Ad
related to: who plays the mom bear on gunsmoke death video
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Her television appearances include the sitcom Leave It to Beaver (playing Eddie Haskell's mother), The Twilight Zone, Thriller, Perry Mason, Death Valley Days, Gunsmoke, Have Gun-Will Travel, and “Hawaii Five-0”. Barton was married to actor Dan Barton. [2] In 2000, at age 76, she died in Los Angeles, California. [3] [4]
This list contains notable cast members of the Gunsmoke radio and TV series, and TV movies. [1] The listing includes regular cast members, guest stars, and recurring cast members. Radio cast
Moore was born Dorothy Joanne Cook in Americus, Georgia, the elder of two daughters of Dorothy Martha (née English) and Henry Anderson Cook III. [1] In 1941, when she was a child, her parents and younger sister were involved in a fatal car accident: her mother and sister died immediately, while her father died from his injuries a year later.
Actress Amanda Blake, who died from AIDS-related hepatitis in 1989, was one tough cookie, just like her most famous character, Miss Kitty Russell on TV’s long-running Western, Gunsmoke.
In 1980, she appeared in a Magnum PI episode "Lest We Forget" playing a World War II flashback version of character Diane Westmore played by her mother June Lockhart. Through the 1980s and '90s, Lockhart appeared steadily in a variety of credited and uncredited roles primarily on television series.
Amanda Blake (born Beverly Louise Neill, February 20, 1929 [1] – August 16, 1989) was an American actress best known for the role of the red-haired saloon proprietress "Miss Kitty Russell" on the western television series Gunsmoke.
Gunsmoke: To the Last Man: TV movie: as Beth Dillon 1993: Gunsmoke: The Long Ride: TV movie: as Beth Reardon 1993: Kiss of a Killer: TV movie: as Young Mrs. Wilson 1994: Gunsmoke: One Man's Justice: TV movie: as Beth Reardon 1996: The Little Death: Film: as Meredith Hannon 1996: High Incident: TV series: 1994: Beanstalk: Film: as Rebecca Taylor ...
Gunsmoke is an American Western television series developed by Charles Marquis Warren and based on the radio program of the same name. [1] The series ran for 20 seasons, making it the longest-running Western in television history.