- Born
- Birth nameJulia Chalene Newmeyer
- Nickname
- Catwoman
- Height5′ 11″ (1.80 m)
- Julia Chalene Newmeyer was born on August 16, 1933, in Los Angeles, California, the eldest of three children. Her father, Don, was a one-time professional football player (LA Buccaneers, 1926), her mother, Helene Jesmer, was a star of the Follies of 1920 and later became a fashion designer under the professional name of Chalene. From an early age, Julie studied piano, dance, and classical ballet. She graduated from high school at the age of 15, and spent a year touring Europe with her mother and brother. She became prima ballerina for the Los Angeles Opera. She attended UCLA studying classical piano, philosophy, and French.
Newmar went to New York and tried out for Broadway musicals; in 1955, she made her Broadway debut as the ballerina in "Silk Stockings." She won acclaim for her role as Stupefyin' Jones in "Li'l Abner." Though audiences and critics alike were stupefied by her good looks, that was not the compliment Newmar wanted.
Newmar wanted to be known for her comedy, as she told the New York Times: "Tell me I'm funny, and it's the greatest compliment in the world." She had beauty, brains and a fantastic sense of humor. Promoting her various Broadway and off-Broadway show appearances, she often posed as a pin-up girl. Making the transition to television, Newmar appeared in Rod Serling's science-fiction series The Twilight Zone (1959), playing Miss Devlin (devil). As physical perfection, Julie was perfect to play Rhoda the Robot in My Living Doll (1964); the sitcom had an enthusiastic cult following. In 1966, urged on by her friends, she tried out for and was cast as Catwoman (a character she had never heard of) in the wildly popular television series Batman (1966) On account of a movie commitment, Newmar was unavailable to play Catwoman in the third season. (Her role was taken over by Eartha Kitt.)
Newmar was very busy in the 1960s and 1970s, making guest appearances in many television series and several television movies. She toured the country in stage productions of "Damn Yankees" and "Dames at Sea," among others. Becoming an entrepreneur, in 1977, Newmar turned up in People magazine wearing her new invention, Nudemar pantyhose. In the 1980s, she appeared in nine films while she was busy raising her son and working in the real-estate business. Newmar went back to UCLA to take a few real-estate courses. In 1991, she toured in a stage production of "The Women." Still very active, and very beautiful, she occasionally has appeared at fan conventions.- IMDb Mini Biography By: [email protected]
- SpouseJ. Holt Smith(August 5, 1977 - 1983) (divorced, 1 child)
- ChildrenJohn Jewl Smith
- ParentsDon Newmar
- RelativesPeter Bruce Newmeyer(Sibling)Helen Newmeyer Newmeyer(Sibling)
- Natural brunette hair
- I.Q. of 135. Graduated from John Marshall High School in Los Angeles at age 15.
- Invented and marketed her own brand of pantyhose in the 1970s and 1980s.
- Having originated the Catwoman character on the 1960s television series Batman (1966), she accepted the Worst Picture award at the 25th Annual Razzie Awards on behalf of the Halle Berry remake of Catwoman (2004).
- In November 2004 the former "Catwoman" had a different type of cat fight on her hands. Her next-door neighbor, Jim Belushi, sued her for $4 million, alleging harassment and defamation of character. Their openly hostile neighborhood feud had reportedly been going on for years. Newmar, an avid community advocate who once fought for restrictions on noisy leaf-blowers, once threw an egg at Belushi's house in retaliation for a noisy air-conditioner. The suit includes vandalism and spying.
- She was visiting her brother at his college in New York when she was first contacted with the offer to play Catwoman on Batman (1966). A group of her brother's friends were regular watchers of the series and after consultation convinced her to take the role.
- Tell me I'm beautiful, it's nothing. Tell me I'm intellectual--I know it. Tell me I'm funny and it's the greatest compliment in the world anyone could give me.
- It was so wonderful being on Batman (1966) because you could be nasty and mean, and in the '50s, women could never--unless you were some "B" picture actress--be mean, bad and nasty. It was so satisfying; I can't tell you how satisfying it was.
- [interview in "Star Trek Magazine", #1, September/October 2006] Star Trek (1966)--oh my goodness, what a following that show has! I get asked about it all the time, and I receive lots of fan mail from it, even though I only did one episode.
- [July 2008] Today, I walk--but very slowly. My balance is also affected. People might think I've had too much to drink, but I never drank, smoked or took drugs my entire life. If I'm out in public, I grab on to some charming, darling fellow who can steady me. I've been encouraged by the many men who have offered me their shoulders.
- [on Catwoman fans] It's an honor--it really is--that something stays for so long with people in the sweet depths of their feelings.
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