Angelique Pettyjohn
Angelique Pettyjohn | |
---|---|
Angelique Pettyjohn in 1980s publicity photo | |
Born |
Dorothy Lee Perrins March 11, 1943 Los Angeles, California, USA |
Died |
February 14, 1992 48) Las Vegas, Nevada, USA | (aged
Cause of death | cervical cancer |
Other names | Angelique, Heaven St. John, Angel St. John |
Occupation | actress, model, adult entertainer |
Years active | 1967–1992 |
Angelique Pettyjohn (March 11, 1943 – February 14, 1992) was an American actress and burlesque queen.[1] She appeared as the drill thrall Shahna in the Star Trek episode, "The Gamesters of Triskelion".
Acting career
Pettyjohn was born Dorothy Lee Perrins in Los Angeles, California, and raised in Salt Lake City, Utah. Her first credited film appearances were in 1967 under the name Angelique. They include The Touch of Her Flesh and The Love Rebellion.[1] Her big break came that same year in the Elvis Presley film, Clambake. Pettyjohn was one of the go-go dancers in the opening scene of the comedy The Odd Couple (1968), starring Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau, and she also tested for the role of Nova in Planet of the Apes the same year (Linda Harrison got the part). In 1969 she starred in the cult horror film The Mad Doctor of Blood Island, appeared as Cherry in the biker film Hell's Belles, played a saloon girl in the Glenn Ford Western Heaven with a Gun, and starred in Childish Things, co-directed by John Derek. Her 1970s films included Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon (1970) starring Liza Minnelli, the sci-fi exploitation film The Curious Female (1970), and the low-budget crime drama The G.I. Executioner (1971) where she played a topless dancer.[2] During the early 1980s, she made use of her buxom figure in such hardcore adult films as Titillation (1982), Stalag 69 (1982), and Body Talk (1982) under the pseudonyms Angelique, Heaven St. John or Angel St. John.[1][3] She played a stripping nun in the 1983 comedy Good-bye, Cruel World (1983), and appeared in such cult classic features as The Lost Empire (1983), Repo Man (1984), Biohazard (1985), and Mike Jittlov's film The Wizard of Speed and Time (1989), where she played an assistant to a movie executive (and designed her own costumes).
Apart from her role in Star Trek, Pettyjohn also made appearances on other 1960s television shows such as Mister Terrific, The Green Hornet, Batman, Love, American Style, The Girl From U.N.C.L.E., and as male CONTROL agent Charlie Watkins (a "master of disguise" who is able to appear convincingly female) in episodes of Get Smart, "Smart Fit the Battle of Jericho" and "Pussycats Galore" (1967).
Burlesque
During the 1970s, she worked as a burlesque star in Las Vegas.[1] In 1970, she appeared in Barry Ashton's Burlesque Show at the Silver Slipper Gambling Hall and Saloon.[4] She later was a featured showgirl in the Vive Paris Vive show at the Aladdin Hotel. She also was featured in the Maxim Hotel & Casino Burlesque Show, and in 1978 teamed with Bob Mitchell and Miss Nude Universe in "True Olde Tyme Burlesque" at the Joker Club.[5] She was photographed by Robert Scott Hooper for the February 1979 Playboy pictorial "The Girls of Las Vegas".[6] Pettyjohn became quite popular at the Star Trek conventions and in 1979 Hooper photographed her in her "Shahna " costume from the episode "The Gamesters of Triskelion". They produced two posters, one in her complete costume and one nude without the costume, that she sold at the conventions.[7]
Death
On February 14, 1992, Pettyjohn died in Las Vegas, Nevada, of cervical cancer.[1]
Filmography
- Films
- Repo Man (1984) - Repo Wife #2
- Television
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 Lisanti, Tom (2003). "Angelique Pettyjohn". Drive-in Dream Girls: A Galaxy of B-movie Starlets of the Sixties. McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-1575-4.
- ↑ Hosoda, Craig; 387 (1998). The Bare Facts Video Guide. Santa Clara, CA: Bare Facts. ISBN 0-9625474-8-4.
- ↑ Jon C. Hopwood (2009). "Angelique Pettyjohn". Super Strange Video. Retrieved 2009-01-01.
- ↑ Vegas Visitor 7 Aug. 1970: P1
- ↑ Vegas Visitor 22 Sep. 1978: P1
- ↑ "The Girls of Las Vegas". Playboy. February 1979. Archived from the original on 2008-01-25. Retrieved 2009-01-01.
- ↑ Original poster