Paula Raymond was an American model and actress who played the leading lady in numerous movies and television series. She was the niece of American pulp-magazine editor Farnsworth Wright.
Early years
Raymond was born on November 23, 1924 as Paula Ramona Wright in San Francisco, California. Her father was a corporate lawyer. Following her parents' divorce, Raymond and her mother moved to Los Angeles. As a child, Raymond studied ballet, piano, and singing. She was a member of both the San Francisco Opera Company and the San Francisco Children's Opera Company. She graduated from Hollywood High School in 1942. Following graduation, she returned to San Francisco to attend college. She also worked with two theater groups there.
Modeling
Before she became an actress, Raymond was a photographers' model. She told author Leo Verswijver "I got started modeling at $25 an hour and forgot all about acting, because I was earning a living." Her work included posing for the cover of True Confessions magazine.
Film
Raymond's first acting role was playing Bettina Bowman in Keep Smiling, credited as Paula Rae Wright. In 1950, she was put under contract by MGM, where she played opposite leading men such as Cary Grant and Dick Powell. Earlier in her career, Raymond acted in film noir thrillers such as City That Never Sleeps, and later in her career, she acted in horror films. In 1952, she played the heroine in The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms. Her low-budget horror movies included Blood of Dracula's Castle. In 1954, she starred as Queen Berengaria in the film King Richard and the Crusaders. She also starred in a 1955 western The Gun That Won the West. Raymond did some work for Paramount Pictures using the screen name Rae Patterson.
Television
In the late 1950s and 1960s, Raymond appeared in many television shows including Perry Mason, Maverick, Hawaiian Eye, M Squad with Lee Marvin, 77 Sunset Strip, as Martha Harrington in Peter Gunn season 1, episode 11, in 1958. She turned down the role of saloon keeper Kitty Russell in the long-running western classic series Gunsmoke and the role went instead to Amanda Blake. She was noted as saying of this: "I didn't want to play a woman who worked in a saloon, week after week. I have a freckle on my face, and I sometimes put a beauty mark over it. They even put it on Amanda Blake, who finally got the part—although it was put on the opposite side from mine. I wanted them to soften the character but didn't think they’d do it. As it turned out, the character wasn't a trashy woman at all. She was just the type I would have liked to have played". Raymond appeared in a 1959 episode "The Paymaster" of the ABC/Desilu western series The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp. In Have Gun - Will Travel, "Lady with a Gun", season 3, episode 30, she played Eve McIntosh, a woman seeking revenge for her brother's killing. In 1960, she appeared in a “Bat Masterson episode as Angie, “Last of the Night Raiders.” In 1961, she also played opposite Jack Kelly in an episode from the final season of the Western comedy television seriesMaverick, titled "The Golden Fleecing." She also appeared in the third episode of the first season, initially broadcast on February 3, 1959, in the science fiction series titled "Emergency Only," which also memorably featured Jocelyn Brando as a screaming fortune teller at a party. In 1962, she portrayed the role of Franny Wells in the episode "House of the Hunter" on Rawhide. Raymond was cast as former Union Army spy Pauline Cushman in the 1964 episode "The Wooing of Perilous Pauline" of the syndicated series Death Valley Days.
Personal life
In 1962, Raymond was a passenger in a car that crashed into a tree on Sunset Boulevard. Her nose was severed by the rear view mirror. After a little more than a year of extensive plastic surgery and recovery she returned to acting. In 1977, while working on the soap opera Days of Our Lives, after only three appearances, she accidentally tripped on a telephone cord and broke her ankle. She was written out of the show. In 1984, she broke both hips, and in 1994, she broke her shoulder. In 1944, Raymond married Floyd Leroy Patterson. In 1946, they divorced shortly after the birth of their daughter, Raeme Dorene Patterson. In 1993, Raymond's daughter died. Raymond was Catholic.