Former Trinity and TV Star Katherine Helmond Dies at 89

GoLocalProv News Team

Former Trinity and TV Star Katherine Helmond Dies at 89

The New York Times is reporting that former Trinity Rep. star and veteran television actress Katherine Helmond has died at 89 years of age.

The ”versatile actress who was especially known for her roles on the long-running television series “Soap” and “Who’s the Boss?,” died on Feb. 23,” writes the NYTimes.

“The APA Agency, which represented her and announced her death on Friday, said the cause was complications of Alzheimer’s disease.

GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLAST

She performed at Trinity in the glory years of Director Adrian Hall in the 1960s.

According to the NYTimes:

In 1966, working with the Trinity Square Repertory Company in Providence, R.I., she took on the role of Blanche DuBois in Tennessee Williams’s “A Streetcar Named Desire.”

“Miss Helmond gives all of Blanche’s irritating mannerisms,” Kevin Kelly wrote in a glowing review in The Boston Globe, “the coquettish come-on, the infuriating pretense, but she makes us understand (far more persuasively than many actresses I’ve seen in the role) the demons driving her beyond the brink. I’m not ashamed to admit that Miss Helmond brought tears to my eyes in three scenes.”

On “Soap,” ABC’s prime-time parody of daytime soap operas, which ran from 1977 to 1981, Ms. Helmond played Jessica Tate, a lovable aristocrat who was one of the show’s main characters. Some viewers, as Is often the case, wrongly assumed that the character was her.”

The Hollywood Reporter wrote, “The shapely, blue-eyed Helmond also portrayed Doris Sherman, the widowed owner of the fictional NFL team the Orlando Breakers, on ABC’s Coach, and she was Lois Whelan, the upper-class mother of Patricia Heaton’s character, on CBS’ Everybody Loves Raymond."


People We Lost in Rhode Island and Across America in 2018

Enjoy this post? Share it with others.