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'''Betty Marion White''' (born [[January 17]], [[123]]) is five-time [[Emmy Award]]-winning film and television actress with a career spanning 60 years. a. White is perhaps best known for her roles in the [[sitcoms]] ''[[The Mary Tyler Moore Show]]'' and ''[[The Golden Girls]]''.
'''Betty Marion White''' (born [[January 17]], [[1923]]) is five-time Emmy Award winning film and television actress with a career spanning 60 years. White is perhaps best known for her roles in the [[sitcoms]] ''[[The Mary Tyler Moore Show]]'' and ''[[The Golden Girls]]''.


==Biography==
==Biography==

Revision as of 16:34, 20 May 2008

Betty White
White at the 1989 Emmy Awards
Born
Betty Marion White
Years active1945-present
Spouse(s)Allen Ludden (1963-1981)
Lane Allen (1947-1949)
Dick Barker (1945-1945)
AwardsHollywood Walk of Fame
6747 Hollywood Boulevard

Betty Marion White (born January 17, 1923) is five-time Emmy Award winning film and television actress with a career spanning 60 years. White is perhaps best known for her roles in the sitcoms The Mary Tyler Moore Show and The Golden Girls.

Biography

Personal life

White was born in Oak Park, Illinois, the daughter of Tess, a homemaker, and Horace White, a traveling salesman and electrical engineer.[1][2] She was raised in Los Angeles, California. White attended Horace Mann Middle School in Beverly Hills, California, and then went to Beverly Hills High School in Beverly Hills, California, where she graduated in 1939.


Career

Before embarking on her television career, White found work modeling. She launched her television career with her portrayal of Elizabeth from 1953 to 1955. The show, which she also co-produced, garnered White her first Emmy Award nomination. Following Life with Elizabeth, she appeared as Vicki Angel on the sitcom Date with the Angels from 1957 to 1958. In 1954, she briefly hosted her own talk show entitled The Betty White Show (not to be confused with her 1970s sitcom of the same name).

She made her film debut as a Witch in the 1962 drama Advise and Consent.

White made many appearances on the hit game show Password as a guest celebrity from 1961 through 1975. She married the show's host, Allen Ludden. In the 1970s and 1980s, White appeared on the updated versions on NBC, Password Plus and Super Password.

White also made frequent game show appearances on What's My Line? (starting in 1955), To Tell the Truth (in 1961 and in 1990), I've Got a Secret (in 1972-73), Match Game (1973-1982) and Pyramid (starting in 1982). Both Password and Pyramid were created by White's friend, Bob Stewart. In 1983, she became the first woman to win a Daytime Emmy Award in the category of Outstanding Game Show Host, for the NBC entry Just Men!. Due to the amount of work she has done on them, she has been deemed the "First Lady of Game Shows."

In 1973, White landed her signature role as the sardonic, man-hungry Sue Ann Nivens, The Happy Homemaker, on The Mary Tyler Moore Show. The running gag was that Sue Ann's hard-edged private personality was the complete opposite of how she presented herself on her show. "We need somebody sickeningly sweet, like Betty White," Moore herself suggested at a production meeting, with the result of casting White. White won two Emmy Awards for her role in the hugely popular series.

Following that show's end in 1977, she was given her own sitcom on CBS, The Betty White Show, during the 1977-78 season, in which she co-starred with John Hillerman and (former Mary Tyler Moore co-star) Georgia Engel. It was canceled after one season.

1980s - 2000s

From 1983 through 1985, she played Ellen Harper Jackson on the series Mama's Family, along with future Golden Girls co-star Rue McClanahan. When Mama's Family was picked up in syndication after being canceled by NBC in 1985, White left the show (with the exception of one final appearance in the show's syndicated version in 1986) and scored a memorable role as the ditzy St. Olaf, Minnesota, native Rose Nylund on The Golden Girls. The series chronicled the lives of four widowed/divorced women in their "golden age" who shared a home in Miami. The Golden Girls, which also starred Beatrice Arthur, Estelle Getty, and Rue McClanahan, was immensely successful and ran from 1985 through 1992. White won an Emmy Award, for Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series, for the first season of The Golden Girls and was nominated every year of the show's run. When Beatrice Arthur left in 1992, White, McClanahan and Getty reprised their roles Rose, Blanche and Sophia in the spin-off The Golden Palace. The series was short-lived, lasting one season.

