Image:Melody-Patterson.jpg

Watchers
Browse
Image Information
People
Melody Patricia Patterson1949 - 2015
Copyright holder
Unknown

Description

Melody Patricia Patterson (April 16, 1949 – August 20, 2015) was an American actress known for her role as Wrangler Jane in the 1960s television series F Troop, and for her role as Ellie in the cult horror film Blood and Lace (1971).

Patterson was the daughter of machinist Pat Patterson and the former Rosemary Wilson, an official in the Miss Universe contest. Her mother had been a dancer with Warner Bros., who "doubled for Joan Crawford in several films."

Patterson wrote and directed a play at the age of 5. Before turning 10 she had also been a photographer's model, an actress and an ice skater. In the ninth grade, she enrolled in the Hollywood Professional School. She continued her education in the Warner Bros. school while she acted on F Troop.

Patterson was 16 years old when she first appeared on F Troop, having obtained the role with the help of a forged birth certificate that indicated her age was 18. After the 1967 cancellation of F Troop, Patterson worked in television, radio, and the theater. She also appeared on Mr. Novak and Shindig! In the 1970s, she appeared in three episodes of Hawaii Five-O, and began modeling and appearing in television commercials.

Source

BodySize.org, accessed 5 Mar 2019. Original source of photo unknown.

This page was the subject of the
WeRelate Crowdsourcing Challenge

File history

Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version.
Click on date to see the file uploaded on that date.

  • (del) (cur) 18:42, 5 March 2019 . . BobC (Talk | contribs) . . 300×400 (13,526 bytes) (== Description == Melody Patricia Patterson (April 16, 1949 – August 20, 2015) was an American actress known for her role as Wrangler Jane in the 1960s television series F Troop, and for her role as Ellie in the cult horror film Blood and Lace (1971). )

The following pages link to this file:

License: This image is a faithful digitalization of a unique historic photograph, and the copyright for it is most likely held by the photographer who took the photograph or the agency employing the photographer. It is believed that the use of this photograph to illustrate the subject in question where:

  • the photograph depicts a non-reproducible historic subject, and no free alternative exists or can be created, and
  • the image is a small snippet of the original and of no larger and of no higher quality than is necessary for the illustration of an article, and the use of the image on WeRelate is not expected to decrease the value of the copyright,

on the English-language WeRelate, hosted on servers in the United States by the non-profit Foundation for On-Line Genealogy, qualifies as fair use under United States copyright law. Other use of this image, on WeRelate or elsewhere, may be copyright infringement. See Wikipedia:Fair use for more information.
To the uploader: You are representing that this image is a small snippet of the original photo. You must provide the source of the work and copyright information.