Menu
All
All
Titles
TV Episodes
Celebs
Companies
Keywords
Advanced Search
Watchlist
Sign In
Sign In
New Customer?
Create account
EN
Fully supported
English (United States)
Partially supported
Français (Canada)
Français (France)
Deutsch (Deutschland)
हिंदी (भारत)
Italiano (Italia)
Português (Brasil)
Español (España)
Español (México)
Use app
Back
Biography
Awards
Trivia
FAQ
IMDbPro
All topics
Trivia
Barbara Steele
Edit
She was slightly injured by
Vincent Price
while filming her last scene from
The Pit and the Pendulum (1961)
when he quite aggressively grabbed her by her throat - she shrugged it off because the scene came off so real.
The role of Alice LeBlanc in
They Shoot Horses, Don't They? (1969)
was written by
James Poe
- her husband - specifically for her, but the studio would not accept her and eventually fired Poe, too.
Sydney Pollack
eventually directed the film and the role was given to
Susannah York
instead.
Has appeared in
The Crimson Cult (1968)
with three other cinema horror masters:
Boris Karloff
,
Michael Gough
and Sir
Christopher Lee
.
She has one child, a son named Jonathan Jackson Poe who was born on August 11, 1970 in Los Angeles with her ex-husband,
James Poe
.
Best remembered by the public for her role as the evil yet sexy witch Princess Asa Vajda in
Mario Bava
's horror classic
Black Sunday (1960)
.
She was the original female lead to
Elvis Presley
in
Flaming Star (1960)
. She walked off the picture after an argument with director
Don Siegel
.
She was reportedly the last person to be signed as a contract player by the J. Arthur Rank Organization.
She was friends with
Jane Wald
, when she was in the United States during the 1960s.
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Learn more about contributing
Edit page
More from this person
More to explore
List
IMDb's 2024 Summer Watch Guide
See our picks
List
Staff Picks: What to Watch in May
See our picks
List
5 Movies to Watch While Gearing Up for 'Furiosa'
See our picks
Recently viewed
Please enable browser cookies to use this feature.
Learn more.
Back to top