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Sheree North

Sheree North (born Dawn Shirley Crang; January 17, 1932 – November 5, 2005) was an American actress, dancer, and singer, known for being one of 20th Century-Fox's intended successors to Marilyn Monroe.

Sheree North
Sheree North in 1975
Born
Dawn Shirley Crang

(1932-01-17)January 17, 1932
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
DiedNovember 4, 2005(2005-11-04) (aged 73)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Other namesDawn Shirley Bethel
Sherree Bessire
Shirley Mae Bessire
Occupations
  • Actress
  • singer
  • dancer
Years active1951–2000
Spouse(s)
Fred Bessire
(m. 1948; div. 1953)

John "Bud" Freeman
(m. 1955; div. 1956)

Dr. Gerhardt Sommer
(m. 1958; div. 1963)

Phillip Alan Norman
(m. 2003)
Children2

Early life

North was born Dawn Shirley Crang[1] in Los Angeles, California, on January 17, 1932, the daughter of June (née Shoard) and Richard Crang. Following her mother's remarriage to Edward Bethel, she was known as Dawn Shirley Bethel.[citation needed]

She began dancing in USO shows during World War II at age 10. In 1948, she married Fred Bessire. She bore her first child at age 17 in 1949, and continued dancing in clubs under the stage name Shirley Mae Bessire.[citation needed] (Already married at this age, her legal name at this time was Dawn Shirley Bessire.)

Career

Beginnings

North made her film début as an uncredited extra in Excuse My Dust (1951). She was then spotted by a choreographer performing at the Macayo Club in Santa Monica, and was cast as a chorus girl in the film Here Come the Girls (1953), starring Bob Hope. Around that time, she adopted the stage name Sheree North. She made her Broadway début in the musical Hazel Flagg, for which she won a Theatre World Award.[2] She reprised her role in the film version, Living It Up (1954), starring Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis.[citation needed] In early 1954, at age 22, she appeared in a live TV version of Cole Porter's Anything Goes on The Colgate Comedy Hour, with Ethel Merman, Frank Sinatra, and Bert Lahr.[3]

20th Century-Fox

In 1954, North signed a four-year contract with 20th Century-Fox. The studio had big plans for her, hoping to groom her as a replacement for the studio's leading—and increasingly uncontrollable—female star Marilyn Monroe. Fox tested North for leading roles in two of their upcoming productions, The Girl in Pink Tights and There's No Business Like Show Business—two films that had been offered to Monroe—while North was wearing Monroe's own studio wardrobe. After her screen tests, though, North was not cast in either film. In March 1954, North had a brush with scandal when she was revealed to have once danced in a bikini in an 8 mm erotic film. Fox capitalized on the publicity, as the studio previously had with Monroe's nude calendar posing in 1952.[4]

In 1955, she was assigned the lead role opposite Betty Grable in How to Be Very, Very Popular (1955), a role that Marilyn Monroe had refused. Media attention surrounding Monroe's suspension, and North's hiring resulted in North appearing on the cover of Life with the cover line "Sheree North Takes Over from Marilyn Monroe".[5] How to Be Very, Very Popular did not live up to the hype Fox had generated, though North had appeared on What's My Line? to publicize the film and had been asked point-blank by one of the panelists if she has been associated with Monroe. The movie received mixed reviews from critics and was a moderate box-office success. Despite this, film historians, then and now, cite North's electrically charged dancing to "Shake, Rattle and Roll" as the film's most memorable scene.[6]

 
Sheree North on the cover of Life (March 21, 1955)

In an attempt to promote North, Fox studio executives lobbied to cast her in films surrounded with popular stars. The studio had campaigned to cast her in a film with comedian Tom Ewell, hoping to repeat the success he had with Monroe in The Seven Year Itch (1955). Soon thereafter, the studio assigned North and Ewell to appear together in the romantic comedy The Lieutenant Wore Skirts, plotting the story of an army lieutenant whose husband tries to get her discharged. To promote the film, North posed for several publicity shots showing her legs. When the majority of the shots were released, only her legs appeared, with the tagline "Believe it or not, these legs belong to an army lieutenant." The film premiered with much fanfare in January 1956, and became a box-office success, grossing over $4 million in the United States.[citation needed]

