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Pinup, B-movie actress Jeanne Carmen dies

1950s star found success in low-budget films, claimed affair with Sinatra

updated 9:34 a.m. ET Dec. 26, 2007

IRVINE, Calif. - Jeanne Carmen, the “little country girl” who became a 1950s pinup and actress and hobnobbed with Frank Sinatra and other stars, has died. She was 77.

Carmen died of lymphoma Thursday at her Orange County home, said her son, Brandon James.

Born on Aug. 4, 1930, in Paragould, Ark., Carmen picked cotton with her family before running away at 13.

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“I was just a little country girl that wanted to be a movie star,” she told the Orange County Register in 1996.

Carmen was still a teenager when she came to New York and, despite having no show business experience, immediately became a dancer in a Broadway show called “Burlesque,” with comic Burt Lahr.

She later went into modeling, gaining a measure of success with a series of cheesecake shots in men’s magazines. One gig turned into a new career as a trick golfer. On tour with golfer Jack Redmond, she would perform stunts such as hitting a ball out of a man’s mouth.

Carmen claimed that she later hustled golfers with Las Vegas mobster Johnny Roselli.

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She came to Hollywood while still in her 20s, where she appeared in low-budget movies with such titles as “Guns Don’t Argue” and “The Monster of Piedras Blancas.”

Carmen also claimed to have had affairs with Sinatra and other celebrities.

She moved to Orange County in 1978.

In addition to her son, Carmen is survived by daughters Melinda Belli and Kellee Jade Campo, and three grandchildren.

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