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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jill_BannerJill Banner - Wikipedia

    Jill Banner (born Mary Kathryn Molumby, November 8, 1946 – August 7, 1982) was an American film actress. She played Virginia, the "spider baby" in the 1968 cult horror-comedy film Spider Baby. She also had roles as James Coburn 's flower child friend in The President's Analyst (1967), and appearances in Jack Webb 's television series, Dragnet .

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0052307Jill Banner - IMDb

    Jill Banner. Actress: The President's Analyst. Jill Banner's early life was somewhat nomadic. Her father died when she was 2, and her mother moved from Washington to South Dakota and Iowa before settling in Glendale, California.

  3. Jill Banner. Actress: The President's Analyst. Jill Banner's early life was somewhat nomadic. Her father died when she was 2, and her mother moved from Washington to South Dakota and Iowa before settling in Glendale, California.

  4. Jill Banner, born Mary Kathryn Molumby, was an American film actress, possibly best known for her role as Virginia, the "spider baby" in the 1964 cult horror-comedy film "Spider Baby". She had a longhand complicated relationship with Marlon Brando.

  5. She is “the Sixties”—in all its promise and eventual deformity—coming into being, coming up from underneath. She was born Mary Kathryn Molumby in Bremerton, Washington, in 1946, but by 1964 she was Jill Banner, still only 17 and suddenly starring in Jack Hill’s comic-horror masterpiece Spider Baby.

  6. www.rottentomatoes.com › celebrity › jill_bannerJill Banner | Rotten Tomatoes

    Jill Banner. Highest Rated: 94% Spider Baby (1967) Lowest Rated: 77% The President's Analyst (1967) Birthday: Nov 8, 1946. Birthplace: Bremerton, Washington, USA. Jill Banner was an actress...

  7. Jill Banner was an actress who had a successful Hollywood career. Banner marked her early career with roles in "Shadow Over Elveron" (NBC, 1967-68) and "Hunters Are For Killing" (CBS, 1969-1970). Later, Banner acted in "Amanda Fallon" (NBC, 1971-72) and the Lon Chaney Jr. comedy "Spider Baby" (1994).

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