Trax Colton
— Time magazine on 23 March 1962[1]
— Dorothy Kilgallen on 22 March 1961[2]
Trax Colton (born Louis A. Morelli; May 26, 1929) is a retired American former motion picture actor who appeared in two films as a contract player for 20th Century Fox between 1960 and 1962.[1] Life and careerColton was born on May 26, 1929, in Highland Park, New Jersey, to Catherine De Angelis and Angelo Morelli, both of Italy. He had a sister, Martha Morelli.[3] He was working as a used car salesman when he was discovered by Henry Willson, a Hollywood talent agent who had discovered Rock Hudson, Tab Hunter, Clint Walker, and Rory Calhoun, who changed his name to Trax Colton.[4] Colton signed an exclusive contract with 20th Century Fox in 1960 and was given a small part in the film adaptation of The Marriage-Go-Round (1961), starring Susan Hayward and James Mason. Soon thereafter, he was given a lead role in It Happened in Athens, a comedy plotting the adventures surrounding a winner at the first modern Olympic games in 1896. He played Spiridon Loues, a Greek shepherd who enters the Olympics as a runner. It co-starred sex symbol Jayne Mansfield, whom Colton had a brief affair with during filming.[5][6] After the picture wrapped, Hollywood columnist Mike Connolly said in a 1961 column that Colton was Fox Studios' new "combination Rudolph Valentino–Ty Power".[7] In March 1961 Dorothy Kilgallen wrote that "his only other screen credit to date was a tiny role in Marriage-Go-Round but the female reaction around the nation was enough to give him a bigger chance" and speculated that Colton "may be our next matinee idol".[2] In November 1961, he screen tested for a film entitled Celebration for the part of a man who convinces Joanne Woodward to perform in a pornographic film.[8] Celebration had been the film's working title, it was eventually produced in 1963 as The Stripper with Robert Webber in the role.[9] It Happened in Athens was released in 1962, but by that time, Colton had been released from his studio contract and stopped making movies.[1] Filmography
References
External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Trax Colton.
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