Suzy Mandel

Suzy Mandel
Born 6 March 1953
London, England

Suzy Mandel (born 6 March 1953) is the stage name of an ex-actress and model best known for her roles in such 1970s British sex comedies as Confessions of a Driving Instructor (1976), Intimate Games (1976), Come Play with Me (1977), The Playbirds (1978), and Adventures of a Plumber's Mate (1978), and for her appearances on the Benny Hill Show.

Biography

Born in London, Mandel grew up on the Isle of Sheppey, Kent and later in Essex at Epping, Woodford and Buckhurst Hill. She began her career as a coat model. Later, she worked modelling lingerie, and was a contestant on ‘Miss TV Times’ (broadcast on UK television on 14 June 1974 and presented by Hughie Green).[1][2] Mandel's acting career in British sex comedies began in 1976, with her first film, Intimate Games.

Benny Hill saw Intimate Games, and this led him to cast Mandel on his eponymous show. She appears in multiple roles on two 1977 episodes of the series (broadcast in the UK 26/01/1977 and 23/03/1977). Of Hill and Jackie Wright's famous ‘head slapping’ routine, she said "Jackie Wright was a chain smoker and he would often hide his cigarette in his mouth or behind his back during scenes. In fact, you could often see a little plume of smoke rising behind him if you looked close enough. Benny would slap his head to fan the smoke away."[3]

On the big screen she quickly became a favourite of both British sex film directors and audiences. Soon she was receiving equal billing with Mary Millington, the UK’s biggest sex symbol of the 1970s. Millington and Mandel's film, Come Play With Me still stands as one of the longest-running films in British film history, and ran continuously at the Moulin Cinema in London's West End from 1977 to 1981.

After the release of her final British sex film, You're Driving Me Crazy, Mandel moved to Los Angeles where, in 1979, she attended the Lee Strasberg Institute for one year, studying acting and voice. She also studied with noted voice and dialect coach Robert Easton.

Mandel continued acting, appearing in the film The Mistress of the Apes (directed by B-film king Larry Buchanan). She also appeared in the 1980 film The Private Eyes starring Tim Conway and Don Knotts as Hilda, the Upstairs Maid. She guest starred on television shows like The Love Boat. She also appeared in the hardcore film Blonde Ambition (also known as Can I Come Again), which was shot in New York in 1977, but only released in 1980. Blonde Ambition saw Mandel cast as Sugar Cane, one half of a talentless duo of singers who become embroiled in the search for a missing brooch. Directed by the eccentric Amero Brothers, the role entailed Mandel to strip while ice-skating, impersonate a drag queen, play the tuba and perform in hardcore sex scenes. She used a body double for the last.

On 16 August 1981, Mandel married wealthy British film financer Stanley Margolis. Margolis had owned Tigon British Film Productions, the company that released some of her best-known British films, and that would later co-produce the 1993 film True Romance.

Mandel eventually moved behind the scenes, working on the horror comedy Dead Men Don't Die (1991) starring Elliott Gould as well as co-producing Love Bites, starring Adam Ant, in 1993. She and Margolis divorced the following year.

In 1996, Mandel revealed in the British newspaper The People,[4] that she had quit showbiz to work as a nurse caring for people dying from AIDS after several of her friends had died from the disease. “The stunning blonde, who often dressed as a saucy nurse, is now wearing a real nurse's uniform to care for dying patients” claimed the article. In 2006, she returned to producing, working with adult video director Jennifer James on a series entitled ‘Inside Erotica’.

In 2014 Mandel appeared in the tongue in cheek British television documentary ‘'The Golden Rules of Porn'’ (broadcast on More4 on 9 August 2014)[5] discussing her roles in the soft-core British comedies Confessions of a Driving Instructor, Come Play with Me, The Playbirds and sharing her thoughts on bad chat-up lines and high heels.

Acting roles

Magazine covers

Notes

  1. TV Times issue dated 06/08/1974
  2. BFI: Miss TV Times 1974 cast
  3. Gram Ponante (2006-09-25). "Open bar at the Rears place". gramponante.com. Archived from the original on 2008-05-16. Retrieved 2008-07-24.
  4. The People, 1996 “Ex-Hill’s Angel Suzy is a real Angel of Mercy”
  5. "golden rules of porn publicity blurb". channel4.com.

References

External links