No Man’s Woman (1955)

Directed by Franklin Adreon, No Man’s Woman is a taut, low-budget film noir that delivers classic mid-century suspense with a venomous twist. At its center is Marie Windsor, playing one of her most iconic roles as a manipulative woman whose death sets off a whodunnit with multiple suspects and motives.

Plot Summary
Carolyn Ellenson Grant (Marie Windsor) is a cold, calculating socialite who refuses to divorce her estranged husband Harlow Grant (John Archer), preferring to keep his money and torment him emotionally. She meddles in the lives of others, sabotaging relationships and manipulating her employees. When she’s found murdered on her staircase, nearly everyone in her orbit becomes a suspect.

The second half of the film shifts into a procedural mystery, as Detective Lt. Colton (Louis Jean Heydt) and Detective Sgt. Wells (John Gallaudet) investigate the crime. The audience is kept guessing as motives pile up and secrets unravel.

Cast Highlights

  • Marie Windsor as Carolyn Ellenson Grant
  • John Archer as Harlow Grant
  • Patric Knowles as Wayne Vincent
  • Nancy Gates as Louise Nelson
  • Richard Crane, Jil Jarmyn, Louis Jean Heydt, and John Gallaudet round out the ensemble

Behind-the-Scenes Trivia

  • Carolyn demands $300,000 in a divorce settlement—equivalent to over $3 million in 2021
  • Windsor’s character drives a 1955 Mercury Montclair Convertible, while the police use a 1955 Nash Super Ambassador
  • Though Carolyn is said to be 29, Marie Windsor was 35 during filming
  • The film’s tone shifts from melodrama to murder mystery, echoing the structure of a long-form Perry Mason episode
  • The sets are modest but effective, reflecting the film’s B-movie budget and noir sensibility

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