North's follow-up was The Best Things in Life Are Free (1956), a lavish musical in which her singing voice was dubbed by Eileen Wilson. She received fourth billing under Gordon MacRae, Dan Dailey, and Ernest Borgnine. It was an attempt by the studio to broaden North's audience appeal, and while it earned favorable reviews from critics, it did not become the success for which Fox had hoped. In 1956, Fox signed another blonde bombshell in the person of Broadway actress Jayne Mansfield to a contract, and began promoting her instead of North. Although Fox gradually lost interest in North, the studio continued to offer her a string of films. She was offered the lead role in a film called The Girl Upstairs, in which she would have parodied Monroe's on-screen persona.[citation needed]

When North's agent suggested she decline the film, Fox put her on suspension for two months. When her suspension was lifted one month later, North agreed to appear in The Way to the Gold, but only on the assurance that Elvis Presley would be her co-star. When Presley withdrew due to salary disagreements, he was replaced with Jeffrey Hunter, with whom North often quarreled. In the film, North attempted to progress from her blonde bombshell image, playing a sarcastic waitress, and while the film drew mixed reviews, it was a box-office success.[citation needed]

She next starred in No Down Payment (1957), a melodrama about the lives of multiple families living in a California subdivision. Tony Randall played her alcoholic husband in the film. Although critically acclaimed, it was not a box-office success. The following year, she appeared in her final two films for Fox. In Love and War (1958) was a war drama film pairing her again with Jeffrey Hunter, and also with Robert Wagner, Dana Wynter, and Hope Lange. It was not a critical or financial success. Although the musical film genre had declined in profitability, she next co-starred in Mardi Gras (1958) with Pat Boone and Tommy Sands. It was her final film under her contract.[citation needed]

Later years

After North's contract with Fox ended in 1958, her career stalled, although she continued to act in films, television, and on the stage throughout the rest of her life. She guest-starred on episodes of The Untouchables and Gunsmoke (both 1963). North joined the cast of I Can Get It for You Wholesale in 1962, which featured Elliott Gould and introduced Barbra Streisand. She later guest-starred on a series of popular television series, including Ben Casey, Burke's Law (1963–65), The Virginian (1964–66), The Big Valley, The Iron Horse (both 1966), and The Fugitive (1965–67).[citation needed]

After an eight-year absence from film acting, North accepted a lead role in the B-movie science-fiction film Destination Inner Space (1966). The film opened to only a minor release in 1966 and has rarely been seen since. North co-starred with Elvis Presley in one of his final films, The Trouble with Girls (1969).[citation needed]

When she was not working in films, she worked in musicals and many other theatrical productions. She appeared on Broadway doing a lively routine in the musical Hazel Flagg (1953), and won a Theatre World Award. This led directly to her being cast in the film Living It Up (1954). In 1962, she appeared on Broadway as Martha Mills in I Can Get It for You Wholesale, with Jack Kruschen, Elliott Gould, and Barbra Streisand in her Broadway debut. North also appeared in productions of Irma La Douce, Bye Bye Birdie, and Can-Can. In 1965, she took over from Shirley Knight in a Los Angeles production of Dutchman that coincided with the 1965 Watts riots. The production was controversial and was blamed by conservatives for inciting unrest. It was picketed, ads in newspapers were blocked, and North's car was set on fire. Despite that, the production ran for a year.

From the 1960s onward, North focused mainly on becoming a solid and versatile character actress, appearing on almost every television Western, cop show, and medical drama produced from the 1960s through the 1990s. She displayed a talent for comic timing on many of the situation comedies of the era. She was a favorite in several made-for-television movies. She also earned Emmy nominations for appearances on Marcus Welby, M.D. (1969) and Archie Bunker's Place (1979).

 
Ed Asner as Lou Grant and Sheree North as Charlene Maguire, his new girlfriend, in a fifth-season episode of The Mary Tyler Moore Show

A favorite of film producer/director Don Siegel, she appeared in four of his films: in Madigan (1968) opposite Richard Widmark; in Charley Varrick (1973) with Walter Matthau; as John Wayne's long-lost love in the actor's final film The Shootist (1976); and in Telefon (1977). She had supporting roles in two Charles Bronson movies, Breakout (1975) with Robert Duvall, and Telefon. Other notable performances were in The Gypsy Moths (1969) with Burt Lancaster and Gene Hackman; and as Burt Lancaster's ex-lover in Michael Winner's Western, Lawman (1971) with Robert Ryan, Lee J. Cobb, Robert Duvall, and Albert Salmi. She also appeared in the crime drama The Organization (1971) with Sidney Poitier, and in The Outfit (1973) with Duvall, Joe Don Baker, and Karen Black.

Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, North appeared in guest spots on TV shows, including Hawaii Five-O, The Streets of San Francisco, McMillan & Wife, Matlock, Family, and Magnum, P.I.. She played Lou Grant's girlfriend in several episodes of The Mary Tyler Moore Show. She co-starred with Sheldon Leonard in the short-lived CBS sitcom Big Eddie in 1975. During the 1980–81 season, North starred in I'm a Big Girl Now with Diana Canova, Danny Thomas, and Martin Short. The series aired 19 episodes. In 1980, she played Marilyn Monroe's mother in the made-for-television film Marilyn: The Untold Story. In 1983, she appeared in the ensemble cast of Steven Bochco's series Bay City Blues. The hour-long drama series aired eight episodes. North later appeared in two episodes of The Golden Girls as Blanche Devereaux's sister Virginia.

In the 1990s, she appeared as Cosmo Kramer's mother Babs Kramer in two episodes of the sitcom Seinfeld. Her last screen role was in John Landis' black comedy Susan's Plan (1998).[citation needed]

Personal life

North was married four times and had two children. In 1948, at age 16, she married Fred Bessire, a draftsman, with whom she had a daughter, Dawn. The marriage ended in 1953. In 1955, she married television writer Bud Freeman; the marriage ended a year later. Her third marriage was to a psychologist, Gerhardt Sommer, with whom she had another daughter, Erica Eve. The marriage ended in divorce in 1963.[citation needed] At the time of her death, North was married to her fourth husband, Emmy Award-winning title designer Phillip "Phill" Norman.[6]

On November 4, 2005, aged 73, North died of complications following surgery at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.[7][8]

Theatre

Filmography

Television

Awards and honors

Theatre World Award

  • Won: For performance in Hazel Flagg (1953)

Emmy Award

  • Nominated: Outstanding Lead Actress for a Single Appearance in a Drama or Comedy Series, Marcus Welby, M.D. episode "How Do You Know What Hurts Me?" (1976)
  • Nominated: Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series, Archie Bunker's Place (1980)

References

  1. ^ Theatre World 2005–2006; accessed December 26, 2014.
  2. ^ Sheree North at the Internet Broadway Database
  3. ^ "Anything Goes! on DVD". Television Academy Foundation's Archive of American Television. Retrieved December 26, 2014.
  4. ^ Brown, Gene (1995). Movie Time: A Chronology of Hollywood and the Movie Industry from Its Beginnings to the Present (paperback). New York: MacMillan. p. 222. ISBN 0-02-860429-6.
  5. ^ "Sheree North". Variety.com. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  6. ^ a b Oliver, Myrna (2005-11-05). "Sheree North; blond bombshell recast career with character roles". The Boston Globe.
  7. ^ Some sources claim that it was cancer-related surgery but no reliable first-hand sources disclose the precise nature of the surgery, nor did her family.
  8. ^ Oliver, Myrna (7 November 2005). "Sheree North, 72; Stand-In for Marilyn Monroe Forged a Lengthy Acting Career". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 16 January 2022.

