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    Obituaries
    Monday, May 06, 2024

    Steffi Sidney-Splaver

    Los Angeles - Steffi Sidney-Splaver, who as a young actress appeared in "Rebel Without a Cause," then gave up acting to become a Hollywood writer, publicist and producer, has died at age 74.

    She died Monday of kidney failure at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle, said her husband, Rick Splaver.

    Born April 16, 1935, in Los Angeles, she was the daughter of famed Hollywood columnist Sidney Skolsky, who claimed to have been the first to call the Academy Award statuette "Oscar."

    A graduate of Fairfax High School, Sidney-Splaver studied at the Actors Lab in Los Angeles. Her first movie role was in "The Eddie Cantor Story," a 1953 film her father produced.

    Two years later the dark-haired actress landed the role of Mil in "Rebel Without a Cause," Nicholas Ray's 1955 film about adolescent angst starring James Dean and Natalie Wood. Billed as Steffi Sidney, she played one of the girls in the gang of teenagers tormenting Jim Stark, played by Dean.

    Decades later, teenagers still gushed about Sidney-Splaver's part in the classic film, she said in a 2000 interview with the Los Angeles Times.

    "They just flip," she said. "I just find that amazing. They still identify with that movie."

    A few more movie roles followed, including in "Hold Back Tomorrow" (1955) and "The Hot Angel" (1958). Then she left acting to write for teen magazines Datebook and Tiger Beat and work as a production assistant and associate TV producer. She also produced TV commercials.

    After she married Splaver in 1985 they formed a public relations agency, Splaver Associates. They moved to Whidbey Island near Seattle in 1998, and she retired in 2003.

    In addition to her husband, she is survived by her sister, Nina Marsh.

    ___

    (c) 2010, Los Angeles Times.

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    Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

    AP-NY-02-26-10 2141EST

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