Marilyn Buferd came into the world on January 30, 1925, in Detroit, a city that would later rust itself into mythology, but back then it was all factory smoke and American promise. She was tall — five foot eight — the kind of height that makes a room shuffle when a woman walks into it. She had that clean-boned California shine too, the kind Hollywood pretends it can manufacture but never really can. UCLA polished her edges, but the truth is she arrived already gleaming.
In 1946, she rolled the dice and stepped onto the Miss America stage. She wasn’t supposed to win. Everyone thought the favorite was a sharp young competitor named Cloris Leachman. But Marilyn — poised, cool, with a smile that could make a judge forget his own name — beat them all. Overnight she went from student to crowned national beauty, inheriting a throne vacated by Bess Myerson and passing it eventually to Barbara Jo Walker. Miss America 1946. A tiara, a bouquet, and the strange curse of being instantly recognizable without being truly known.
Some women fold under that sudden attention. Marilyn didn’t fold; she got on a plane.
Italy, France, the backlots of America — she took all of it. The pageant queen turned actress, the way so many try to, except she actually pulled it off. In Europe she found the kind of roles that didn’t ask her to smile for the nation, only for the camera. She shared frames with Jean Gabin in Touchez pas au grisbi (1954), one of those films that moves like cigarette smoke and midnight regret. She worked under Rossellini, under René Clair, under directors who cared more about shadows and movement than they cared about the pageant résumé she carried like a ghost behind her.
She made nearly two dozen films across three countries — A Night of Fame, Totò Tarzan, Les Belles de nuit, The Machine to Kill Bad People, Queen of Outer Space. Some were art, some were pulp, and she handled both with the same elegant shrug that said she understood the joke Hollywood never does: fame is temporary, but work is work.
Television got hold of her next — The Millionaire, Highway Patrol, Schlitz Playhouse, The Ford Television Theatre, the flickering silver grind of the ’50s. The small screen could be cruel, but Marilyn was steady. There was always another script, another guest spot, another week where she slipped into a different life and made it look effortless.
Her private life was restless too. She married Franco Barbaro — an Italian submarine commander turned movie agent, a man who had lived several lives before breakfast — and had a son, Nick. After the divorce, she tried again with Hans E. Orton. That one didn’t stick either. Then came Milton Stevens, who stayed until death took him in 1969. It wasn’t a fairytale lineup, but life rarely behaves like a good third act. And through it all she kept moving forward — not with the brittle desperation of a fading star, but with the practical stride of someone who understood that reinvention is a kind of survival.
Her son, Nick Barbaro, grew up to shape the cultural weather of Austin, Texas — publisher of The Austin Chronicle, co-founder of South by Southwest. Marilyn didn’t just pass her beauty forward; she passed the instinct to build something.
By 1990, at 65, she was living in Austin. Pancreatic cancer came for her — swift, cruel, indifferent to crowns or leading roles. On March 27, she slipped away quietly, without the marquee lights, without the last-minute tribute montages that some lesser actors manage to wring out of the machine.
But here’s the thing they don’t tell you about beauty queens: most of them spend their lives trying to outrun the crown. Marilyn Buferd actually did. She traded the pageant stage for film sets in foreign languages, traded the easy applause for the harder, better work of being interesting. She left real performances, real films, and a life that wandered far from the choreography expected of her.
Miss America was only her beginning. The rest — the wild, imperfect, glamorous, international rest — is why she deserves to be remembered at all.
