Katharine Juliet Ross went from an unknown actress to an Academy Award-nominated star overnight. She famously portrayed Elaine in The Graduate alongside Dustin Hoffmann and over the years became what many at the time referred to as a Hollywood bombshell.
Ross’s career has been long and very successful to date. However, her personal life hasn’t been nearly so stable – she’s been married five times. Fortunately, her fifth marriage, with the beloved actor Sam Elliott, has proven to be worth waiting for
It’s been some years since Katharine Ross has appeared on-screen, but there’s far more to her life than mere acting. To this day, she remains a true beauty. Here’s all you need to know about Katharine Ross – and what she looks like today at, age 83.
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Katharine Ross was born in Hollywood, California on January 29, 1940. Unlike many other Hollywood stars, the young girl’s parents didn’t work in the acting business. Her father, Dudley, worked both as a reporter for the Associated Press and as a commander in the U.S. Navy. As a result, his family moved around plenty.
They lived first in Virginia, before moving to Palo Alto, California, and eventually settling in Walnut Creek, outside San Francisco, California. That was where Katharine grew up, and in 1957, she graduated from Las Lomas High School.
She went on to attend Santa Rosa Junior College, a place that would prove pivotal with regards to her future. It was at the school she was first introduced to acting. Katharine Ross took part in her first productions in theater, which would change her life forever.
She appeared in the school’s production of The King and I, and afterwards decided she wanted to seriously pursue a career in the acting business. After just one year, though, Katharine chose to drop out. Instead, she applied to The Actors Workshop in San Francisco and moved into a small apartment above a grocery shop.
Katharine Ross – early life & career
For three years, Ross became a better and better actress as she continuously refined her talent. Eventually, she was able to land some minor roles in television shows. Not only was she a good actress, but she also knew how to audition.
“I was queen of the screen tests,” Ross told Life Magazine in 1968. “Daily runs from San Francisco to Los Angeles and back in time for the Workshop’s curtain time. I played a whole string of hit-and-run drivers: an innocent hit-and-run driver, a hardened hit-and-run driver, a well-to-do, snotty teenage hit-and-run driver. On Gunsmoke, I was a sympathetic crippled clubfoot.”
While in college, Ross met her first husband in her college sweetheart, Joel Fabiani, whom she married in 1960. He was the first of five husbands, but we’ll return to that shortly.
The years after she and Fabiani tied the knot were crucial in Ross’ life. She became known for her many appearances in television Westerns. Being the true beauty that she is, she fitted perfectly into that genre.
However, though it might sound like a dream to be cast in many television shows, it wasn’t all sunshine and roses for Katharine Ross. Like many others in the business, she was exploited and taken advantage of.
Put simply, it wasn’t all fun and games for certain young T.V. stars in the 1960s.
“I remember doing a screen test for the only film that Samuel Goldwyn Jr. ever directed: The Young Lovers. It was to star Peter Fonda, but he wasn’t available to do the screen test with me, so they brought in Chad Everett. He didn’t know that the role was cast, and he was putting everything he had into the screen test. I didn’t have the heart to tell him the truth. I went through a series of sessions with a hairdresser to get my look the way Sam wanted it. When they were finished, they had hacked off all of my hair. And they wound up casting someone else,” Katharine told Variety.
Katharine Ross – cast as Elaine in ‘The Graduate’
“I’ll tell you what was great about it,” she continued. “It was a time when the old studio system was in its dying throes, and they were just starting to try new approaches, and the little $1 million budget films were being seen as the way to go. And that did turn out to be the progenitor of a great new era that eventually became the indie film movement.”
Katharine made her T.V. debut in an episode of Sam Benedict in 1962, and her first film role was in the Civil War-themed Shenandoah, starring James Stewart, in 1965. The year after, Ross signed a deal with Universal, and when she worked on her first starring role in the film Games, director Mike Nichols noticed that the young, talented actress had something exceptional.
He cast her in perhaps the most prominent of all her film roles: Elaine in The Graduate, also starring Dustin Hoffman.
“[Dustin Hoffman] was this New York stage actor. He looked like he had rolled out from under a rock, he was so pale. He just wanted to get back to some play off-Broadway he was doing. Although we ended up getting to know and like each other, what I thought that first day was, “Oh my God — this guy is dressed all in black, and he is white as a sheet,” Ross recalled in an interview with the Houston Chronicle.
“You know Dustin’s one-time roommate Gene Hackman was cast as my father. I don’t know exactly what the deal was, but he bowed out.”
The Graduate was a masterpiece, and Ross became a star overnight. She was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role and a Golden Globe nomination for New Star of the Year.
The ending of The Graduate remains a mystery. Benjamin rescued Elaine from the wedding, but the expression on their faces, as they sat on a city bus was not what many had expected.
‘Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid’
Most believed that the beautiful story of two people in love, pulled apart by other forced before being dramatically reunited, would offer a happy ending. However, the two didn’t say anything to each other.
So what does Katharine think happened between the two characters? It turns out that the ending wasn’t scripted.
“You are always told you just keep going in a scene until the director says ‘cut.’ Well, Mike didn’t say it for the longest time. We ran out of dialogue, but the camera kept running. What do I think? I think Elaine got off at the next stop,” she said.
In 1969, Katharine landed another very significant role. She was cast in the now-legendary film Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, in which she featured in one of the most iconic scenes ever when she balanced on the handlebars of a bicycle pedaled by actor Paul Newman.
By the time they wrapped up filming, Ross had actually been in the same movie as the love of her life, although she didn’t know it at that point.
Ross’ private life has been quite the roller coaster, or at least it was in the beginning of her career. Katharine’s been married five times, with her current union spanning more than 40 years, a truly incredible achievement.
As mentioned, Ross first tied the knot in 1960 with Joel Fabiani. The couple was married for two years, and not long after, in 1964, Ross married John Marion. Their marriage lasted for three years. Then, in 1969, she married for a third time, to Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid cinematographer Conrad Hall. In 1973, the couple divorced, and Ross married Gaetano “Tom” Lisi a year later.