
Barbara Read
Biography
Born in Port Arthur, Ontario, Canada, Barbara Read was the daughter of a contractor. Under contract to Columbia, she was paid but never used for a single picture. She quit in disgust. She was later signed by Universal and was cast as one of the Craig sisters inThree Smart Girls (1936) along with Deanna Durbin and Nan Grey. This was Barbara's first and best remembered film. Her career was over by the time she married actor William Talman, of "Perry Mason" fame, in 1953. The couple had two children: Barbara ("Barbie") and William III ("Bobo"). The marriage was turbulent as both she and Talman suffered from alcohol problems. They divorced in 1960 with Barbara gaining custody of the children. Talman took over custody a year later when Barbara's alcoholism and mental/emotional problems became overbearing. Committed suicide at her Laguna Beach, California home when she turned on the gas jets of her stove and sealed the doors and windows. She left a suicide note blaming "ill health". Barbara Read bore a powerful likeness to Deanna Durbin, whose sister she was portraying in "Three Smart Girls". Date of Death: 11 December 1963, Laguna Beach, California (suicide)
Also Known As
Movie Appearances

Make Way for Tomorrow
as Rhoda Cooper
1937

Coroner Creek
as Abbie Miles (as Barbara Reed)
1948

Three Smart Girls
as Kay Craig
1936

Key Witness
as Martha Higby (as Barbara Reed)
1947

Behind the Mask
as Margo Lane
1946

The Missing Lady
as Margo Lane
1946

The Shadow Returns
as Margo Lane
1946

Curtain Call
as Helen Middleton
1940

Married and in Love
as Helen Yates
1940

Sorority House
as Dotty Spencer
1939

The Man Who Cried Wolf
as Nan
1937

Midnight Intruder
as Patricia Hammond
1938

The Crime of Doctor Hallet
as Claire Saunders
1938

The Spellbinder
as Janet Marlowe
1939

Too Many Women
as Linda Pearson
1942

Death Valley
as Mitzi
1946

Rubber Racketeers
as Mary Dale
1942

The Mighty Treve
as Aileen Fenno
1937

Ginger
as Peggy Sullivan (as Barbara Reed)
1947

Merry Go Round of 1938
as Clarice Stockbridge
1937