External links

sheree, north, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, january, 202. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sheree North news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sheree North born Dawn Shirley Crang January 17 1932 November 5 2005 was an American actress dancer and singer known for being one of 20th Century Fox s intended successors to Marilyn Monroe Sheree NorthSheree North in 1975BornDawn Shirley Crang 1932 01 17 January 17 1932Los Angeles California U S DiedNovember 4 2005 2005 11 04 aged 73 Los Angeles California U S Other namesDawn Shirley BethelSherree BessireShirley Mae BessireOccupationsActresssingerdancerYears active1951 2000Spouse s Fred Bessire m 1948 div 1953 wbr John Bud Freeman m 1955 div 1956 wbr Dr Gerhardt Sommer m 1958 div 1963 wbr Phillip Alan Norman m 2003 wbr Children2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Beginnings 2 2 20th Century Fox 2 3 Later years 3 Personal life 4 Theatre 5 Filmography 5 1 Television 6 Awards and honors 7 References 8 External linksEarly life EditNorth was born Dawn Shirley Crang 1 in Los Angeles California on January 17 1932 the daughter of June nee Shoard and Richard Crang Following her mother s remarriage to Edward Bethel she was known as Dawn Shirley Bethel citation needed She began dancing in USO shows during World War II at age 10 In 1948 she married Fred Bessire She bore her first child at age 17 in 1949 and continued dancing in clubs under the stage name Shirley Mae Bessire citation needed Already married at this age her legal name at this time was Dawn Shirley Bessire Career EditBeginnings Edit North made her film debut as an uncredited extra in Excuse My Dust 1951 She was then spotted by a choreographer performing at the Macayo Club in Santa Monica and was cast as a chorus girl in the film Here Come the Girls 1953 starring Bob Hope Around that time she adopted the stage name Sheree North She made her Broadway debut in the musical Hazel Flagg for which she won a Theatre World Award 2 She reprised her role in the film version Living It Up 1954 starring Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis citation needed In early 1954 at age 22 she appeared in a live TV version of Cole Porter s Anything Goes on The Colgate Comedy Hour with Ethel Merman Frank Sinatra and Bert Lahr 3 20th Century Fox Edit In 1954 North signed a four year contract with 20th Century Fox The studio had big plans for her hoping to groom her as a replacement for the studio s leading and increasingly uncontrollable female star Marilyn Monroe Fox tested North for leading roles in two of their upcoming productions The Girl in Pink Tights and There s No Business Like Show Business two films that had been offered to Monroe while North was wearing Monroe s own studio wardrobe After her screen tests though North was not cast in either film In March 1954 North had a brush with scandal when she was revealed to have once danced in a bikini in an 8 mm erotic film Fox capitalized on the publicity as the studio previously had with Monroe s nude calendar posing in 1952 4 In 1955 she was assigned the lead role opposite Betty Grable in How to Be Very Very Popular 1955 a role that Marilyn Monroe had refused Media attention surrounding Monroe s suspension and North s hiring resulted in North appearing on the cover of Life with the cover line Sheree North Takes Over from Marilyn Monroe 5 How to Be Very Very Popular did not live up to the hype Fox had generated though North had appeared on What s My Line to publicize the film and had been asked point blank by one of the panelists if she has been associated with Monroe The movie received mixed reviews from critics and was a moderate box office success Despite this film historians then and now cite North s electrically charged dancing to Shake Rattle and Roll as the film s most memorable scene 6 Sheree North on the cover of Life March 21 1955 In an attempt to promote North Fox studio executives lobbied to cast her in films surrounded with popular stars The studio had campaigned to cast her in a film with comedian Tom Ewell hoping to repeat the success he had with Monroe in The Seven Year Itch 1955 Soon thereafter the studio assigned North and Ewell to appear together in the romantic comedy The Lieutenant Wore Skirts plotting the story of an army lieutenant whose husband tries to get her discharged To promote the film North posed for several publicity shots showing her legs When the majority of the shots were released only her legs appeared with the tagline Believe it or not these legs belong to an army lieutenant The film premiered with much fanfare in January 