named her the most popular female vocalist for several years, and she e he eventually received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for recording.
London was known for her low, sultry voice, and he also happened to have a beautiful face and a good figure. It was an appealing package, and producers at Liberty records made good use of her looks on her album covers. In fact, she attributed her limited success as an actress to her fame as a singer. An amusing AP article from 1961 summed up her career challenges at that time; it was titled "Julie London Dilemma: She Sounds Too Sexy" :
Even the liner notes sometimes commented on her looks. For instance, the liner notes for her album Calendar Girl read: “No wonder her voice comes out swell. Look where it’s been!” 
As one Liberty executive said (in the AP story mentioned above): “She is the only singer I know of who can sell albums to men who don’t own record players.”
London released her final album, Yummy, Yummy, Yummy , in 1969. 
London remained amicable with her ex-husband, Jack Webb, who cast both London and Troup in Emergency! a hit show that ran from 1972-79 and was set in the same TV universe as the Webb-produced Dragnet and Adam-12. She played the nurse Dixie McCall opposite Troup, who played Dr. Joe Early. To play the role, she studied medical terminology.
London left show business after Emergency! ended its run in 1979. Her final song, a cover of “My Funny Valentine,” was included on the soundtrack to the Burt Reynolds film Sharky’s Machin e in 1981. 
In 1995, London, who had been a smoker for many years, had a stroke. Her health continued to decline after that, and she died after going into cardiac arrest on October 18, 2000.

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