- Jack Lemmon, who played her husband in Days of Wine and Roses (1962), was her favorite co-star.
- A very weak, almost unrecognizable Lee made one of her last public appearances on April 29, 1991, to receive her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. In the last stages of her kidney cancer, her face was extremely bloated by the chemo treatments she was receiving. Jack Lemmon, her Days of Wine and Roses (1962) co-star, was at the ceremony to lend love and support. She passed away two months later on July 2nd.
- Her role in Anatomy of a Murder (1959) was intended for Lana Turner, who got fired when she insisted that her off-the-rack costumes, (suitable for the role of an Army wife), be designed by splashy Jean Louis. Later, Remick was announced to replace Marilyn Monroe in the unfinished Something's Got to Give (1962), but loyal co-star Dean Martin demanded that the studio reinstate the fired Monroe.
- She was cremated at Westwood Memorial Park and services held at a later date. Elizabeth Taylor attended and eulogies were delivered by good friends Jack Lemmon and Gregory Peck. Her children, Kate and Matt Colleran, sang the title song from one of her Broadway musical shows "Anyone Can Whistle".
- Discovered she had tumors on her kidneys and lungs while filming in France in 1989. She had a remission in 1990 before the cancer returned again.
- In 1962, Lee, who was with 20th Century Fox, briefly replaced the excessively tardy Marilyn Monroe on the film Something's Got to Give (1962). Lee never got past a few wardrobe fittings. Dean Martin, the film's co-star, refused to work with anyone but Marilyn and threatened to quit. As a result, Marilyn was brought back. The project was eventually scrapped.
- Alcoholic Montgomery Clift's career was in decline when he was considered for Wild River (1960). Director Elia Kazan made him promise he wouldn't drink. The actor kept his word with the support of sympathetic co-stars Jo Van Fleet and Lee Remick.
- Was nominated for Broadway's 1966 Tony Award as Best Actress (Dramatic) for "Wait Until Dark".
- Her grandfather, Alfred Remick, was founder of Remick's Department Store in Quincy, Massachusetts.
- She has appeared in four films that have been selected for the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically or aesthetically" significant: A Face in the Crowd (1957), Anatomy of a Murder (1959), Wild River (1960) and Days of Wine and Roses (1962).
- Katharine Hepburn befriended Remick after A Face in the Crowd (1957) and wanted her to be in Desk Set (1957), in which she would star with Spencer Tracy. Tracy thought that the role wasn't good enough for Remick and advised her not to play the role. She didn't and the role went to Dina Merrill. Remick later co-starred with Hepburn in A Delicate Balance (1973).
- Was originally cast in the role ultimately played by Mary Tyler Moore in Ordinary People (1980).
- While filming Wild River (1960) her husband, Bill Colleran, was severely hurt in an auto accident and she left the location shoot immediately. When she returned she was given great support by co-star Montgomery Clift, who had been through a horrible car accident a few years earlier himself. Because of the time lost, Remick lost a chance to appear in the Broadway play "A Good Soup" with Ruth Gordon. She was replaced by Diane Cilento. The play closed after 21 performances.
- Gave birth to her second child at age 25, a son Matt Colleran on June 7, 1961. Child's father is her first [now ex] husband, Bill Colleran.
- Lee's paternal grandfather was the son of Irish immigrants. Lee's other ancestry was English (where her maternal grandmother was born, and from where many of her other ancestors had immigrated to Massachusetts in the 1600s).
- Lee's second husband, British producer Kip Gowans, worked with Lee on a number of television movies including The Women's Room (1980), and Rearview Mirror (1984).
- Received the Women's International Center (WIC) Living Legacy Award (1990).
- Although she liked the European locations for Hard Contract (1969), she thought the film didn't work and was a disaster. However, she met first assistant director and future husband Kip Gowans on the film.
- Gave birth to her first child at age 23, a daughter Kate Colleran on January 27, 1959. Child's father is her first [now ex] husband, Bill Colleran.
- Early in her career, she was scheduled to play Jean Harlow in a film that never materialized.
- Studied at the Hewitt School, Swaboda School of Dance, and, in-between modelling, trained for acting at the Actors Studio and Barnard College.
- She passed away only four days before her Jennie: Lady Randolph Churchill (1974) co-star Thorley Walters.
- Was the daughter of actress Gertrude Margaret Waldo and department store owner Frank Remick.
- Had a fondness for chocolate.
- Her son, Matt Colleran, was a founding member of Los Angeles-based rock band, Mary's Danish. He wrote (with Gretchen Seager) the band's biggest hit, "Don't Crash the Car Tonight".
- In 1988, she declared These Thousand Hills (1959) was the least favorite of her films.
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