Attractive, blond, dimple-cheeked artist's daughter, Irene Hervey was trained at the MGM School of Acting before being signed as a contract player in 1933. Often on loan to other studios, she was assigned bit parts until meatier co-starring roles came along in 'The Girl Said No'(1936) and 'Say it in French' (1937). While at MGM, Irene was briefly engaged to Robert Taylor, an affair which was stymied by Louis B. Mayer, who saw it as detrimental to Taylor's career. After briefly free-lancing, Irene signed with Universal (joining her then-husband actor/singer Allan Jones) in 1938 and remained with that studio until 1943. Her best-known film was the classic Stewart-Dietrich western 'Destry Rides Again' in 1939. In the 1940's, Irene became a leading lady of B-movies. In the crime melodramas 'San Francisco Docks' (1941) and 'Frisco Lil' (1942), she was, respectively, a barmaid and a law student, trying to clear her nearest and dearest of murders they hadn't committed. In the adventure yarn 'Bombay Clipper' (1942), she was William Gargan's obligatory girlfriend - more decorative than active; and in the potboiler 'The Night Monster', a Dr. Phibes-like tale of revenge and murder, she played second-fiddle to those great characters Lionel Atwill and Bela Lugosi. A charming, smart and likeable actress, who some reviewers compared to Myrna Loy, Irene put her family above her career and never made the breakthrough to A-grade pictures. In 1943, she was injured in a car accident and sidelined for five years. When she returned to the screen, it was as a character actress in the fantasy 'Mr. Peabody and the Mermaid' (1948), as the titular character's sophisticated wife. From the 1950's, Irene concentrated on television work with a recurring role as Aunt Meg in the series 'Honey West' (with Anne Francis) and numerous guest starring spots in top shows like 'Peter Gunn', 'Perry Mason', 'Ironside' and 'The Twilight Zone'. She was nominated for an Emmy Award for a performance on 'My Three Sons' in 1969. Her final motion picture role was as radio station owner Madge Brenner, who hires Clint Eastwood as a disc jockey in 'Play Misty for Me' (1971).
Mother, with Allan Jones , of pop singer Jack Jones .Was briefly engaged to Robert Taylor early in his career, but it didn't work out due to his "impossible jealousy", as Irene explained later.Divorced her husband Allan Jones on the charge of "mental cruelty".
Disc jockey Dave Garver attracts the amorous attentions of a demented fan named Evelyn Draper. Evelyn lets Dave pick her up at a bar; later at her apartment Evelyn admits that she is the cooing caller who repeatedly asks Dave to play the Erroll Garner classic "Misty." From then on, the film is a lesson in how one casual date can turn your whole life around. Evelyn stalks Dave everywhere, ruins his business lunch, assaults his maid, mutilates his house and all of his belongings, and finally...
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When Selby arrives as the new ranch owner, he is assumed to be just another cowboy attracted to Ann Hepburn so he takes a job as a dude cowhand. He learns cattle are being rustled and he suspects the boss Sam Hepburn. But Hepburn suspects the foreman Hyslip and when he catches him with the goods, Hyslip shoots him. Hyslip then blames the new dude, and sends his men out to kill him.