|
Register Now!
|
|
Register now for vtap for the fastest and easiest way to watch web video on your mobile device!
|
|
Lois June Nettleton (August 6, 1927 - January 18, 2008) blank">Obituary was a _American actress of film, stage and television. She was Miss Chicago of 1948, as well as a semi-finalist at that year's Miss America Pageant.
Lois Nettleton is a versatile and accomplished actress who has appeared on stage, in films and on TV in her long career. The former Miss Chicago of 1948 beauty pageant contest winner was born on August 6, 1929 in Oak Park, Illinois, She studied acting at Chicago's Goodman Theatre and then at the Actors' Studio in New York City, where she made her Broadway debut in 1949's "The Biggest Thief in Town" under the stage name "Lydia Scott" (her given name, she felt, was too plain and sounded "schoolmarmy"). Nettleton was Barbara Bel Geddes's understudy in the role of Maggie the Cat in the original 1955 Broadway production of Tennessee Williams Pulitzer-Prize winning "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof," staged by Elia Kazan, Occasionally, she got to play Maggie herself. A supremely talented stage actress, she won the prestigious Clarence Derwent Award for her acting in "God and Kate Murphy," Lois Nettleton was married to the one and only Jean Shepherd (I), the radio and television humorist and writer, for seven years. Nettleton and Shepherd clicked when she called the humorist's nightly radio show at WOR in the 1950s; the beguiled Shepherd broadcast their telephone conversations on the air. They appeared together in Shepherd's off-Broadway play "Look Charlie" in 1959. While her official film debut came in 1962's adaptation of Williams' "Period of Adjustment," Nettleton previously had played a bit part in Kazan's classic "A Face in the Crowd" (1957), scripted by 'Bud Schulberg'. Nettleton has appeared in many movies, but she's done most of her major work on stage and in television, where she has appeared on everything from sitcoms to soap operas. Nettleton has won two Emmies for her TV work, for the daytime special "The American Woman: Profiles in Courage" (1977), and for "A Gun for Mandy" (1983), an episode of the syndicated religious anthology "Insight."







