Posted on 08/30/2019 4:44:13 PM PDT by EdnaMode
Valerie Harper, the Emmy-winning sitcom star whose role as the somewhat neurotic Rhoda Morgenstern made her one of televisions biggest and most beloved stars in the 1970s, died today. She was 80 and had been suffering from various cancers for a number of years. She had been in a coma for a while before succumbing today, her family told KABC-TV entertainment reporter George Pennacchio.
The veteran TV and stage actress was best known for playing sidekick Rhoda Morgenstern on The Mary Tyler Moore Show, then taking the character into her own popular spinoff, Rhoda.
She also starred in the 1980s sitcom, Valerie, which thanks to some head-butting over creative control with the show producers saw Harpers character killed off as an explanation for her exiting the show. It then morphed into Valeries Family, and was later re-titled The Hogan Family.
I like a lot of preparation, she said in a 2009 interview with the Televisin Academy Foundation (watch a snippet below). Necause when you get to the moment, you can just forget your lines, youre not thinking, whats my line? youre feeling what the character is, and only that line can come out.
Harper also had recurring roles on The Office and The Simpsons. Her film credits include Freebie and the Bean (1974) and Chapter Two (1979).
Over the years, she won multiple Emmy Awards for her work on Rhoda and The Mary Tyler Moore Show, and was nominated for a Tony in 2010 for her role as Tallulah Bankhead in the play Looped.
Harper was diagnosed with lung cancer in 2009. Then, in 2013, doctors discovered shed developed a rare brain cancer. But she defied the odds on both dread diseases and even participated in the TV show Dancing With The Stars in 2014.
More recently, she took a turn for the worse, and Harpers husband, Tony Cacciotti, started a GoFundMe campaign titled The Valerie Harper Cancer Support Fund on July 8 to help with the mounting medical bills. He said in the request that she required 24/7 care, but that he did not want to put her into hospice care.
Harper was born on Aug. 22, 1939 in Suffern, New York, the middle child of three. The family moved frequently, owing to her fathers work as a lighting salesman, and Harper lived in New Jersey, California, Michigan, Oregon and then New Jersey again. She briefly attended a Jersey City high school, then traveled across the river and graduated from the Young Professionals School on West 56th Street in Manhattan, where her classmates included future stars Sal Mineo, Tuesday Weld and Carol Lynley.
The young Harper studied ballet, and began her career as a Broadway dancer in the musical Take Me Along in 1959. She appeared in several other plays, then scored a bit part in the 1959 film Lil Abner. From there, she segued into a mixed bag of a show business career television episodes, small theater work, touring with the Second City comedy troupe, recording comedy records, and even dabbling in some television writing.
Her big break came in 1970, when a casting agent spied her and asked her to audition for the role of Rhoda Morgenstern on the Mary Tyler Moore Show. Harper, who was raised in the Catholic faith, instantly transformed into Marys slightly neurotic, quintessentially Jewish sidekick. She played the role from 1970-1974. Her character then moved to New York for her own spin-off, Rhoda, and stayed from 1974-1978.
Harper won four Emmy Awards and a Golden Globe for her work as Rhoda. She was also nominated for a Golden Globe for New Star of the Year for her role in the film Freebie and The Bean.
Harper ran for SAG president in 2001, but lost to Melissa Gilbert before the union merged with AFTRA.
Survivors include her husband, Tony Cacciotti, and daughter Cristina Harper. No memorial plans have been announced.
Here is an hourlong portiion of her sit-down for The Interviews from the TV Academy Foundation:
A beautiful human being who fought so hard to live..she lived 6 years when she was given 3-6 months to live. RIP Valerie you will be missed
Hard to believe that Jack Soo would be over 100 if he were around today. Hal Linden, Max Gail, Barbara Barrie, and Gregory Sierra are the ones who were on that show and are still around, with Jack (1979), Ron Glass (2016), Abe Vigoda (2016), James Gregory (2002), Steve Landesberg (2010), and Ron Carey (2007) have since passed. Hal Linden was first offered the role of Dr. Donald Westphall on “St Elsewhere”, but he turned it down to take a break after finishing Barney Miller so the role went to Ed Flanders (RIP).
I’ve been watching episodes of the Dick Van Dyke show on You Tube lately and your comment makes me think of ones like Morey Amsterdam and Rose Marie and Richard Deacon (in addition to Dick and Mary) and the scenes with any or all of those three are still side splitting funny even after more than 50 years. I was too young to have watched Dick Van Dyke first run but it was one of my favourites when it cropped up in my locale for afternoon reruns back in the early 1980s.
She had beautiful gypsie, or Georgian dark haired beauty, and a great sense of humor and timing. 80 is not a bad run. May God welcome her home and remind her of the smiles she induced. “Remember that time when...?”
RIP. She was funny and pretty. Wasnt her sister Marge Simpson?
Yes, and as per my earlier post, Julie Kavner is now the last surviving main cast member of “Rhoda” since Valerie’s passing.
Hard to believe the Mary Tyler Moore show is about to turn 50.
“A little song, a little dance, a little seltzer down your pants.”
Yes, Mary and Julie Andrews were
terrific together.
Even Keith Richards is getting concerned over what kind of world we will be leaving to Betty White.
In what other series did Carl Reiner appear (just once) as Alan Brady?
Remember how that line cracked Mary up at Crusty the Clown’s funeral?
She played a VERY convincing New York Jewess.
Loved her New York accent in Mary Tyler Moore
I had a crush on her way back in the day.
SAD.
Always liked her.
1970’s television was fun. The days of clean non vulgar entertainment. I was a 14 year old kid in 1970. A different time and place. An America that vanished. Rip Valerie Harper.
Enjoyed her work. RIP.
“Mad About You.”
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