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Rue McClanahan

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Rue McClanahan
File:Gg ruemcclanahan.jpg
Rue McClanahan as Blanche Deveraux
Born
Eddi Rue McClanahan


Rue McClanahan (born Eddi Rue McClanahan on February 21, 1934 in Healdton, Oklahoma) is an Emmy Award-winning American actor, best known for her roles acting alongside Bea Arthur on the television sitcoms Maude and The Golden Girls.

Biography

In Maude, broadcast from 1972 to 1978, McClanahan played Maude Findlay's best friend, Vivian Harmon. In The Golden Girls, broadcast from 1985 until 1992, McClanahan portrayed man-crazed Southern belle Blanche Devereaux. She received an Emmy Award in 1987 for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series for her work on The Golden Girls. She also starred on the early seasons of Mama's Family as "Aunt Fran" Crowley.

McClanahan grew up in Ardmore, Oklahoma, and was a 1952 graduate of Ardmore High School. She began acting on stage in New York City in 1957, but her breakout role was of maniacal nanny Caroline Johnson on Another World from July 1970 - September 1971. In the show, while taking care of twins Michael and Marianne Randolph, Caroline fell in love with their father, John, and began poisoning their mother, Pat. Due in part to McClanahan's performance, the short-term role was extended to over a year before Caroline was finally brought to justice after kidnapping the twins. McClanahan expected negative fan reaction but was generally popular, even getting one letter advising her on the best poisons with which to kill Pat. Unlike a number of actors who become famous after leaving soaps, McClanahan has always praised daytime drama and the people who work in it.

In fact, she made a nod to her beginnings on Another World in an episode of The Golden Girls, called "The Flu" when, as Blanche, she, along with her roommates, Dorothy Zbornak (Beatrice Arthur) and Rose Nylund (Betty White) were sick with the flu, and Blanche wanted to watch Another World over the strenuous objections of Dorothy.

File:RueMcClanahanDogCareVideoGuide.JPG
The Dog Care Video Guide featuring Rue McClanahan, 1990

A lifelong animal-rights advocate and vegetarian, McClanahan was one of the first celebrity supporters of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA). She is also a lifelong supporter of the Democratic Party. In December 2003, she wrote a letter informing Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry that his pheasant hunting had cost him her vote.

She was diagnosed with breast cancer in June 1997 and survived with the help of cancer expert Dr. Larry Norton and her sixth husband, the much younger Morrow Wilson. She is also the mother of one child, a son, Mark Bish, from a previous marriage. Her autobiography, My First Five Husbands, is due in the spring of 2007.

In May 2005, McClanahan took over the role of Madame Morrible in the hit Broadway musical Wicked, for which she received mixed, but somewhat negative reviews. She received positive notice from the "New York Times" though: "The former Golden Girls star Rue McClanahan, dressed in flamboyant kimonolike costumes, is doing maaahvelous things with vowel sounds as Madame Morrible, the flamboyant headmistress of the witches' school. She steals scenes with a flip of a hand." July 15, 2005 She replaced the actress Carole Shelley. McClanahan left the role in January 2006, replaced by Carol Kane. She is of Scots-Irish (also known as Ulster-Scots) and Choctaw Indian ancestry. She has recently been cast in the period epic, The Other Boleyn Girl.

Emmy Award Nominations

For successful Emmy Awards, see the Infobox, unsuccessful Emmy nominations were :

1986 - Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series - "The Golden Girls" - (Nominated)
1987 - Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series - "The Golden Girls" - (Won)
1988 - Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series - "The Golden Girls" - (Nominated)
1989 - Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series - "The Golden Girls" - (Nominated)

Selected TV Work

Selected filmography

Personal Life

McClanahan is the aunt of author Amelia Kinkade.

Rue also appeared as a leader of Al-Anon in a 70s informational video called "Slight Drinking Problem" in which Patty Duke played the enabling and eventually self-empowered wife of an alcoholic.