The only main actors still alive from Rosemary's Baby

Few horror films are as fantastical and as retroactively controversial as Rosemary's Baby. What to do several decades after the premiere of a film about a woman's bodily agency, shot by a man – Roman Polanski – who was later convicted of statutory rape? This is just one of several trick questions that arise after carefully watching the film; In addition to Polanski's life story, both surviving cast members of the film (see below) have been embroiled in their own complex and traumatic situations in the years since the film's 1968 debut.

That's a difficult legacy for a phenomenal film that played to the strengths of everyone involved in making it, including the powerful young Mia Farrow, who turns Polanski's already sharp take on Ira Levin's great book into something unforgettable. Most of the actors who made the film a classic are no longer around, including John Cassavettes (who played Rosemary's gaslighting husband) and Ruth Gordon (who played her charming and devilish old neighbor). Aside from Farrow, the only major cast member still with us is Victoria Vetriwho played a hapless young woman named Terry in the film. Here's what life has been like for Farrow and Vetri in the years since Rosemary's Baby.

Mia Farrow (Rosemary)

21-year-old Mia Farrow went through a lot on the set of “Rosemary's Baby”, including: directed to the traffic entrance and told to eat raw liver for this scene. Her performance as young, reluctant mother-to-be Rosemary is indelible, and continued to impress on screen for decades to come. In the 1970s, she played Daisy Buchanan in Robert Redford's version of “The Great Gatsby” and appeared in an adaptation of “Death on the Nile.” In the 1980s, she voiced a character in “The Last Unicorn” and became the muse of her then-partner Woody Allen, appearing in 13 of his films over 12 years.

According to Farrow and Allen's breakup in the early 1990s documentary “Allen v. Farrow,” she discovered that Allen was having an affair with her adopted daughter Soon-Yi Previn. Another of her children, Dylan Farrow, accused Allen of sexual abuse later that year. Dylan Farrow and her mother still maintain the molestation allegation, and Mia's son, Moses Farrow, defended Allen and published his own account of alleged physical abuse by his mother in 2018. (Previn also filed a physical abuse allegation against Mia.) The actor he has a large family that has witnessed several tragedies, including the death of three of his 14 children.

After her breakup with Allen, Farrow continued acting, appearing in the Howard Stern comedy “Private Parts,” the Michel Gondry film “Be Kind Rewind,” the remake of “The Omen” and the family film “Arthur and the Invisibles.” franchises, among other titles. She also appeared on Broadway several times, including in the plays “Love Letters,” “Getting Away With Murder” and “The Roommate.” Farrow most recently appeared in the Netflix thriller “The Watcher” in 2022, after a six-year hiatus from acting. She also has a second career as an outspoken activist and has done extensive work in Darfur as: A UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador. In 2007, she received the Presidential Medal of Honor.

Victoria Vetri/Angela Dorian (Terry)

Victoria Vetri, who was credited with playing Angela Dorian in Rosemary's Baby, has had a hell of a life story in the decades since she appeared in the film. On screen, Vetri played Terry, the new neighbor of Mia Farrow's Rosemary, who later in the film throws herself out of a window (or is killed by Satanists). Off-screen, Vetri had already established a career in 1968, appearing in several television shows and modeling for Playboy and others. The year Rosemary's Baby was released, Vetri also won the prestigious title of Playboy's Playboy of the Year.

The actor continued to work on screen until 1975, guest-starring on television shows and starring in B-movies of the era. She played the lead role in Hammer Films' “When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth” and has also starred in such notable films as “Group Marriage” and “Invasion of the Bee Girls.” Unfortunately, Vetri's time in Hollywood was marred by trauma because, according to ex-husband Bruce Rathgeb, she was best friends with Roman Polanski's wife, Sharon Tate. Tate was murdered by Charles Manson's followers in 1969, as Rathgeb told the Daily Mail. that Vetri thought it was her fault because she allegedly met Manson (along with Tate and others) two weeks before Tate's death and made a comment that he found offensive.

There is much apocryphal surrounding the Tate case, but this story has real consequences. Vetri was arrested in 2010 after shooting Rathgeb during an argument, per Getting to Atlanta. The actress and model, then 60, pleaded not guilty to the charge of attempted intentional manslaughter and was sentenced to nine years in prison. Eight years later, Rathgeb told the Daily Mail that the haunted Vetri always feared that Manson would send someone after her, and that she shot him, believing that he was cult leader. Rathgeb, who said he had forgiven Vetri and wanted to remain friends, even said the actor used a gun that Polanski himself gave her for protection.

According to Movie Posters Since her release from prison in 2018, Vetri has appeared at fan events and signed autographs. She does not appear to have given any interviews to the press about Tate or the motives behind the crime.