Paula Prentiss


Paula Prentiss is an American actress best known for her film roles in Where the Boys Are, Man's Favorite Sport?, The Stepford Wives, What's New Pussycat?, In Harm's Way, The Black Marble, and The Parallax View, and the cult television series He & She.

Early life

Prentiss was born Paula Ragusa in San Antonio, Texas, the daughter of Paulene and Thomas J. Ragusa, a social sciences professor at San Antonio's University of the Incarnate Word, who was of Sicilian descent.
Before high school, Paula, who grew to, was always the tallest person in class. She attended Lamar High School in Houston, Texas. In 1958, while studying drama at Northwestern University, she met future husband Richard Benjamin, who impressed her with his sophistication and height. While attending Northwestern she was discovered by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and was offered a film contract.

Career

Prentiss leapt to fame playing the role of Tuggle in Where the Boys Are. Her romantic co-star was Jim Hutton. The film was a hit and response to Prentiss and Hutton was very favorable, so MGM decided to reteam them in three more comedies, promoting them as a new William Powell and Myrna Loy: The Honeymoon Machine with Steve McQueen, Bachelor in Paradise with Bob Hope, and The Horizontal Lieutenant. They were the two tallest male and female contract players at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
Hutton and Prentiss were also meant to be in Follow the Boys, a Where the Boys Are style comedy, but he dropped out, and Prentiss' co-star was Russ Tamblyn.
Howard Hawks cast her as the female lead opposite Rock Hudson in Man's Favorite Sport? at Universal, her first film outside MGM. Hawks would later say: "Paula Prentiss was good, but she couldn't remember what she was doing from one shot to the next. Her shots never matched".
Prentiss appeared on stage in a production of As You Like It. She had notable roles in The World of Henry Orient and In Harm's Way and made a cameo as herself in Looking for Love. She also had a strong supporting role in What's New, Pussycat? with Peter Sellers.
in 1967
For one season, Prentiss co-starred with her husband, Richard Benjamin, in the CBS sitcom
He & She. For her role, Prentiss was nominated for an Emmy Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Comedy.
In 1969 she appeared Off-Broadway in the double production,
Arf and The Great Airplane Snatch, directed by Benjamin.
Prentiss returned to films with a small role in
Catch-22. She had the female lead in Move with Elliott Gould and Born to Win with George Segal. She was one of the leads in Last of the Red Hot Lovers with Alan Arkin. Next, Prentiss was in the made-for-television film, The Couple Takes a Wife.
She was the female lead in
Crazy Joe and had a small but pivotal part in The Parallax View with Warren Beatty. She was second lead in The Stepford Wives, alongside Katharine Ross.
In 1976, Prentiss and Benjamin appeared on Broadway in
The Norman Conquests. After that, they traveled to Australia to make No Room to Run.
Prentiss was in
Having Babies II, Friendships, Secrets and Lies, and Top of the Hill. She had a starring role in The Black Marble, but it was not widely seen.
She did
Saturday the 14th with her husband and was in director Billy Wilder's last film, Buddy Buddy, with Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau. She then made Packin' It In with her husband and did the made-for-television film, ''.

Later years

Prentiss guest starred on TV shows like Murder, She Wrote and Burke's Law.
Except for brief cameo roles, Prentiss had not appeared in a feature film for more than 30 years, until 2016's I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House, a horror film directed by Oz Perkins. It premiered Sept. 10, 2016 at the Toronto International Film Festival.

Personal life

Prentiss and actor-director Richard Benjamin were married on October 26, 1961. Besides the series He & She, the couple appeared together in such films as Catch-22 and Saturday the 14th, the made-for-television films No Room to Run and Packin' It In, as well as in various plays. Benjamin also directed Prentiss in a brief appearance in Mrs. Winterbourne. They have two children, Ross and Prentiss.
Her younger sister Ann Prentiss was also an actress.

Filmography

Film

Television