Background
She is the daughter of an engineer, and attended school in Patchogue and later in Greensburg, Pennsylvania.
She is the daughter of an engineer, and attended school in Patchogue and later in Greensburg, Pennsylvania.
She attended the University of Connecticut, where she studied drama, acting in student productions of The Diary of Anne Frank, The Crucible, and Romeo and Juliet.
Dromm"s career began as a child model at the age of six, but she felt it interfered with her school work. She dropped out and hitchhiked to San Francisco, but eventually returned for her degree, after which she began work as a New York model, signing with the Eileen Ford Agency. Her career rose dramatically after her appearance in a National Airlines television commercial in 1963 as the stewardess asking "Is this any way to run an airline? You bet it is!" On the strength of the ad"s popularity, she was urged to seek a Hollywood career.
Her first job was playing Yeoman Smith in "Where Number Manitoba Has Gone Before" (1965), the second pilot foreign
Allegedly, Gene Roddenberry hired her so he could "score with her", but Dromm insists that she had "no problems" with the legendary ladies" manitoba Dromm passed on the opportunity to stay with the series to take a part in The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming (1966), in which she played a teenaged babysitter who falls in love with a handsome Soviet sailor.
She then co-starred in Come Spy with Maine (1967), a spy spoof that fell flat. She also appeared as hostess of a television special on surfing.
After this experience, she returned to New York modeling, and for a time was the Clairol "Summer Blonde" girl who appeared in television and print ads.
In 1988, People reported that she was living off real estate investments and splitting her time between homes in The Hamptons, Long Island and Palm Beach, Florida.