1956 and became a box office success grossing over 4 million in the United States citation needed North s follow up was The Best Things in Life Are Free 1956 a lavish musical in which her singing voice was dubbed by Eileen Wilson She received fourth billing under Gordon MacRae Dan Dailey and Ernest Borgnine It was an attempt by the studio to broaden North s audience appeal and while it earned favorable reviews from critics it did not become the success for which Fox had hoped In 1956 Fox signed another blonde bombshell in the person of Broadway actress Jayne Mansfield to a contract and began promoting her instead of North Although Fox gradually lost interest in North the studio continued to offer her a string of films She was offered the lead role in a film called The Girl Upstairs in which she would have parodied Monroe s on screen persona citation needed When North s agent suggested she decline the film Fox put her on suspension for two months When her suspension was lifted one month later North agreed to appear in The Way to the Gold but only on the assurance that Elvis Presley would be her co star When Presley withdrew due to salary disagreements he was replaced with Jeffrey Hunter with whom North often quarreled In the film North attempted to progress from her blonde bombshell image playing a sarcastic waitress and while the film drew mixed reviews it was a box office success citation needed She next starred in No Down Payment 1957 a melodrama about the lives of multiple families living in a California subdivision Tony Randall played her alcoholic husband in the film Although critically acclaimed it was not a box office success The following year she appeared in her final two films for Fox In Love and War 1958 was a war drama film pairing her again with Jeffrey Hunter and also with Robert Wagner Dana Wynter and Hope Lange It was not a critical or financial success Although the musical film genre had declined in profitability she next co starred in Mardi Gras 1958 with Pat Boone and Tommy Sands It was her final film under her contract citation needed Later years Edit After North s contract with Fox ended in 1958 her career stalled although she continued to act in films television and on the stage throughout the rest of her life She guest starred on episodes of The Untouchables and Gunsmoke both 1963 North joined the cast of I Can Get It for You Wholesale in 1962 which featured Elliott Gould and introduced Barbra Streisand She later guest starred on a series of popular television series including Ben Casey Burke s Law 1963 65 The Virginian 1964 66 The Big Valley The Iron Horse both 1966 and The Fugitive 1965 67 citation needed After an eight year absence from film acting North accepted a lead role in the B movie science fiction film Destination Inner Space 1966 The film opened to only a minor release in 1966 and has rarely been seen since North co starred with Elvis Presley in one of his final films The Trouble with Girls 1969 citation needed When she was not working in films she worked in musicals and many other theatrical productions She appeared on Broadway doing a lively routine in the musical Hazel Flagg 1953 and won a Theatre World Award This led directly to her being cast in the film Living It Up 1954 In 1962 she appeared on Broadway as Martha Mills in I Can Get It for You Wholesale with Jack Kruschen Elliott Gould and Barbra Streisand in her Broadway debut North also appeared in productions of Irma La Douce Bye Bye Birdie and Can Can In 1965 she took over from Shirley Knight in a Los Angeles production of Dutchman that coincided with the 1965 Watts riots The production was controversial and was blamed by conservatives for inciting unrest It was picketed ads in newspapers were blocked and North s car was set on fire Despite that the production ran for a year From the 1960s onward North focused mainly on becoming a solid and versatile character actress appearing on almost every television Western cop show and medical drama produced from the 1960s through the 1990s She displayed a talent for comic timing on many of the situation comedies of the era She was a favorite in several made for television movies She also earned Emmy nominations for appearances on Marcus Welby M D 1969 and Archie Bunker s Place 1979 Ed Asner as Lou Grant and Sheree North as Charlene Maguire his new girlfriend in a fifth season episode of The Mary Tyler Moore Show A favorite of film producer director Don Siegel she appeared in four of his films in Madigan 1968 opposite Richard Widmark in Charley Varrick 1973 with Walter Matthau as John Wayne s long lost love in the actor s final film The Shootist 1976 and