Karen Kay Sharpe (born September 20, 1934)[1] is an American film and television actress.[3][4] She is known for playing Laura Thomas in the American western television series Johnny Ringo.[1]
Sharpe was born in San Antonio, Texas, the daughter of Dorothy Shrout and Kirk Howard Sharpe.[1] Her father was a businessman[1] and oilman.[5] She was an ice skater in Hollywood, California and a student at the Hollywood Professional School.[1] At the age of 18, her mother filed for divorce, charging Sharpe's father with pleasure in inflicting suffering cruelty.[5] She studied dancing with ballet dancer and choreographer Adolph Bolm in Los Angeles, California.[6]
In 1959, Sharpe starred in the new CBS western television series Johnny Ringo, playing Laura Thomas, in which she starred with Don Durant who played the main character Johnny Ringo, Mark Goddard who played as Cully and also Terence De Marney playing general store owner Case Thomas who was the father of Sharpe's character.[1] She retired in 1967, last appearing in the television film Valley of Mystery,[1] playing Connie Lane.[10] Sharpe became heir to her father's business, in which she sold for a dividend.[11] She settled in Seattle, Washington in 1978[1] and moved to Beverly Hills, California, in 1985.[1]
Sharpe married Charles Stevens Marshall, an actor, in 1957.[1] She later filed for divorce from Marshall, on the grounds that he had physically abused her. According to The Odessa American, due to beatings at the hands of Marshall, her rib cage was contused and her head was smashed into brickwork.[12] The divorce became final on September 18, 1962.[1][13] Charles Stevens Marshall was murdered at his home in 1974.[1]
In 2022, Sharpe revealed that she was sexually assaulted and harassed by comedian, actor, singer, director, producer, writer and humanitarian Jerry Lewis on the set of the 1964 film The Disorderly Orderly.[14][15] She stated that Lewis had sent for Sharpe to come his office, whereupon he grabbed and fondled her, then unzipped his pants.[14] Sharpe stated that "I was dumbstruck."[14] She rebuffed his advances, which enraged Lewis so much that that was the last time she ever worked with him.[14] Actress Hope Holiday shared that she was similarly sexually assaulted by Lewis.[16]
Diltz, Douglas (February 21, 1960). "Equal Starring Status for Girls". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Honolulu, Hawaii. p.91. Retrieved April 16, 2022– via Newspapers.com.
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