Eva Gabor Movies
Best known as the
Gabor sister with talent, actress
Eva Gabor began her career as a cabaret singer and ice skater in her native Hungary. Forced to emigrate to the U.S. at the outbreak of World War II,
Gabor was able to secure film work in mystery-woman parts in such films as
Forced Landing and
Pacific Blackout (both 1941). The actress didn't truly achieve star stature until her Broadway appearance in The Happy Time (1950), though, curiously, she wasn't called upon to appear in the 1952 film version.
Gabor's movie career, in fact, remained rooted in supporting roles, such as one of
Vincent Price's victims in
The Mad Magician (1954) and as Liane d'Exelmans in the Oscar-winning
Gigi (1958). Like her sister
Zsa Zsa Gabor,
Eva has accrued plenty of press coverage thanks to her multiple marriages, but, unlike
Zsa Zsa,
Gabor has managed to stay off the police blotter -- except for a 1964 incident in which she was nearly killed fighting off a couple of vicious diamond robbers.
Gabor's best-loved public appearances were manifested in her five-year run as Lisa Douglas on the popular TV sitcom
Green Acres (1965-1970). Contrary to the Gabor Sisters' image of contentiousness,
Eva was well liked on the
Green Acres set by both co-star
Eddie Albert and director Richard Bare, who had nothing but praise for her professionalism and comic timing.
Gabor proved she hadn't lost her touch in 1990 when the inevitable
Green Acres two-hour revival movie made its way to television. She died in 1995. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

- 1941
-
In this war drama, a commercial pilot joins the air corps of a South Pacific island, and there he finds that he must contend with a dictator. He also falls quietly in love with the leader's girlfriend. Unfortunately, the evil leader is the head of the air corps, and to get rid of the young man who threatens his relationship, he send the hero on a suicide mission. The two rivals end up in a dogfight. Fortunately, the hero wins the fight and gets the girl. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- 1941
-
Midnight Angel was the title of this Paramount actioner when it was first released in December of 1941. But by the time the film reached the hinterlands, America had entered WW2, and thus it was that Midnight Angel was rechristened Pacific Blackout, which remained its title to this very day. Falsely convicted of murder (in one of those movie trials that takes only a few minutes!), young Robert Draper (Robert Preston) escapes custody during a practice blackout drill. Under cover of darkness, Draper hopes to find the real killer, who turns out to be a member of a Nazi sabotage ring. Our hero is helped along by Mary (Martha O'Driscoll), one of the most refreshingly self-reliant heroines in B-picture history. Among the secondary players are a young Hungarian immigrant named Eva Gabor and a portly German refugee named John Banner. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Robert Preston, Philip Merivale, (more)