Dickson was born in Long Beach, California.[1] As a teenager, she toured Southeast Asia singing and dancing for the armed forces with Bob Hope.[2] At the age of 17, she won the title of Miss California USA in the Miss World pageant; it led to acting offers but she decided to continue performing at USO shows while studying acting at the Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute in Los Angeles.[1]
Dickson played the role of Jill Foster Abbott on The Young and the Restless from 1973 to 1980, then again from 1983 to 1987.[3] Dickson was let go from the show in 1987. She filed a $10 million lawsuit against Columbia Pictures in an effort to be reinstated.[4]
In the lawsuit, Dickson claimed William J. Bell blacklisted her and wreaked havoc on her personal and professional life by hiring "Mafia cartel judges and attorneys" to "ruin" her life. As a result, she ended up "broke and homeless" and claimed to have been blocked from working.[5][6]
In 1987, Dickson released the film Welcome to My Home,[7] described as a "vanity film"[7] which showcased her home and wardrobe.[8] A YouTube parody became an Internet meme and has been removed and re-uploaded several times.[9] In 2018, its influence was profiled in Vanity Fair. Dickson, who was interviewed for the article, revealed that she financed the film with $5,000 of her own money.[10]
In May 2013, Blue Boulevard Publications released Dickson's memoir, My True Hidden Hollywood Story.[11]
Personal life
Marriages
Dickson has been married twice. Her first husband was dentist Robert Rifkin whom she married on September 30, 1976.[12] She married attorney Jan Weinberg on December 25, 1997.[13] They were divorced in 2006.[14]
Legal issues
In 2007, Dickson was jailed in Hawaii because of a civil contempt order stemming from a divorce judgment from her ex-husband Jan Weinberg.[14] She said she was the victim and wasn't given a fair divorce hearing.[14] Released after 16 days, she was sent back to jail and released after more than three months.[15]
In 2009, the judgment in Weinberg v. Dickson was set aside after an appeals court found that the judge in the original trial had abused his discretion in not guaranteeing Dickson a fair trial and that her imprisonment had been unlawful.[16]