in Telefon 1977 She had supporting roles in two Charles Bronson movies Breakout 1975 with Robert Duvall and Telefon Other notable performances were in The Gypsy Moths 1969 with Burt Lancaster and Gene Hackman and as Burt Lancaster s ex lover in Michael Winner s Western Lawman 1971 with Robert Ryan Lee J Cobb Robert Duvall and Albert Salmi She also appeared in the crime drama The Organization 1971 with Sidney Poitier and in The Outfit 1973 with Duvall Joe Don Baker and Karen Black Throughout the 1970s and 1980s North appeared in guest spots on TV shows including Hawaii Five O The Streets of San Francisco McMillan amp Wife Matlock Family and Magnum P I She played Lou Grant s girlfriend in several episodes of The Mary Tyler Moore Show She co starred with Sheldon Leonard in the short lived CBS sitcom Big Eddie in 1975 During the 1980 81 season North starred in I m a Big Girl Now with Diana Canova Danny Thomas and Martin Short The series aired 19 episodes In 1980 she played Marilyn Monroe s mother in the made for television film Marilyn The Untold Story In 1983 she appeared in the ensemble cast of Steven Bochco s series Bay City Blues The hour long drama series aired eight episodes North later appeared in two episodes of The Golden Girls as Blanche Devereaux s sister Virginia In the 1990s she appeared as Cosmo Kramer s mother Babs Kramer in two episodes of the sitcom Seinfeld Her last screen role was in John Landis black comedy Susan s Plan 1998 citation needed Personal life EditNorth was married four times and had two children In 1948 at age 16 she married Fred Bessire a draftsman with whom she had a daughter Dawn The marriage ended in 1953 In 1955 she married television writer Bud Freeman the marriage ended a year later Her third marriage was to a psychologist Gerhardt Sommer with whom she had another daughter Erica Eve The marriage ended in divorce in 1963 citation needed At the time of her death North was married to her fourth husband Emmy Award winning title designer Phillip Phill Norman 6 On November 4 2005 aged 73 North died of complications following surgery at Cedars Sinai Medical Center 7 8 Theatre EditHazel Flagg February 11 1953 September 19 1953 I Can Get It for You Wholesale March 22 1962 December 8 1962 The Glass Menagerie Laguna Moulton Playhouse January 3 2000 Filmography EditExcuse My Dust 1951 as Six Girl Club Member uncredited Here Come the Girls 1953 as Chorine with Elephant uncredited Living It Up 1954 as Jitterbug Dancer The Girl in Pink Tights 1954 uncompleted How to Be Very Very Popular 1955 as Curly Flagg The Lieutenant Wore Skirts 1956 as Lt Katy Whitcomb The Best Things in Life Are Free 1956 as Kitty Kane The Way to the Gold 1957 as Henrietta Hank Clifford waitress No Down Payment 1957 as Isabelle Flagg In Love and War 1958 as Lorraine Mardi Gras 1958 as Eadie West Destination Inner Space 1966 as Dr Rene Peron Madigan 1968 as Jonesy The Gypsy Moths 1969 as Waitress The Trouble with Girls 1969 as Nita Bix Io sono la legge 1970 Lawman 1971 as Laura Shelby The Organization 1971 as Mrs Morgan Charley Varrick 1973 as Jewell Everett The Outfit 1973 as Buck s Wife Breakout 1975 as Myrna The Shootist 1976 as Serepta Survival 1976 as Sheree Telefon 1977 as Marie Wills Rabbit Test 1978 as Mystery Lady Only Once in a Lifetime 1979 as Sally Maniac Cop 1988 as Sally Noland Cold Dog Soup 1990 as Mrs Hughes Defenseless 1991 as Mrs Bodeck Susan s Plan 1998 as Mrs Beyers final film role Television Edit The Bing Crosby Show CBS January 3 1954 as Herself The Colgate Comedy Hour one episode 1954 as Bonnie Shower of Stars one episode 1954 What s My Line one episode 1955 as Herself Playhouse 90 one episode 1957 as Suzy The Witness one episode 1961 as Blossom Knight The Untouchables one episode 1963 as Claire Simmons Gunsmoke one episode 1963 as Avis Fisher The Eleventh Hour one episode 1963 as Peggy Lewis Breaking Point two episodes 1963 as Susan Beaumont Lisa Adams The Great Adventure one episode 1964 as Agnes Lake Ben Casey two episodes 1963 1964 as Gloria Cooper Lisa Adams The Greatest Show on Earth one episode 1964 as Gloria Burke s Law three episodes 1963 1965 as Cleo Delaney The Maharani of Kooshipoo Myrtle Gigi String The Loner one episode 1965 as Cora Rice The Virginian two episodes 1964 1966 as Della Saunders Karen Anders Run for Your Life one episode 1966 as Jeannie Lake The Big Valley one episode 1966 as Libby Mathews The Iron Horse one episode 1966 as Alix Henderson Code Name Heraclitus 1967 TV Movie as Sally Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre three episodes 1965 1967 as Sally Mary The Fugitive two episodes 1965 1967 as Willy Marianne Adams Mannix one