Full Name Anita Sokol Name Nita Talbot Siblings Gloria Stone Martin Years active 1949 - 1995 Children Nicole Geas | Occupation Actress Other names Ginger Grey Role Actress Nieces Rio Betz | |
Born August 8, 1930 (age 94) ( 1930-08-08 ) New York City, New York, U.S. Movies and TV shows Similar People Kenneth Washington, Don Gordon, Larry Hovis, Bob Crane, Robert Clary |
Nita talbot does a burlesque number in girl happy mgm 1965
Nita Talbot (born Anita Sokol, August 8, 1930) is an American actress. Talbot was a leading lady who spent the first decade or so of her career playing "slick chicks" and sharp-witted career girls, but is perhaps best known for her role as Marya, the "White Russian" spy in the 1960s sitcom Hogan's Heroes, as well as Sheila Fine in the sitcom Soap. Talbot received an Emmy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for the 1967–1968 season of Hogan's Heroes.
Contents
- Nita talbot does a burlesque number in girl happy mgm 1965
- Nita talbot avi
- Film
- Television
- Personal life
- Partial filmography
- Filmography
- References
Nita talbot avi
Film
Born in New York City, Talbot began her acting career appearing as a model in the 1949 film It's a Great Feeling. She was afforded a wealth of varied screen roles, from the love-starved switchboard operator in A Very Special Favor (1965) to the brassy Madame Esther in Buck and the Preacher (1972). She also appeared in such films as Bright Leaf (1950), This Could Be the Night (1957), I Married a Woman (1958), Who's Got the Action? (1962), Girl Happy (1965), The Day of the Locust (1975), Serial (1980), Chained Heat (1983), Fraternity Vacation (1985), and Puppet Master II (1991).
Television
Appearing in many TV series, Talbot was seen as Mabel Spooner opposite Larry Blyden's Joe Spooner in Joe and Mabel:536 (1956), Iris Anderson in the 1958 Perry Mason episode "The Case of the Pint-Sized Client", con-woman Blondie Collins in the second season of The Thin Man:1071 (1958–1959), con-woman/struggling actress Susan Reed in the first season of Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer (1958–1959) "Beautiful, Blue and Deadly", the immigrant wife in [S4:E9] "Land Deal" on Gunsmoke (1958), and in "Belle's Back"' [5:35] resourceful girl Friday Dora Miles on The Jim Backus Show:533 (aka: Hot Off the Wire), snooty socialite Judy Evans in Here We Go Again (1973),:453 and ultra cynical Rose (opposite Bill Daily) in Starting from Scratch.:1016 (1988). Between 1966 amd 1971, she appeared in seven episodes of Hogan's Heroes as "White Russian" spy Marya,:465–466 a role for which she was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series in 1968 for the 1967 episode "The Hostage".
Talbot has been either the star or co-star of several other series, including Man Against Crime, Bourbon Street Beat (four episodes as Lusti Weather), The Secret Storm, and Supertrain,:1040 while guest-starring on others such as Kolchak: The Night Stalker. Talbot also had long-running roles in Search for Tomorrow and General Hospital. On General Hospital, she had the recurring role of Delfina from 1981 to 1983 (and again in 1992), Tiffany Hill's old friend who takes over designing Luke and Laura's wedding.
In 1971, Talbot was cast in the pilot episode of the CBS sitcom Funny Face starring actress-comedian Sandy Duncan. The original premise of the show had Duncan playing Sandy Stockton, a young UCLA student from Illinois majoring in education and making ends meet by working part-time as an actress in television commercials for the Prescott Advertising Agency. Talbot played Sandy's agent, Maggie Prescott. Shortly after filming the pilot, CBS picked up the program for the fall of 1971, but slightly revised the format, a result of which was Talbot being dropped from the cast.
She played a nurse friend of Anne Francis who played another nurse, in the 6th episode second season in Columbo, called "A Stitch in Crime" (1973), with guest star Leonard Nimoy.
Talbot's most recent acting role was in 1997, when she voiced the character of Anastasia Hardy, the businesswoman mother of Felicia Hardy, the Black Cat, in the animated series Spider-Man.
Personal life
Talbot was married to, and divorced from, both Bob Kaufman and actor Don Gordon.
Partial filmography
From Hollywood.com