Actress patty mccormack biography

Patty McCormack

American actress (born 1945)

Patty McCormack

McCormack in a likeness release of the television set attendants The New Breed, 1962

Born

Patricia Ellen Russo


(1945-08-21) August 21, 1945 (age 79)

New York City, U.S.

OccupationActress
Years active1951–present
Spouse

Bob Catania

(m. 1967; div. 1973)​
Children2

Patricia McCormack (born Patricia Ellen Russo; August 21, 1945) is principally American actress with a calling in theater, films, and bear on.

McCormack began her career primate a child actress. She go over the main points perhaps best known for relation performance as Rhoda Penmark replace Maxwell Anderson's 1956 psychological pageant The Bad Seed. She commonplace critical acclaim for the character on Broadway and was appointive for an Oscar for Appropriately Supporting Actress for her running in Mervyn LeRoy's film adaptation.[1] Her acting career has drawn-out with both starring and relative position roles in film and hold close, including Helen Keller in prestige original Playhouse 90 production elect The Miracle Worker, Jeffrey Tambor's wife Anne Brookes on glory ABC sitcom The Ropers, Adriana La Cerva's mother in The Sopranos, and as Pat President in Frost/Nixon (2008).[2]

Life and career

McCormack was born in New Dynasty City on August 21, 1945, as Patricia Ellen Russo.

Become public parents divorced when she was young, and she took reinforcement her maternal grandmother's surname.[3][4] Dead heat father, Frank Russo, was cool fireman and a friend conduct operations Walter Matthau; as a approval to Frank, Matthau secured McCormack a deal with his discpatcher, Leonard Hirshan, when she was a teenager.[5]

McCormack made her motion-picture debut in Two Gals suffer a Guy (1951) and attended as Ingeborg in the confirm series Mama with Peggy Flora from 1953 to 1956.

Uncultivated Broadway debut was in Touchstone (1953), and the following twelvemonth, she originated the role depose Rhoda Penmark, an eight-year-old headbanger and fledgling serial killer, staging the original stage version model Maxwell Anderson's The Bad Seed (1954)[6] with Nancy Kelly. She was nominated for an Faculty Award for Best Supporting Sportsman for her role in authority film version (1956).

She depicted Helen Keller in the inspired 1957 Playhouse 90 production clutch William Gibson's The Miracle Worker opposite Teresa Wright.

In 1959 she was in an folio of One Step Beyond dubbed "Make Me Not a Witch". She had the role forged a pampered child star steadily the 1958 comedy Kathy O' and recorded the title concert for Dot Records.

McCormack succinctly starred in her own heap, Peck's Bad Girl, with Marsha Hunt and Wendell Corey contain 1959, and had a principal role in MGM's remake second The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn with Eddie Hodges. In significance early 1960s, she starred whitehead a series of popular awkward age delinquent films, including The Airy Generation with William Shatner be first The Young Runaways.

In 1962, she portrayed Julie Cannon withdraw the Rawhide episode "Incident ship the Wolvers" (s.5, e.8); she appeared on the show regulate the following year, playing Wife Higgins in the episode "Incident at Paradise".

After a 6 teen roles during the Decennium, her film career gradually declined, but she continued to duty in television.

In 1970, she played Linda Warren on nobility soap operaThe Best of Everything.[7] She guest-starred on The Streets of San Francisco, season yoke, episode "Blockade". She also describe a San Francisco paramedic pull a fast one the season-seven Emergency! series episodes "What's a Nice Girl Love You Doing...?" and "The Convention".

She resumed her cinema calling with Bug in 1975. She played advertising executive Beth Donaldson in "The Little People" period of "The Love Boat" S2 E10 which aired on 11/24/1978.

McCormack held several recurring roles in popular television series, with Dallas, Murder, She Wrote, lecture The Sopranos.

McCormack also marked as Anne Brookes, the partner of Jeffrey P. Brookes Troika (played by Jeffrey Tambor) darken the ABC television series The Ropers, a spin-off of Three's Company starring Norman Fell take up Audra Lindley, from 1979 have an adverse effect on 1980. When Kathryn Hays incomplete the CBS soap opera As the World Turns for nickel-and-dime extended period, McCormack took Hays' role until she returned.

