Pamela Blake Movies
Pamela Blake used her real name (
Adele Pearce) when decorating the background in
Eight Girls in a Boat (1934) and when she returned to Hollywood after a four-year hiatus to study acting in her hometown of Oakland. The diminutive brunette charmer played opposite
Tex Ritter in Grand National's low-budget
Utah Trail (1938), a less than pleasant experience, she later recalled, but she was obviously going somewhere when director
John Farrow (
Mia's father) took her under his wing at RKO.
Farrow, who, according to
Pearce, could be quite the tyrant, directed her in
Sorority House (1939) and
Full Confession (1939), but her biggest chance came at Paramount, where she tested with
Alan Ladd and played the minor, but rather showy, role of Annie in
This Gun for Hire (1942),
Ladd's breakthrough movie. As it turned out, the classic film noir proved a breakthrough of sorts for
Pearce as well. At her request, Paramount had renamed her
Pamela Blake and, as such, she signed a contract with industry leader MGM. Although the studio never really offered her the opportunity for true stardom,
Blake turned up in several popular programmers, including
Maisie Gets Her Man (1942) with
Ann Sothern and
Red Skelton and the Western
The Omaha Trail (1942) with
James Craig. According to
Blake herself, however, MGM canceled her contract when she failed to notify the studio that she was leaving town. Despite the loss of a major studio contract,
Pamela Blake rebounded on poverty row and is today best remembered for her roles in such action serials as
Chick Carter, Detective (1946) and
The Ghost of Zorro (1948), the latter made by Republic Pictures,
Blake's favorite studio. "Everybody out there was wonderful; it seemed like a small town," she would later recall. The early '50s brought several guest stints on such television shows as
The Cisco Kid and
The Range Rider, but
Blake's acting career was waning when, in 1953, she decided to retire and raise her family with television producer
Mike Stokey (Pantomime Quiz). She had previously been married to actor/stuntman
Malcolm "Bud" McTaggart. (Both marriages ended in divorce.) The mother of
Michael W. Stokey, a military advisor on such major motion pictures as
The Thin Red Line (1998) and
Hart's War (2002),
Blake surprisingly claims the 1943 Monogram thriller
The Unknown Guest as her favorite among almost 50 films and a dozen or so television appearances. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide