Ann Robinson, Star of ‘The War of the Worlds,’ Dies at 96
The onetime stuntwoman got more mileage out of the 1953
sci-fi movie than "Vivien Leigh did on 'Gone With the Wind,'" she
once said.
The Hollywood Reporter
By Mike Barnes
May 17, 2026
Ann Robinson, the red-haired actress who was memorably
menaced by Martians in the spectacular 1953 sci-fi classic The War of the
Worlds, has died. She was 96.
Robinson died Sept. 26 at her home in Los Angeles, her
granddaughter, Tori Bravo, told The Hollywood Reporter. Her death had not been
publicly revealed until now.
Born in Hollywood, Robinson had broken into the movies as
a stunt performer and was an inexperienced contract player at Paramount
Pictures when she auditioned for producer and effects wiz George Pal and then
cast as library science teacher Sylvia Van Buren in War of the Worlds.
In the Oscar-winning film, based on the H.G. Wells’ 1898
novel, Sylvia and Pacific Tech professor Clayton Forrester (Gene Barry) try to
figure out a way to defeat Martians who have landed in a small town outside Los
Angeles and all over the planet, employing a fantastic heat-ray to inflict
widespread destruction.
“The nations of the world mobilize their armed might
rushing to defend the Earth against the unknown weapon of the super race from
the Red Planet!” the narrator on the movie trailer exclaims. “Is there nothing
that can stop the Martians’ death machines?”
In one creepy scene, a Martian places his long, skinny
fingers on the shoulder of an unsuspecting Sylvia, but Clayton comes to the
rescue and kills the creature with a hatchet.
“I always thought, ‘This guy might have been nice! Maybe
we ruined a chance for peace because Gene Barry got overzealous and threw that
hatchet,'” a playful Robinson told Tom Weaver in an interview for his 1994
book, Attack of the Monster Movie Makers.
“This Martian was just coming up behind me to tap me on
the shoulder — he wasn’t aggressive, he wasn’t mean. Of course, the Martians
had blown my uncle apart, along with a bunch of other people, but maybe this
guy was the nice one who wanted to negotiate.”
Steven Spielberg invited Robinson and Barry to reprise
that scene in his 2005 version of War of the Worlds, starring Tom Cruise.
“Steven was just so adorable,” she told Nick Thomas in
2016. “He came up behind me, squatted down and placed three fingers on my left
shoulder and yelled, ‘Someone take my picture!’ Apparently, War of the Worlds
was one of his favorite films growing up.
“They treated me like royalty,” she added. “My son, who
was with me, told me he heard people saying, ‘She’s here, she’s here!’ after we
arrived on the set. Then for the Ziegfeld Theater premiere, they flew me to New
York first class, put me up in a beautiful hotel overlooking Central Park and
arranged for a limousine to drive my family around. I waited 60 years to get
that treatment!”
Robinson also played Sylvia on a few episodes of a
1988-90 War of the Worlds syndicated TV series.
“I’ve gotten more mileage out of War of the Worlds than
Vivien Leigh did on Gone With the Wind,” she told Weaver.
Born on May 25, 1929, Robinson attended Hollywood High
and Sacred Heart Academy in La Canada Flintridge. In one of her first movies,
she doubled for June Havoc and got caught on a 15-foot barbed-wire fence trying
to escape the Tehachapi state prison in The Story of Molly X (1949).
“I had lied like crazy to get the job, telling everybody
how experienced I was!” she told Weaver. “I looked and thought to myself, ‘What
have I got myself into?’ But when you’re that young and stupid, nothing fazes
you.”
She also rode horses in Black Midnight (1949), starring
Roddy McDowall, stepped in for Shelley Winters in Frenchie (1950) and served as
an extra in A Place in the Sun (1951), for which director George Stevens gave
her a line of dialogue.
Robinson joined the Circle Theatre in Hollywood, then was
signed by Paramount for $125 a week as one of the studio’s “Golden Circle” of
future stars.
After War of the Worlds and a loan-out to Columbia to
work in the film noir The Glass Wall (1953), Paramount decided not to renew her
contract. In 1954, she played an L.A. cop opposite Jack Webb in the first
Dragnet movie and an alien queen on a syndicated kids sci-fi show, Rocky Jones,
Space Ranger.
Robinson put show business on hold in 1957 when she ran
off to Mexico to marry Jaime Bravo, a famous matador. That “blew my career
right out of the water,” she told Weaver. “When I got back home, Hollywood had
passed me by. I just ruined it, I blew it.” She and Bravo had two children
before divorcing in 1967.
Robinson, however, did guest-star in the 1960s on many TV
shows, including Perry Mason, Bachelor Father, The Life and Legend of Wyatt
Earp, Peter Gunn, Death Valley Days and 77 Sunset Strip.
In addition to her granddaughter, survivors include a
son, Jaime Bravo Jr., a director for ABC Sports and ESPN, and a grandson,
Sammy.
ROBINSON, Ann
Born: 5/25/1929, Hollywood, California, U.S.A.
Died: 9/26/2025, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.
Ann Robinson’s westerns – actress:
Black Midnight – 1949 (girl serving punch at square dance)
Callaway Went Thataway – 1951 (hatcheck girl at Mocambo's)
The Cimarron Kid – 1952 (Stella)
Cheyenne (TV) – 1955, 1957 (Joan Carter, Paula Copeland)
Fury (TV) – 1955-1956 (Helen Watkins)
Gun Brothers – 1956 (Rose Fargo)
Gun Duel in Durango – 1957 (Judy)
Rawhide (TV) – 1960 (Julia Garcia)
The Texan (TV) - 1960 (Anne Carter)
Shotgun Slade (TV) - 1960 (Miss Baxter)
The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp (TV) - 1961 (Hetty
Doane)
Sugarfoot (TV) - 1961 (Marie McTavish)
Death Valley Days (TV) - 1962 (Millie)