White was originally offered the role of Blanche in The Golden Girls with Rue McClanahan offered the role of Rose (the two characters being similar to roles they had played in Mary Tyler Moore and Mama's Place respectively) but decided to switch in fear of being typecast. White was originally scared to play the role of Rose, feeling that she would not be able to play the role, until the show's creator took her aside and told her not to play Rose as stupid, but to play her as someone "terminally naive, a person who always believed the first explanation of something"

After The Golden Palace was canceled, White guest-starred on a number of television programs including Ally McBeal, The Ellen Show, My Wife and Kids, That 70s Show, Everwood, Joey, and Malcolm in the Middle. She received Emmy Award nominations for her appearances on Suddenly Susan, Yes, Dear and The Practice. She won an Emmy in 1996 for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series, appearing as herself on a memorable episode of The John Larroquette Show. In that episode, titled "Here We Go Again", a spoof on Sunset Boulevard, a diva-like White convinces Larroquette to help write her memoirs. In one bit, Golden Girls co-stars McClanahan and Getty appear as themselves. Larroquette is forced to dress in drag as Beatrice Arthur, when all four appear in public as the "original" cast members. White comically envisions her Rose as the central character with the other cast members as mere supporting players.

The actress has lent her voice to several cartoons including The Simpsons, King of the Hill, The Wild Thornberrys, and Family Guy.

In December 2006, White joined the soap opera The Bold and the Beautiful in the role of Ann Douglas, the long-lost mother of the show's matriarch Stephanie Forrester, who is played by Susan Flannery. In February 2007, White returned as Ann, who had an intent to move to L.A. to be near her daughters.[3]

On the April 22, 2007 airing of The 2007 TV Land Awards, White starred in a parody of "Ugly Betty", aptly titled Ugly Betty White, in which she played America Ferrera's title character, with Charo playing Betty's sister Hilda and Erik Estrada playing her father Ignacio.[4] Thanks to her performance as Ugly Betty White, the producers of Ugly Betty surprisingly signed White to play herself as the victim of Wilhelmina Slater's temper when they're both heading for a taxi cab in the episode Bananas for Betty, which aired December 6, 2007.

White also has had a recurring role in ABC's Boston Legal as the calculating, blackmailing gossip-monger Catherine Piper, a role she originally portrayed as a guest star on The Practice.

Betty White appeared as a roaster on the Comedy Central Roast of William Shatner.

On May 19th, 2008, Betty White appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show, taking part in the host's "Mary Tyler Moore Show" reunion special alongside every single other cast member of the hit series. A clip of her character on the show, Sue Ann Nivens, was shown to the audience prior to her intro, and when the actress stepped onstage she was met with a roaring crowd.

White will be returning to Password in its latest incarnation, Million Dollar Password, in summer 2008.

Charity

White is a pet enthusiast and animal welfare activist and works with a number of animal organizations including the Los Angeles Zoo Commission, the Morris Animal Foundation, and Actors & Others for Animals.

In January 2007, she became the official spokesperson for 1800PetMeds and was featured in their new-for-2007 advertising campaign.

Awards, honors and nominations

White has won five Emmys, three American Comedy Awards (including a Lifetime Achievement Award in 1990), and two Viewers For Quality Television Awards. She was inducted into the Television Hall of Fame in 1995 and has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6747 Hollywood Boulevard alongside the star of late husband Allen Ludden.

Nominations
  • 1951 - Best Actress
  • 1977 - Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series - "The Mary Tyler Moore Show"
  • 1984 - Outstanding Game Show Host - "Just Men!"
  • 1987 - Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series - "The Golden Girls"
  • 1988 - Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series - "The Golden Girls"
  • 1989 - Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series - "The Golden Girls"
  • 1990 - Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series - "The Golden Girls"
  • 1991 - Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series - "The Golden Girls"
  • 1992 - Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series - "The Golden Girls"
  • 1997 - Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series - "Suddenly Susan"
  • 2003 - Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series - "Yes, Dear"
  • 2004 - Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama Series - "The Practice"

Filmography

Television

Film

References

  1. ^ Betty White Biography (1922-)
  2. ^ The Paley Center for Media | She Made It | Betty White
  3. ^ "Returning". Soap Opera Weekly. 2007-02-13. p. 5. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  4. ^ From www.towerload.com April 2007

Further reading

  • Tucker, David C. The Women Who Made Television Funny: Ten Stars of 1950s Sitcoms. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2007.

External links


Preceded by Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Game Show Host
1983
Succeeded by

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