Career
Leslie Graves"s father, Michael Graves, was a theatre actor and introduced her to the entertainment industry when she was about 10. So she started her career with a small role in a Broadway play A Cry of Players (1968–1969) written by William Gibson, and then moved to acting for television series: Sesame Street (1969, first 13 episodes), The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1971, in the episode titled "Baby Sit-Com"), Here We Go Again (1973), and some uncredited commercials. In the late-70s, she left Hollywood, supposedly to move with a boyfriend to Texas, where she worked on a shrimp boat for three years.
Leslie Graves"s comeback to Hollywood in early 1980 was marked by some nude photoshoots.
Phillip Dixon shot her for OUI Magazine, a Playboy corporation affiliate and put her on the cover in November 1980 and again in May 1981 with a shoot by five photographers). At that time some rumors about her involvement with Penthouse publisher, Bob Guccione, and an argument with Playboy publisher, Hugh Hefner, arose, as reported in specialised entertainment business magazines and books
As she started to be noticed, she had small roles in two slasher movies: Piranha: the Spawning (1981) and Death Wish II (1982). Columbia Broadcasting System in 1982 cast her, at 23, in the role of Brenda Clegg in the daytime soap Capitol.
On the set she found in Carolyn Jones a sort of second, supportive mother.
When Jones died, Graves was devastated and suffered from depression and eventually became addicted to drugs. In late summer 1984, Graves left the Columbia Broadcasting System show due to a serious drug problem and a heroin overdose, although her departure was reported as stress-related. Her last public appearance was a nude photo shoot by Jean Rougeron published in the October 1984 issue of OUI Magazine.