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Lois Nettleton, RIP


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Lois Nettleton died Friday. This obituary shows that she had a much more interesting career than I realized. I had no idea that she had so many roles on Broadway. I guess time marches on, but I had no idea that she was that old, ten years older than Suzanne Pleshette for example.

I remember her starring in a TV series about 1962. As I recall she was a divorcee who ran a farm. I think but I'm not sure that Jerry Van Dyke was in it. To my knowledge that was the first TV show in which the lead role was of a divorcee.

I also remember seeing her on a game show a few years later in which she got into a little bit of an argument with the emcee about the rules. She didn't lose her temper, but she kept saying, "I don't want to cavil, but..."!

Here's her LA Times obituary:

http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-...news-obituaries

Lois Nettleton, 80; stage, movie and TV actress

Los Angeles Times

The actress, shown in 1985, once said she enjoyed playing a variety of roles. She appeared on many television series, including "In the Heat of the Night," "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" and "The Twilight Zone."

By Mary Rourke, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer

January 23, 2008

Lois Nettleton, an actress who went from Broadway plays to roles in movies and on popular television series, has died. She was 80.

Nettleton died Friday of complications from lung cancer at the Motion Picture and Television Fund Hospital in Woodland Hills, publicist Dale Olson said.

She made her Broadway debut in a 1949 production of "The Biggest Thief in Town," a comedy by Dalton Trumbo.

She appeared in more than a dozen other plays, on and off Broadway, over the next decade. As Blanche DuBois in a 1973 production of "A Streetcar Named Desire" by Tennessee Williams, Nettleton avoided the typical portrayal of a faded beauty turned boozy manipulator.

"This is a Blanche . . . who has been to hell and back and yet retains her innocence," wrote critic Clive Barnes in a review for the New York Times. "Miss Nettleton plays Blanche as a woman of nearly unshatterable courage."

Nettleton said in interviews that theater was her first love, but she moved to Los Angeles to be closer to her ailing mother.

In Hollywood, starting in the 1950s, she was a guest actress on dozens of leading television series.

She had roles on "Kraft Television Theatre" and "Studio One" in the 1950s and appeared on "The Twilight Zone" in a 1961 episode titled "The Midnight Sun." She played a woman coping with the radically shifting climate after the Earth falls out of orbit.

Nettleton also had roles on "Bonanza" and "The Fugitive" in the 1960s and "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" in the '70s, among other series. For two years in the late 1980s, she was a regular on the police drama "In the Heat of the Night." She also appeared on "The Golden Girls," "Murder, She Wrote" and "Cagney & Lacey."

For three years in the 1990s, she had a role as Virginia Benson on the soap opera "General Hospital."

She won Emmy Awards for daytime television for her role as suffragette Susan B. Anthony in "The American Woman: Portraits in Courage" in 1976 and her performance in an episode of the religious program "Insight" in 1983.

She made her movie debut in 1962 in "Period of Adjustment," based on a play by Williams. She also had roles in "Mail Order Bride" in 1964, "The Man in the Glass Booth" in 1975 and "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas" in 1982.

"It takes courage to be . . . a gypsy actor like I am," Nettleton told The Times in 1985, adding that she liked playing a variety of roles. "I'm a character actress. I always wanted to be as different in everything as possible," she said.

Nettleton was born Aug. 16, 1927, in Oak Park, Ill. At 21, she was named Miss Chicago.

She studied acting at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago and moved to New York City, where she joined the Actors Studio. She married Jean Shepherd, the writer, actor and radio personality, in 1960. Their marriage ended in divorce seven years later. She had no children and has no immediate survivors.

Instead of flowers, contributions in Nettleton's name can be made to The Actors Fund, for Everyone in Entertainment, 729 Seventh Ave., 10th floor, New York, NY 10019.

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Always liked Lois Nettleton. Remembered seeing in Jean Shepherd's obit that they were married. I think that the obit in the NY Times said that they met after she called him when he was doing one of his radio shows. Don't believe that either of them remarried after their divorce.

Shepherd married again in 1977 to his radio show producer Leigh Brown

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Always liked Lois Nettleton. Remembered seeing in Jean Shepherd's obit that they were married. I think that the obit in the NY Times said that they met after she called him when he was doing one of his radio shows. Don't believe that either of them remarried after their divorce.

Shepherd married again in 1977 to his radio show producer Leigh Brown

Thanks for the correction. I should have done a search before posting.

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Huh?

tulipe.jpg

Thanks for the great picture, Chris. Now I remember Ms. Nettleton. The name was familiar, but I needed to be reminded of how she looked.

Like many actors who played supporting roles for a good part of their careers, she had a long and successful career and I'm sure that lots of us were unaware that she was in a lot of our favourite movies and TV shows.

Seeing that picture will jog their memories.

RIP Ms. Nettleton.

Edited by patricia
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