Barbara Feldon
Barbara Feldon | |
---|---|
Feldon as Agent 99 with Don Adams in Get Smart, 1965 | |
Born |
Barbara Anne Hall March 12, 1933 Butler, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Occupation | Actress, model, television host, writer |
Years active | 1957–present |
Spouse(s) | Lucien Verdoux-Feldon (1958-1967; divorced) |
Partner(s) | Burt Nodella (1968-1979) |
Barbara Feldon (born March 12, 1933) is an American character actress who works mostly in the theatre, but is primarily known for her roles on television. Her most prominent role was that of Agent 99 on the 1960s sitcom Get Smart. She also worked as a model.[1][2]
Early life
Feldon was born Barbara Anne Hall in Butler, Pennsylvania, near Pittsburgh. She graduated from Bethel Park High School and trained at Pittsburgh Playhouse.[3] She graduated from Carnegie Institute of Technology (now Carnegie Mellon University) in 1955, with a Bachelor of Arts in drama. She initiated into the Delta Xi Chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma. In 1957, she won the grand prize on The $64,000 Question in the category of William Shakespeare.
Career
Following some work as a model, Feldon's break came in the form of a popular and much parodied television commercial for "Top Brass", a hair pomade for men. Lounging languidly on an animal print rug, she purred at the camera, addressing the male viewers as "tigers".[4]
This led to small roles in television series. In the 1960s, she made appearances on Twelve O'Clock High, Lorne Greene's Griff, Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, Flipper, and The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (in "The Never-Never Affair"). In 1964, she appeared with Simon Oakland in the episode "Try to Find a Spy" of CBS's short-lived drama Mr. Broadway.
Then she was cast as "Agent 99" in the spy comedy series Get Smart, co-created by Mel Brooks and Buck Henry, starring opposite Don Adams as Maxwell Smart, Agent 86. She played the role for the duration of the show's production from 1965 until 1970, and was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series in 1968 and 1969.
Feldon made guest appearances five times on The Dean Martin Show from 1968 to 1972, singing and dancing as well as performing in comedy skits. She guest-starred in '70s TV series including The Name of the Game and McMillan & Wife.
She appeared in the cult-classic TV-movie thriller A Vacation in Hell (1979) with Maureen McCormick and Priscilla Barnes.
Feldon's feature films included Fitzwilly (1967), Smile (1975) and No Deposit, No Return (1976). She was a commercial voice performer for The Dinosaurs! Flesh on the Bone (1993). Her last film to date is 2006's The Last Request, a crime comedy with Danny Aiello and Joe Piscopo.
Feldon reprised her role as "Agent 99" in the made-for-television film Get Smart, Again! (1989) and a short-lived television series also titled Get Smart in 1995. She provided audio commentaries and introductions for the DVD release of the original Get Smart series in 2006 but did not take part in the 2008 film adaptation that starred Steve Carell as Maxwell Smart. Feldon guest-starred as a former TV spy star on a 1993 episode of Mad About You, as Diane "Spy Girl" Caldwell.[5]
Personal life
Feldon has served as the actress's last name since her marriage to Lucien Verdoux-Feldon in 1958. The pair divorced in 1967 and Feldon then embarked on a relationship with Get Smart producer Burt Nodella. That union lasted 12 years and upon its ending Feldon moved back to New York City where she resides. She wrote a book, Living Alone and Loving It, in 2003. Barbara Feldon will still occasionally act in off-Broadway plays, but she is "no longer interested in performing." Feldon has become an avid writer, although she has not published since Living Alone and Loving It in 2003.
Notes
- ↑ Miller, Laura. "At Home With Agent 99". Salon.com. Salon Media Group, Inc. Retrieved 26 September 2012.
- ↑ Rahner, Mark (November 12, 2006). "Classic "Get Smart" on DVD: Q&A with Barbara Feldon, Agent 99". Seattle Times. Retrieved 26 September 2012.
- ↑ Conner, Lynne (2007). Pittsburgh In Stages: Two Hundred Years of Theater. University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 152; ISBN 978-0-8229-4330-3. Retrieved 2011-06-06.
- ↑ Top Brass commercial on YouTube
- ↑ The Spy Who Loved Me, IMDb.com (May 8, 1993)
References
- Feldon, Barbara (2003). Living Alone and Loving It. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-3517-4. OCLC 50091772.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Barbara Feldon. |
- Barbara Feldon at the Internet Movie Database
- Barbara Feldon at the Internet Broadway Database
- Barbara Feldon at the Internet Off-Broadway Database
- Barbara Feldon interview video at the Archive of American Television