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Because the special optical effects used by the series were taking longer to complete than anticipated (which made a missed air date a real possibility), that pilot story was re-framed using newly filmed "current" footage and a time difference to explain the significant format and cast evolution since Oliver's scenes were filmed. Two years later, Oliver's performance was reused in the first season, two-part episode " The Menagerie" (1966). Oliver played the female lead guest character Vina in " The Cage" (1964), which was the first pilot of Gene Roddenberry's new show, Star Trek. Oliver as Vina transformed into an Orion slave girl in the Star Trek episodes "The Cage" and "The Menagerie" She had a continuing role as Ann Howard on ABC's primetime serial Peyton Place in 1966. Oliver appeared in television films, including Carter's Army. (1965) and The Love-Ins (1967) with Richard Todd. The same year, she also starred opposite Jerry Lewis in The Disorderly Orderly, and appeared in The Man from U.N.C.L.E. Her most challenging role during this time was as the ambitious wife of doomed country music legend Hank Williams (George Hamilton) in Your Cheatin' Heart (1964). She also made two appearances in Quinn Martin's The Invaders (episodes: "Inquisition" and "The Ivy Curtain") on ABC. She made one appearance on The Andy Griffith Show and ABC's family Western series, The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters. Kildare, The Naked City, The Barbara Stanwyck Show, Burke's Law, The Fugitive, Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C., I Spy, The Virginian, The Name of the Game, Longstreet, and Mannix.
Oliver was cast in episodes of Adventures in Paradise, Twilight Zone, Route 66, Dr. With Gardner McKay and Guy Stockwell in Adventures in Paradise (1961) In 1961, Oliver played the part of Laurie Evans in the episode "Incident of His Brother's Keeper" on CBS's Rawhide, and in 1963, she played Judy Hall in the episode "Incident at Spider Rock", Also in 1962, Oliver appeared as Jeanie in the television series Laramie in the episode "Shadows in the Dust". Oliver was cast in the 1960 episode of The Deputy as the long-lost daughter of star Henry Fonda's late girl friend, and appeared in Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theatre episode "Knife of Hate" as Susan Pittman. On November 9, 1960, she was cast as the lead guest star in "The Cathy Eckhart Story" on Wagon Train, with husband-and-wife actors John Larch and Vivi Janiss as Ben and Sarah Harness. On April 6, 1960, the 28-year-old Oliver played a spoiled young runaway, Maggie Hamilton, who gets soundly spanked by scout Flint McCullough ( Robert Horton), in "The Maggie Hamilton Story" on NBC's Wagon Train. Its seven-performance run was even shorter than that of Small War on Murray Hill, but won Oliver a Theatre World Award for "Outstanding Breakout Performance" it was her last Broadway appearance. In mid-1958, Oliver began rehearsals for a co-starring role in Patate, her second Broadway play. in December on the bottom half of a double bill. In July 1957, Oliver was chosen for the title role in her first motion picture, The Green-Eyed Blonde, a low-budget independent melodrama scripted by Dalton Trumbo (under a pseudonym), and released by Warner Bros. Oliver then went to Hollywood, where she appeared in the November 14, 1957, episode of Climax!, one of the few live drama series based on the West Coast, as well as in a number of filmed shows, including one of the first episodes of NBC's Wagon Train, Father Knows Best, The Americans, and Johnny Staccato. The play's short run was immediately followed by larger roles in live television plays on Kaiser Aluminum Hour, The United States Steel Hour, and Matinee Theater. That same year, Oliver replaced Mary Ure as the female lead in the Broadway production of John Osborne's play Look Back in Anger. She began the year with an ingénue part, as the daughter of an 18th-century Manhattan family, in her first Broadway play, Small War on Murray Hill, a Robert E. Oliver did numerous television shows in 1957, and appeared on stage. Susan Oliver (born Charlotte Gercke, February 13, 1932 – May 10, 1990) was an American actress, television director, aviator, and author. Swarthmore College Neighborhood Playhouse School of the TheatreĪctress, television director, aviator, and author