Patricia Harty | |
---|---|
Harty in 1968 publicity photo | |
Born | Washington, D.C., U.S. | November 5, 1941
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1963–2003 |
Spouses |
Patricia Harty (born November 5, 1941), [1] also known professionally as Trisha Hart,[ citation needed] is an American actress.
Born in Washington, D.C., Harty lived in Baltimore until age 5, when she and her family moved. [2] She took lessons in singing and dancing while growing up in North Miami, Florida, [3] and graduated from Miami Edison High School in 1957. [4] She worked for a lawyer, took secretarial classes, [5] and majored in English at Columbia University. [2]
Harty performed in the national company of I Ought to Be in Pictures. [2] On Broadway, Harty's credits include Fiorello! (1959) and Sail Away (1961). [6]
Harty debuted on television as a dancer on Pat Boone's ABC Chevy Show program, [2] and Perry Como's NBC Kraft Music Hall. [3] She was also a featured dancer on Garry Moore's CBS series, where she also performed in comedy skits with Carol Burnett. [2] Harty is known for her starring roles in several short-lived television series, Occasional Wife (1966–67) as Greta Patterson, [7]: 778 Blondie (1968) as the titular Blondie Bumstead, [7] The Bob Crane Show (1975) as Ellie Wilcox, [8] and Herbie, the Love Bug (1982) as Susan MacLane. [7]: 451 She also appeared on Broadway in Fiorello! [9] and Sail Away. [10]
A review in The New York Times highlighted Harty's work in Occasional Wife, saying "she made a viewer more aware of what was right than wrong" with the show. [11]
In the mid-1960s, Harty was married to E. Thomas Kearney, who was also her manager. [3] She married Occasional Wife co-star Michael Callan. [8] The marriage ended in divorce. She married Les Sheldon, who had been associate producer on The Bob Crane Show, in 1975. [5]
Patricia Harty | |
---|---|
Harty in 1968 publicity photo | |
Born | Washington, D.C., U.S. | November 5, 1941
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1963–2003 |
Spouses |
Patricia Harty (born November 5, 1941), [1] also known professionally as Trisha Hart,[ citation needed] is an American actress.
Born in Washington, D.C., Harty lived in Baltimore until age 5, when she and her family moved. [2] She took lessons in singing and dancing while growing up in North Miami, Florida, [3] and graduated from Miami Edison High School in 1957. [4] She worked for a lawyer, took secretarial classes, [5] and majored in English at Columbia University. [2]
Harty performed in the national company of I Ought to Be in Pictures. [2] On Broadway, Harty's credits include Fiorello! (1959) and Sail Away (1961). [6]
Harty debuted on television as a dancer on Pat Boone's ABC Chevy Show program, [2] and Perry Como's NBC Kraft Music Hall. [3] She was also a featured dancer on Garry Moore's CBS series, where she also performed in comedy skits with Carol Burnett. [2] Harty is known for her starring roles in several short-lived television series, Occasional Wife (1966–67) as Greta Patterson, [7]: 778 Blondie (1968) as the titular Blondie Bumstead, [7] The Bob Crane Show (1975) as Ellie Wilcox, [8] and Herbie, the Love Bug (1982) as Susan MacLane. [7]: 451 She also appeared on Broadway in Fiorello! [9] and Sail Away. [10]
A review in The New York Times highlighted Harty's work in Occasional Wife, saying "she made a viewer more aware of what was right than wrong" with the show. [11]
In the mid-1960s, Harty was married to E. Thomas Kearney, who was also her manager. [3] She married Occasional Wife co-star Michael Callan. [8] The marriage ended in divorce. She married Les Sheldon, who had been associate producer on The Bob Crane Show, in 1975. [5]