- Born
- Birth nameJane N. Woldberg
- American comedienne and glamour girl of the 1960s, Jane was invited by her friend, Barbara Steele, to visit the 20th Century-Fox commissary, where she was discovered by an independent producer. She had small but significant roles in J. Lee Thompson's What a Way to Go! (1964), as a beatnik painter living in Paris; in Henry Koster's Dear Brigitte (1965), as James Stewart's sexy neighbor, and in the television series, Batman (1966), starring Adam West, playing Jill against Cesar Romero's Joker. She was also seen in Thompson's John Goldfarb, Please Come Home! (1965), as one of Peter Ustinov's harem wives; and in David Swift's Under the Yum Yum Tree (1963), as one of Jack Lemmon's flirts. She was married to writer William L. Driscoll from 1963 to 1966. In 1967, she married Joseph F. Antonoff, with whom she had sons Joseph and John, and daughter Jennifer. She resides in Los Angeles.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Edgar Soberón Torchia
- SpousesJoseph F. Antonoff(September 23, 1967 - November 20, 1979) (divorced, 3 children)William L. Driscoll(April 21, 1963 - March 1965) (divorced)
- ChildrenJennifer Wald AntonoffJoseph John AntonoffJohn David Antonoff
- Declined three times an offer to pose for Playboy Magazine.
- As of 2007 she is living as Jane N. Antonoff in Pacific Palisades.
- [her physique] I knew I had a nice body, but it was something I sort of took for granted. In Hollywood, it got a lot of attention, it made me self-conscious. I wanted to be known as a serious actress. I should have just gone with the flow but we always want something we don't have. It was kind of silly of me that I didn't since I obviously had a great body. I didn't take advantage of it like the girls do today especially that in those days there was no nudity to worry about.
- [choosing family over acting] I would rather have my children and the life I have now then a woman who doesn't have children. That's what is important in life, it's not having a career. If you have a career and come home to an empty home at night, what's the point?
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