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Joan Hackett

Biography

Joan Hackett

Edit

Overview

  • Born
    March 1, 1934 · East Harlem, New York City, New York, USA
  • Died
    October 8, 1983 · Encino, California, USA (ovarian cancer)
  • Birth name
    Joan Ann Hackett
  • Height
    1.70 m

Biography

    • Joan Hackett was never one of your conventional leading ladies. Directors sometimes found her difficult to work with. Yet this strong-minded perfectionist had an unquenchable individuality that came through in her performances, and she never hesitated to appear unglamorous whenever the role demanded. Born of an Italian mother and an Irish-American father in East Harlem on March 1, 1934, teenage Joan left school during twelfth grade to become a model. On the cover of Harper's Junior Bazaar in 1952, the attractive brunette turned down the resulting offer of a contract with 20th Century-Fox and opted instead for acting classes at Lee Strasberg's Actors Studio.

      Joan made her Broadway debut in the John Gielgud production of "Much Ado About Nothing" in 1959 and also appeared in her first television episode that year. In 1961, she had her first success in an off-Broadway play, "Call Me By My Rightful Name", winning three awards, including an Obie. A later stage performance, "Night Watch" (1972), based on a play by Lucille Fletcher, saw her playing an emotionally disturbed woman with such intensity that Clive Barnes of The New York Times described her performance as "beautifully judged". From 1961 to 1962, Joan had regular work in the CBS courtroom drama series Les accusés (1961) (starring E.G. Marshall), playing social worker "Joan Miller", fiance of one of the partners in the law firm. During the remainder of the decade, she guest-starred in many top-rated TV shows, from La quatrième dimension (1959) to Bonanza (1959) and Ben Casey (1961) (an Emmy-nominated performance). She also played the second "Mrs. de Winter" in a television version of Daphne Du Maurier's classic "Rebecca".

      Joan's off-beat personality likely limited her career in films. She was first featured as one of eight Vassar graduates making up Le Groupe (1966), a 150-minute Sidney Lumet-directed part-satire, part-soap-opera film examining the lives and loves of the protagonists over the years. Her next motion pictures allowed Joan considerably more screen time: She co-starred with Charlton Heston in the moody, idiosyncratic western Will Penny, le solitaire (1967). She gave a decidedly understated, subtle performance as the down-to-earth frontier woman who befriends the hero, shares in his ordeals, and then is left by him when he realizes that there is no future in their relationship. In stark contrast was her role in the western comedy Ne tirez pas sur le shérif (1969). She was very much in her element as feisty, accident-prone mayor's daughter "Prudy Perkins". In this film, she displayed a talent for visual comedy reminiscent of Lucille Ball, but otherwise rarely seen since silent films. There was also great chemistry and clever verbal interaction between her and co-star James Garner, as the newly appointed sheriff who catches her character in various embarrassing situations.

      She was also featured in the spy film Les tueurs sont lâchés (1968), followed by the predictable "Baby Jane" look-alike TV thriller Vengeance en différé (1970). Joan then gave assured performances in two subsequent thrillers, the stylish Les Invitations dangereuses (1973) and the made-for-TV disguised remake of Les diaboliques (1955), Reflections of Murder (1974) with Sam Waterston. Joan gave a spectacular performance in the Michael Crichton book adaption of Homicides incontrôlés (1974) where she plays a compassionate psychiatrist who is tormented by her patient. There were to be few roles of interest until Du rire aux larmes (1981). The film, based on Neil Simon's play "The Gingerbread Lady", won Joan a Golden Globe Award and an Academy Award nomination as Best Supporting Actress. By that time, she was already so ill with cancer that she had to travel to the award ceremony in a wheelchair.

      Joan Hackett was well known as a social activist, embracing solar energy and losing causes such as the preservation of the old Morosco Theatre in Times Square with equal fervor. According to personal friends, she accepted her fate with equanimity and dignity, dying at the age of just 49 in a hospital in Encino, California, in October 1983.
      - IMDb mini biography by: I.S.Mowis

Family

  • Spouse
      Richard Mulligan(January 3, 1966 - June 1973) (divorced)
  • Children
      No Children
  • Parents
      John Hackett
      Mary Hackett
  • Relatives
      Theresa Hackett(Sibling)
      John Hackett(Sibling)
      Annette McCarthy(Niece or Nephew)

Trivia

  • Ravaged by cancer, a few weeks prior to her death she checked herself out of the hospital to host a wedding party at her Beverly Hills home for Carrie Fisher and Paul Simon. Just a few days later, her condition rapidly deteriorated. She then spent her last few weeks at Encino Hospital under aggressive treatment. She lost her battle on Saturday, October 8, 1983, at 9:15 pm.
  • Interred at Hollywood Memorial Cemetery (now called Hollywood Forever), Hollywood, California, USA, in the Abbey of the Psalms, Sanctuary of Faith, second from bottom, near the end of the hall. She always loved sleeping, and her mausoleum marker carries an admonition not to wake her while she's getting her beauty sleep: "Go Away - I'm Asleep".
  • Was a successful teenage model.
  • A firm believer in the paranormal, while on location in Texas filming Harnessing the Sun (1981), she persuaded the film's director, Dirk Wayne Summers, to fly in a clairvoyant aura reader. She arranged for the entire crew to receive extrasensory readings. The clairvoyant spent a week with the film's cast and crew. When Summers was asked by a reporter from a Dallas newspaper why he approved such unusual arrangements--and did CBS know--Summers answered: "Joan Hackett is so great to work with and so perfect in her role that I would have flown in Uri Geller if Joan had wanted him.".
  • Filmed in 1980-1981, Harnessing the Sun (1981) was her last picture, although some films shot earlier (e.g., Du rire aux larmes (1981)) were released after that film.

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