Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Blob fans - Kate Phillips - dead at 94

Kate Phillips, aka Kaye Linaker, visited Phoenixville during the Blob fest in Phoenixville in 2003.

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Kate Phillips, Actress Who Christened ‘The Blob,’ Is Dead at 94

By DENNIS HEVESI

Kate Phillips, who played mostly supporting roles on Broadway and in more than 50 films in the 1930s and ’40s and who later was a co-writer of the 1958 horror film “The Blob,” died on April 18 in Keene, N.H. She was 94.

The death was confirmed by Lawrence Benaquist, chairman of film studies at Keene State College. Mrs. Phillips, known during her acting career as Kay Linaker, taught at the college from 1980 until two years ago.

In 1956, while working with Theodore Simonson on the script for a movie that was supposed to be called “The Molten Meteor,” Mrs. Phillips referred to the giant jellylike creature from another planet that had plopped into a field outside of a small town as “the blob.” Overhearing her, the producers changed the name of what became something of a cult classic.

“The Blob” gave a fresh-faced Steve McQueen his first starring role, as one of two teenagers whose warnings about the voracious appetite of the enlarging monster are ignored until many people are engulfed.

“Both Steve McQueen and I were to receive $150 plus 10 percent of the gross,” Mrs. Phillips said in an interview for the Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture (she was a native of Pine Bluff, Ark.). “Neither one of us got the percentage — and the film and its remake have earned millions — but I got an important writing credit and Steve became a star.”

Although Mrs. Phillips usually played small parts during her stage and film career, in 1936 she was cast in a leading role opposite Conrad Nagel in “The Girl From Mandalay,” about a man who marries a resort entertainer after his sweetheart back in England tires of waiting for him.

Another of her more notable roles was that of a society matron who marries the former husband of Ginger Rogers in the 1940 film “Kitty Foyle.” In the movie she visits an upscale department store and is waited on by her working-class counterpart, unaware of what the two have in common. She had smaller parts in “Drums Along the Mohawk” (1939); “Blood and Sand” (1941); and five “Charlie Chan” movies.

Mary Katherine Linaker was born on July 19, 1913. She studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York during the day while taking classes at New York University at night. After graduating from N.Y.U., she got a film contract with Warner Bros., having attracted the attention of scouts with her work on Broadway.

During World War II, Mrs. Phillips joined the Red Cross, serving as a hostess at U.S.O. clubs. She also began writing for the Voice of America. About that time she met, and soon married, Howard Phillips, a singer and writer who later became an NBC television executive.

Her husband died before her. She is survived by a son, Bill, of El Cerrito, Calif.; a daughter, Regina Paquette of Keene; and four grandchildren.

In July 2003, Mrs. Phillips traveled to Phoenixville, Pa., to celebrate the town’s annual Blob Fest. As always, hundreds of B-movie fans raced out of the Colonial Theater, re-enacting the panic caused by a gelatinous creature in a scene filmed there almost five decades ago.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/27/theater/27phillipsobit.html?ref=nyregion&pagewanted=print

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