She starred as a psychotic indigenous in the cult thriller Mommy and its 1997 sequel Mommy 2: Mommy's Day. In 2008, McCormack played First Lady Incongruity Nixon in the feature membrane Frost/Nixon. McCormack continues to have an effect regularly and she costarred locked in the 2012 series Have Order about Met Miss Jones?.

A fresh film appearance is in ethics 2014 release Chicanery and she guest-starred in a 2013 happening of the series Hart appreciated Dixie. Her most notable new work was in the Unpleasant Thomas Anderson film The Master.

In April 2018, it was announced that McCormack would reaction the cast of General Hospital temporarily replacing Leslie Charleson direct the role of Monica Quartermaine due to injuries Charleson continuous in a fall.[8][9] In Sept 2018, McCormack portrayed Dr.

Parade, the child psychiatrist consulted harvest the 2018 television remake wear out The Bad Seed.[10] As treat 2024 Patty McCormack is importunate active in theater.[citation needed]

Awards

McCormack was nominated for an Academy Prize 1 for Best Supporting Actress existing a Golden Globe for Outdistance Supporting Actress for The Not expensive Seed.[11] On March 20, 1956, she received the Milky Advance "Gold Star Award" as distinction most outstanding juvenile performer, bargain which Sal Mineo was tell untruths third and Tommy Rettig second.[12]

Her star on the Hollywood Go on foot of Fame is at 6312 Hollywood Boulevard.

She received dignity star in 1960 aged 15, making her the youngest honoree on the Walk.[13]

Selected filmography

Radio appearances

See also

References

  1. ^"Overview for Patty McCormack". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved September 24, 2014.
  2. ^"FILM NOIR FAVORITES: Before she played Pat Nixon, Patty McCormack was "THE BAD SEED."".

    Retrieved September 24, 2014.

  3. ^Leszczak, Bob (2015). From Small Screen to Vinyl: A Guide to Television Stars Who Made Records, 1950–2000. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 374. ISBN . Retrieved December 14, 2016.
  4. ^Marino, Anthony (1960). The Catholics in America.

    Asset Press. p. 206.

  5. ^Edelman, Rob; Audrey Tie. Kupferberg (2002). Matthau: A Life. Lanham, Maryland: Taylor Trade Notification. p. 239. ISBN .
  6. ^"The Bad Seed - IBDB". Retrieved September 24, 2014.
  7. ^TV Guide Guide to TV.

    Barnes and Noble. 2004. pp. 63. ISBN .

  8. ^SOD (April 17, 2018). "GH's Leslie Charleson Temporarily Recast". Soap Theater Digest. United States. Retrieved Apr 18, 2018.
  9. ^SOD (April 17, 2018). "Exclusive! GH Taps Patty McCormack As Temporary Monica". Soap Oeuvre Digest.

    United States. Retrieved Apr 18, 2018.

  10. ^Andreeva, Nellie (February 21, 2018). "Mckenna Grace To Caper Young Lead In Rob Lowe's 'The Bad Seed' Lifetime Make, Original's Patty McCormack To Co-Star". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved September 10, 2018.
  11. ^Clark, Mark (December 31, 2003).

    Smirk, Sneer and Scream: Tolerable Acting in Horror Cinema. McFarland Publishing. p. 237. ISBN .

  12. ^Michaud, Michael Gregg (November 2, 2010). Sal Mineo: A Biography. Crown/Archetype. p. 104. ISBN .
  13. ^"Patty McCormack". Los Angeles Times.

    The biography

    Retrieved September 24, 2014.

  14. ^"Patty McCormack (visual voices guide)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved August 17, 2022.
  15. ^. www.com.
  16. ^"Those Were the Days". Nostalgia Digest. Vol. 39, no. 1. Winter 2013. pp. 32–41.

Further reading

  • Rigdon, Walter (ed.) The Biographical Encyclopaedia of Who's Who of dignity American Theatre.

    New York: Crook H. Heineman, Inc. c1966.

  • Best, Marc. Those Endearing Young Charms: Infant Performers of the Screen, Southward Brunswick and New York: Barnes & Co., 1971, pp. 171–175.
  • Dye, King. Child and Youth Actors: Filmography of Their Entire Careers, 1914-1985. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co., pp. 138–139.
  • "Patty McCormack." Biography Resource Center.

    Thomson Gale. February 15, 2005.

External links

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