- Born
- Died
- Birth nameRuth Baggett
- Tall, regal, sultry, flame-haired (later blonde) Lynn Baggett is better remembered for her turbulent, unhappy private life than for her "B" level acting roles. Born Ruth Baggett in Wichita Falls, Texas, on May 10, 1923, her father, David L., was in the oil business and her mother, the former Ruth Simmons, was a stenographer. While in Dallas following her high school graduation, the pretty teenager was discovered by a Warner Bros. agent and signed. As a girl with no experience, Lynn (sometimes billed as Lynne) was promoted by the studio as a beauty queen and titleholder ("The Cobra Girl," "The Triple A Girl," etc.) while paying her dues in a slew of unbilled sexy starlet bits as chorines, nurses, waitresses, singers and party-girl types. For five long years she toiled obscurely in such WWII-era films as Manpower (1941), Air Force (1943), The Adventures of Mark Twain (1944), Roughly Speaking (1945), Mildred Pierce (1945) and Night and Day (1946).
The studio did little to increase her stature in Hollywood, and she eventually was released from her contract in 1946. After signing with Universal, she finally received her first role of substance in The Time of Their Lives (1946), an above-average Abbott and Costello haunted-house comedy. Following her marriage to the Austro-Hungarian producer Sam Spiegel ("On the Waterfront") in 1948, she acted less frequently, showing up in a few secondary roles, that of a shady lady of mystery in the classic film noir D.O.A. (1949)) probably being her best-remembered one and those in The Flame and the Arrow (1950) and The Mob (1951) being her most prominent.
The Spiegel-Baggett marriage was quite stormy, marred by adultery and nasty fighting, and they separated in 1952. Three years later, she finally received a divorce. With her career now in shambles, Lynn found work as an Arthur Murray dance teacher. In 1954, she was the direct cause of a fatal two-car accident in which a 9-year-old boy, on his way home from a summer camping excursion, was killed. Another young boy in the same car was seriously injured. Overcome by fear and acute anguish, she "blacked out" and was later charged with leaving the scene of an accident and was convicted of felony hit-and-run.
A failed comeback attempt at acting led to severe depression, mental problems and acute substance abuse. She attempted suicide by pills in 1959 before succeeding a year later on March 22, 1960, dying of acute barbiturate intoxication. She had been released from a private sanitarium several weeks earlier. She was interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park. Never close to showing her true potential, Lynn(e) Baggett became one of Hollywood's sadder statistics.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net
- SpouseSam Spiegel(April 10, 1948 - March 31, 1955) (divorced)
- Attempted suicide by overdosing on sleeping pills in June 1959. Later that year was found suffering from paralysis due to drug addiction and diagnosed as a "chronic depressed neurotic". On 3/23/1960 she was found dead in her apartment from an overdose of barbiturates.
- Charged over the hit-and-run death of a nine-year-old boy in July 1954. The car she was driving had been lent to her by Warner Bros. contract player George Tobias. In December of that year she was sentenced to 60 days in county jail and placed on three years' probation.
- According to an article on her by Laura Wagner in "Films of the Golden Age", Issue 78, Fall 2014, Lynn sustained a head injury while a child that may have instigated her severe emotional and mental problems in later life.
- Met notoriously temperamental producer Sam Spiegel while performing a screen test for one of his pictures. Married him in April 1948. He was 20 years her senior.
- Discovered by a top Warner Bros. talent scout on her way to a department store in July 1942. Subsequently signed to a three-year contract. Moved to Universal in late 1946.
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