Barboura Morris

Shortly after, she joined the Stumptown Players, a 16-person stock theater company in Guerneville which was composed of fellow California university undergraduates and alumni.

Notably, she starred opposite Charles Bronson in 1958's Machine-Gun Kelly and costarred with Peter Fonda in 1967's The Trip, written by Jack Nicholson.

In the piece, Morris implicated Richard Nixon in the death of Dorothy Hunt in the United Airlines Flight 533 plane crash.

[6] The essay was planned as part of a full book to be called The Watergate Women, written by Morris and edited by Donald Freed.

[10] Following her divorce, she had a brief romantic involvement with Roger Corman during the production of A Bucket of Blood[11] In 1965, Morris met playwright Donald Freed at the Los Angeles Art Theater.