Lois Nettleton
Lois June Nettleton was an American film, stage, radio, and television actress. She received three Primetime Emmy Award nominations and won two Daytime Emmy Awards.
Youth
Lois Nettleton was born on August 16, 1927 in Oak Park, Illinois to Virginia and Edward L. Nettleton. She attended Senn High School, where she was a classmate of Lee Stern, and Goodman School of Drama at the Art Institute of Chicago. She was Miss Chicago of 1948 and a semifinalist at the Miss America 1948 Pageant. Her professional acting career began in 1949. She understudied Barbara Bel Geddes in the original Broadway production of Tennessee Williams' Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, and first appeared on television in a 1954 episode of Captain Video.Career
Radio
Nettleton played Patsy in the radio soap opera The Brighter Day.Television/Emmy Award nominations
She performed in dozens of guest-starring roles on television shows. Early roles included The Twilight Zone ; Naked City; Route 66; Mr. Novak; The Alfred Hitchcock Hour ; The Eleventh Hour; Dr. Kildare; Twelve O'Clock High; The Fugitive; The F.B.I.; Cannon; Bonanza; Gunsmoke; The Virginian; and Daniel Boone. In 1973, she appeared on The Mary Tyler Moore Show as Lou Grant's new boss, Barbara Coleman, where she had a crush on Mr. Grant.She appeared in the pilot episode of The Eddie Capra Mysteries in 1978, as well as hit TV miniseries such as and Centennial, as the murderous Maude Wendell.
In 1987, she portrayed the role of Penny VanderHof Sycamore on the TV series version of the classic Kaufman and Hart comedy play You Can't Take It with You with Harry Morgan and Richard Sanders. She was a regular celebrity guest on various versions of the game show Pyramid from the 1970s through 1991.
Nettleton won two Emmy Awards during her career. She won one for her role as Susan B. Anthony in the television film The American Woman: Profiles in Courage, and for "A Gun for Mandy", which was an episode of the religious anthology Insight. She received an Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series for an episode of The Golden Girls. She also received Emmy nominations for her work in the TV movie Fear on Trial and for a recurring role on the series In the Heat of the Night in 1989. Nettleton appeared in a 2006 Christmas TV movie special titled The Christmas Card.
Stage
A life member of the Actors Studio, Nettleton made her Broadway debut in the 1949 production of Dalton Trumbo's play, The Biggest Thief in Town using the name Lydia Scott. She appeared in a 1959 off-Broadway production of Look Charlie, which was written by her future husband, humorist Jean Shepherd.She received critical praise for her performance as Blanche DuBois in a 1973 revival of A Streetcar Named Desire. Nettleton was nominated for a Tony Award for her performance as Amy in a 1976 revival of They Knew What They Wanted. Other stage credits include Broadway productions of Darkness at Noon and Silent Night, Lonely Night. She continued to act onstage into her 70s. Her final stage performance was in 2004, in an off-Broadway play, How to Build a Better Tulip.
Voice acting
In her later years, she did several voice roles for Disney, such as Disney's House of Mouse and Mickey's House of Villains, and Herc's Adventures. She appeared in episodes of the CBS Radio Mystery Theater.Filmography
Movies
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
1957 | A Face in the Crowd | Mr. Mason's Nurse | Uncredited |
1962 | Period of Adjustment | Dorothea Bates | |
1963 | Come Fly with Me | Hilda 'Bergie' Bergstrom | |
1964 | Mail Order Bride | Annie Boley | |
1968 | The Bamboo Saucer | Anna Karachev | |
1969 | The Good Guys and the Bad Guys | Mary | |
1970 | Pigeon | Mildred | |
1970 | Dirty Dingus Magee | Prudence Frost | |
1971 | The Bull of the West | Mary Justin | |
1972 | The Honkers | Linda Lathrop | |
1975 | The Man in the Glass Booth | Miriam Rosen | |
1976 | Echoes of a Summer | Ruth Striden | |
1981 | Deadly Blessing | Louisa Stohler | |
1981 | Soggy Bottom, U.S.A. | Molly | |
1982 | Butterfly | Belle Morgan | |
1982 | The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas | Dulcie Mae | |
1994 | Sister Marion | ||
2001 | Mickey's House of Villains | Maleficent | Voice, Video |
Television
Video games
Year | Title | Role |
1997 | Herc's Adventures | Athena |
Personal life
She was the first caller to Jean Shepherd's late-night radio program on WOR, later becoming his second wife. She became a regular guest, known to listeners as "the Caller". They appeared together in Shepherd's off-Broadway play Look, Charlie in 1959, and married in 1960. They divorced seven years later. She never remarried nor had children.Her last public appearance was at the 2007 Twilight Zone Convention, in Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey, in August 2007.