Monday, June 07, 2010

Wheel of Fortune hostess Adriana Xenides dies at 54



GAME show hostess Adriana Xenides was a rare jewel in television who will be remembered for her generosity towards others, her former colleague John Burgess said last night.
''Adriana had a heart of gold and she couldn't do enough for people,'' Burgess said. ''She always put other people ahead of herself. We've lost a good person.''

Xenides, 54, co-host of the long-running game show Wheel of Fortune for 18 years, was admitted to Liverpool Hospital in Sydney last week with stomach pain.
She died just before 5pm yesterday from a ruptured intestine. Her family were at her bedside. Burgess had visited her earlier in the day. ''I'm pleased she went peacefully,'' he said.
Burgess said Xenides had struggled since leaving the limelight in 1999. She appeared occasionally on the panel show Beauty and the Beast and was on Celebrity Big Brother in 2002.
''We worked for 12 years together on Wheel of Fortune and never had a blue, never had an argument, in all that time, which is remarkable for the business we're in,'' Burgess said.
In the mid-1990s, at the height of her fame, Xenides endured a very public battle with depression and had a physical breakdown. When she returned to the set of Wheel of Fortune - then the top-rating game show on TV - after a seven-month break, she said: ''A difficult chapter has closed, and tomorrow is a blank page.''
Xenides was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, and emigrated to Adelaide in her teens, spending most of her working life in the South Australian capital, where Wheel of Fortune was filmed.
Her publicist and friend for more than two decades Michael Shephard yesterday acknowledged a side of Xenides which was rarely seen by the public.
''She was well-educated, came from a great family and spoke five languages,'' he said. ''She had such an amazing insight into life and the world, and a great passion for animals.''
Funeral details have not yet been announced.

Thursday, June 03, 2010

Golden Girl Rue McClanahan dies at 76


Rue McClanahan, the Emmy-winning actor who brought the sexually liberated Southern belle Blanche Devereaux to life on the hit TV series, The Golden Girls, has died. She was 76.
Her manager, Barbara Lawrence, said McClanahan died on Thursday of a stroke.
She had undergone treatment for breast cancer in 1997 and later lectured to cancer support groups on "aging gracefully". She had heart bypass surgery last year.McClanahan had an active career in off-Broadway and regional stages in the 1960s before she was tapped for TV in the 1970s for the key best-friend character on the hit series, Maude, starring Beatrice Arthur.
But her most loved role came in 1985, when she co-starred with Arthur, Betty White and Estelle Getty in The Golden Girls, a runaway hit that broke the sitcom mould by focusing on the foibles of four ageing - and frequently eccentric - women living together in Miami.
The Golden Girls aimed to show "that when people mature, they add layers", she told The New York Times in 1985. "They don't turn into other creatures. The truth is we all still have our child, our adolescent, and your young woman living in us."


Blanche, who called her father, Big Daddy, was a frequent target of roommates Dorothy, Rose and the outspoken Sophia (Getty), who would fire off zingers at Blanche such as, "Your life's an open blouse."
McClanahan snagged an Emmy for her work on the show in 1987. In an AP interview that year, McClanahan said Blanche was unlike any other role she had ever played.
"Probably the closest I've ever done was Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire at the Pasadena Playhouse," she said. "I think, too, that's where the name came from, although my character is not a drinker and not crazy."
Apple Pie in 1978." Her Blanche Devereaux, she said, "is in love with life and she loves men. I think she has an attitude toward women that's competitive. She is friends with Dorothy and Rose, but if she has enough provocation she becomes competitive with them. I think basically she's insecure. It's the other side of the Don Juan syndrome."
After The Golden Girls was cancelled in 1992, McClanahan, White and Getty reprised their roles in a short-lived spinoff, Golden Palace.
McClanahan continued working in television, on stage and in film, appearing in the Jack Lemmon-Walter Matthau vehicle, Out to Sea, and as the biology teacher in Starship Troopers.
MacBird! in New York in 1967." She stepped in to portray Madame Morrible, the crafty headmistress, for a time in Wicked, Broadway's long-running prequel to Wizard of Oz.
In 2008, McClanahan appeared in the Logo comedy, Sordid Lives: The Series, playing the slightly addled, elderly mother of an institutionalised drag queen.
During production, McClanahan was recovering from 2007 surgery on her knee. It didn't stop her from filming a sex scene in which the bed broke, forcing her to hang on to a window sill to avoid tumbling off.
McClanahan was born Eddi-Rue McClanahan in Healdton, Oklahoma, to building contractor William McClanahan and his wife, Dreda Rheua-Nell, a beautician. She graduated with honours from the University of Tulsa with a degree in German and theatre arts.
McClanahan's acting career began on the stage. According to a 1985 Los Angeles Times profile, she appeared at the Pasadena Playhouse, studied in New York with Uta Hagen and Harold Clurman, and worked in soaps and on the stage.
She won an Obie - the off-Broadway version of the Tony - in 1970 for Who's Happy Now, playing the "other woman" in a family drama written by Oliver Hailey. She reprised the role in a 1975 television version; in a review, The New York Times described her character as "an irrepressible belle given to frequent bouts of 'wooziness' and occasional bursts of shrewdness".
She had appeared only sporadically on television until 1971, when producer Norman Lear tapped her for a guest role on All in the Family.
She went from there to a regular role in the All in the Family spinoff, Maude, playing Vivian, the neighbour and best friend to Arthur in the starring role.
When Arthur died in April last year, McClanahan recalled that she had felt constrained by The Golden Girls during the later years of its run. "Bea liked to be the star of the show. She didn't really like to do that ensemble playing," McClanahan said.
After that series ended in 1978, McClanahan landed the role as Aunt Fran on Mama's Family in 1983.
McClanahan was married six times: Tom Bish, with whom she had a son, Mark Bish; actor Norman Hartweg; Peter D'Maio; Gus Fisher; Tom Keel; and she married husband Morrow Wilson on Christmas Day in 1997.
She called her 2007 memoir, My First Five Husbands ... And the Ones Who Got Away.