
Acting
Also Known As: Joan Lynette McConchie
Birth Date
May 20, 1940
Death Date
November 24, 2019
(passed away at 79)
Place of Birth
Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Popularity
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Lovely Joan Staley was born Joan McConchie on May 20, 1940 in Minneapolis, Minnesota and started taking violin lessons by the time she was three years old. Living in Los Angeles, her prodigious talent was obvious. She soon joined a baby orchestra in Los Angeles and, within a few years, became a Junior Symphony performer at age six. She also made her unbilled specialty debut on film as a child violinist in The Emperor Waltz (1948), starring Bing Crosby and Joan Fontaine. Her father's business had the family traveling throughout Europe growing up but she later relocated to California and briefly enrolled at Chapman College in the Los Angeles area. Becoming a stunning, statuesque beauty, she re-directed herself back to a career in show business, singing backup on records for Sam Phillips and working as a secretary to make ends meet while appearing in local L.A. stage productions. In 1958, she was approached by a photographer and eventually posed for Playboy magazine, becoming November's centerfold. The attention warranted her an MGM contract and cheesecake bit parts came her way with such movies as Ocean's Eleven (1960) and Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961). She appeared front-and-center à la Raquel Welch as a scantily-clad prehistoric turn-on in Valley of the Dragons (1961), but nothing much came of it. Following her perky love interests in the mediocre western Gunpoint (1966), starring Audie Murphy, and The Ghost and Mr. Chicken (1966), a Don Knotts comedy film, and guest appearances on such TV shows as "Rango," "Pistols and Petticoats, "Mission: Impossible," "Ironside" and "Adam-12," Joan's career went on hiatus after a horse-riding accident. Briefly married to Chuck Staley, her second husband is former Universal exec Dale Sheets. Twins were born to them, a boy and girl, on March 24, 1971. Since then, with the exception of a brief appearance on an episode of "Dallas" in 1982, Joan remained with family life and other outside pursuits. She died on November 24, 2019. - IMDb mini biography by: Gary Brumburgh / [email protected]





Sally O'Hara - Secretary
1957 • 1 episode

Dixie
1959 • 1 episode

Millie O'Neil
1967 • 1 episode

Ginny
1966 • 2 episodes

Maggie
1962 • 1 episode

Okie Annie
1966 • 2 episodes

Agnes Wellman
1968 • 1 episode

Valerie Blake
1961 • 1 episode

Laura
1963 • 1 episode

1964 • 1 episode

1959 • 2 episodes

Marla
1963 • 1 episode

1958 • 3 episodes

1961 • 1 episode

1962 • 1 episode

1965 • 1 episode

Blonde in Cream Dress (uncredited)
1961

Roberta Love
1964 • 1 episode

Helen (uncredited)
1960

Sophie
1961 • 1 episode