episode 1968 as Rose Anderson Here Come the Brides one episode 1968 as Felicia Then Came Bronson one episode 1969 as Gloria Oresko My Friend Tony one episode 1969 as Vivian The Name of the Game one episode 1970 as Mrs Palmer The Most Deadly Game one episode 1970 as Lottie The Interns one episode 1971 as Beth Calico Vanished 1971 TV Movie as Beverly West The Smith Family one episode 1971 as Sheree Alias Smith and Jones one episode 1972 as Bess Tapscott Rolling Man 1972 TV Movie as Ruby Cannon one episode 1972 as Millie Carroll Jigsaw one episode 1972 Trouble Comes to Town 1973 TV Movie as Mrs Murdock McMillan amp Wife one episode 1973 as Dr Marion Voight Snatched 1973 TV Movie as Kim Sutter Kung Fu one episode 1973 as Noreen Gallagher Owen Marshall Counselor at Law one episode 1973 as Evelyn Knight Hawkins one episode 1973 as Debbie Lane The Streets of San Francisco one episode 1973 as Donna Coughlin Maneater 1973 TV Movie as Gloria Baron Key West 1973 TV Movie as Brandi Hec Ramsey one episode 1974 as Esther Helpinstall Winter Kill 1974 TV Movie as Betty Kojak two episodes 1974 as Mrs Giancana Hawaii Five O one episode 1974 as Doris Brown Barnaby Jones one episode 1974 as Roxy Morgan Wide World Mystery one episode 1974 as Mrs Janet Swimmer The Whirlwind 1974 TV Movie Movin On two episodes 1974 as Dinah The Mary Tyler Moore Show two episodes 1974 1975 as Charlene Maguire A Shadow in the Streets 1975 TV Movie as Gina Pulaski Medical Center three episodes 1971 1975 as Karen Porter Sylvia Ronston Big Eddie 1975 as Honey Smith Marcus Welby M D one episode 1976 as June Monica Most Wanted 1976 as Melissa Dawson Family one episode 1976 as Constance Hume Baretta one episode 1977 as Amy Future Cop one episode 1977 as Claire Hammond Westside Medical two episodes 1977 as Laurie Hallmark Hall of Fame one episode 1977 as Adele Serkin The Night They Took Miss Beautiful 1977 TV Movie as Layla Burden Fantasy Island one episode 1978 as Julie A Real American Hero 1978 TV Movie as Carrie Todd Amateur Night at the Dixie Bar and Grill 1979 TV Movie as Lettie Norman Women in White 1979 TV Movie as Lisa Gordon Portrait of a Stripper aka The Secret Life of Susie Hanson 1979 TV Movie as Sally Evers Archie Bunker s Place two episodes 1979 as Dotty Wertz A Christmas for Boomer 1979 TV Movie as Dorothy Marilyn The Untold Story 1980 TV Movie as Gladys Baker I m a Big Girl Now 1980 cast member as Edie McKendrick Legs 1983 TV Movie as Ida Bay City Blues four episodes 1983 as Lynn Holtz Magnum P I one episode 1984 as Blanche Rafferty Scorned and Swindled 1984 TV Movie as Maxine Wagner Trapper John M D one episode 1985 as Tilly Whiteside ABC Afterschool Special one episode 1986 as Madelyn Matlock two episodes 1986 as Alice Jenkins Murder She Wrote one episode 1987 as Norma Lewis Jake Spanner Private Eye 1989 TV Movie as Mrs Bernstein Freddy s Nightmares one episode 1989 as Joyce Burton Hunter one episode 1989 as Dorothy Nickens The Golden Girls two episodes 1985 1989 as Virginia Hollingsworth Dead on the Money 1991 TV Movie Seinfeld two episodes 1995 1998 as BabsAwards and honors EditTheatre World Award Won For performance in Hazel Flagg 1953 Emmy Award Nominated Outstanding Lead Actress for a Single Appearance in a Drama or Comedy Series Marcus Welby M D episode How Do You Know What Hurts Me 1976 Nominated Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series Archie Bunker s Place 1980 References Edit Theatre World 2005 2006 accessed December 26 2014 Sheree North at the Internet Broadway Database Anything Goes on DVD Television Academy Foundation s Archive of American Television Retrieved December 26 2014 Brown Gene 1995 Movie Time A Chronology of Hollywood and the Movie Industry from Its Beginnings to the Present paperback New York MacMillan p 222 ISBN 0 02 860429 6 Sheree North Variety com Retrieved 16 January 2022 a b Oliver Myrna 2005 11 05 Sheree North blond bombshell recast career with character roles The Boston Globe Some sources claim that it was cancer related surgery but no reliable first hand sources disclose the precise nature of the surgery nor did her family Oliver Myrna 7 November 2005 Sheree North 72 Stand In for Marilyn Monroe Forged a Lengthy Acting Career Los Angeles Times Retrieved 16 January 2022 External links EditSheree North at IMDb Sheree North at the Internet Off Broadway Database Sheree North at the TCM Movie Database Sheree North at AllMovie Sheree North discography at Discogs Sheree North Tiger dance on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sheree North amp oldid 1120248668, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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