At
the age of 13, her name was listed over the title on the marquee for
her Broadway hit play. At the age of 16, she starred in a sitcom that
is still beloved by fans today and began a career in television that
saw her win three Emmys. She also campaigned tirelessly for mental
health awareness, AIDS research, and nuclear disarmament in addition
to serving as president of the Screen Actors Guild. But her best
accomplishment may have been her real-life role as a survivor; a
force that refused to yield to whatever obstacles came her way.
Patty
Duke, Oscar-winning actress and ‘60s television icon, died March 29
at a hospital near her home in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. She was 69.
The cause of death was sepsis caused by a ruptured intestine that she
suffered a couple of days before, according to Duke’s husband,
Michael Pearce.
Duke
first came to public notice in 1959, when at the age of 12, she
starred as Helen Keller in the original Broadway production of
William Gibson’s drama, The Miracle Worker. Anne
Bancroft co-starred as Keller’s teacher, Anne Sullivan.
When
Duke and Bancroft reprised their roles for the 1962 film version,
Duke won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress.
She
followed this by starring in an eponymous sitcom created by Sidney
Sheldon that was launched in 1963 and ran on ABC until 1966. In the
sitcom, Duke played the dual roles of Patty Lane, a typical Brooklyn
teenager, and her worldly Scottish “identical cousin” Cathy Lane.
Quite
a few critics were nonplussed over how a talented actress such as
Duke could travel so quickly from the sublimity of an Oscar winning
role to playing identical cousins living in Brooklyn.
But
Duke supplied the answer in her 1987 memoir, Call Me Anna.
She was a meal ticket.
Patty
was born Anna Marie Duke in New York City on Dec. 14, 1946, the
youngest of three children to John Patrick Duke, a handyman and
cabby, and Frances (McMahon) Duke, a cashier. Patty, who was reared
in Queens, described her mother as chronically depressed and prone to
violence, and her father as an alcoholic who was forced by her mother
to leave the family home when she was six.
Anna
began acting around the age of 8, when she was taken on by John and
Ethel Ross, a husband-and-wife-managing team who represented her
older brother Raymond. The Rosses began by neutralizing Anna’s
distinct Queens accent and changed her name to the more
“all-American” sounding Patty, most likely after successful
teenage actress Patty McCormick.
As
Patty Duke, she worked bit parts in television, appearing on the soap
opera The Brighter Day, and also in print ads and
television commercials. There were also tiny parts in films such
as The Goddess and 4D Man. In 1959,
before landing the part of Helen Keller in The Miracle
Worker, Duke appeared in a television adaptation of Meet
Me in St. Louis as Tootie Smith, the role played in the 1944
film by Margaret O’Brien.
To
land the part of the young Helen Keller, the Rosses prepared her by
blindfolding her and moving the furniture around. She also
intensively trained by learning to do things without sight. The work
paid off when producer Fred Coe cast her to play Keller. The role was
a daunting one, requiring her to engage nightly with co-star Anne
Bancroft in an ad-libbed, physical onstage fight that could last up
to 10 minutes. At 13, her name was raised above the title on the
marquee, believed to be the first to have her name above the title at
such an early age.
Shortly
after winning her Oscar in 1963 at age 16, the youngest at the time
to win an Academy Award, she also scored another first when she
became the youngest star at the time to have a television series
bearing her name. The series, written by Sidney Sheldon, revolved
around an incredible premise: two cousins so indistinguishable that
they could pass for one another, which they often did over the course
of the series. The public loved it and tuned in every week, along
with purchasing related merchandise like dolls, clothes and board
games.
For
her part, as related in her memoir, Duke felt trapped, having to
pretend she was younger than she was; not being consulted about
anything; and having no choice in how she looked or what she wore.
She wrote about the Rosses removing her from her home to live with
them where they monitored her every movement, telling her what to
wear, what to eat, what to do; even controlling her mother’s access
to her. They billed Duke as being two years younger than she actually
was and padded her resume with false credits. Duke also wrote about
the Rosses introducing her to alcohol and feeding her uppers and
downers to get her in shape to work. She also wrote that both
sexually molested her on occasion.
In
addition, there were financial shenanigans. In 1959, Ross admitted to
a congressional committee that Patty, who had appeared not long
before on the TV quiz show The $64,000 Question, had been fed
the answers by the show’s producers. Her area of expertise was
spelling. She won $32,000 on the show, less the 15% fee the Rosses
took. After she had broken with the Rosses as a young woman, she
discovered that they had embezzled the vast portion of her earnings,
about $1 million.
To escape from the
Rosses, she married Harry Falk, an assistant director on The
Patty Duke Show who was 13 years her senior, in 1965. During
their marriage, she suffered from repeated mood swings and anorexia,
drank heavily, and overdosed on pills a number of times. They
divorced in 1970. A second marriage, to Michael Tell, was annulled
after only 13 days.
In 1972, Patty
married actor John Astin, billing herself as Patty Duke Astin during
their marriage. They divorced in 1985. Her fourth, and final,
marriage was in 1986 to Michael Pearce, an Army drill sergeant. They
had met during the production of A Time to Triumph. It's
the story of Concetta Hassan, a woman who struggles to support her
family after her husband is injured but who eventually becomes a
United States Army helicopter pilot, for which Pearce served as a
consultant. The couple moved Idaho and adopted a son, Kevin, who was
born in 1988. During the course of her marriage Duke occasionally
used the name "Anna Duke-Pearce" in her writings and other
professional work.
After The Patty Duke Show was canceled, Duke began her adult acting career by playing Neely O’Hara, a character loosely based on Judy Garland in the 1967 film adaptation of Jacqueline Suzann’s crap classic, Valley of the Dolls. It was a role she had campaigned to play, and one she hoped would cause audiences to leave her teen persona behind. However, while the film was a box-office success, audiences and critics alike had a difficult time accepting Duke in her new persona as an alcoholic, drug-addicted singing star. While the film is heralded today as a something of a camp classic, thanks in part to Duke's over-the-top performance, at the time, it almost sunk her career.
In 1969, Duke won the Golden Globe for Best Actress (Musical or Comedy) for her starring role in Me, Natalie, a film in which she played an "ugly duckling" Brooklyn teenager struggling to make a life for herself in Greenwich Village.
In 1970, she won the
first of her three Emmy awards for her starring role in the TV
movie My Sweet Charlie, in which she portrayed a pregnant
runaway who falls in love with a black man, played by Al Freeman Jr.
Duke won her second Emmy for her work in the 1976 NBC mini-series Captains and the Kings, and her third Emmy for playing Annie Sullivan (to Melissa Gilbert’s Helen Keller) in a 1979 TV adaptation of The Miracle Worker.
Duke played herself
from her mid-30s onward in Call Me Anna, a 1990 TV movie
based on her memoir. And over the years she had guest roles on many
shows, including The Love Boat, Amazing Grace, Touched
by an Angel and Glee.
And as if all this
weren’t enough, Duke also has a successful signing career,
including two Top 40 hits in 1965, "Don't Just Stand There"
(#8) and "Say Something Funny" (#22).
Off-screen, she
served a term as president of the Screen Actors Guild from 1985 to
1988, the second woman (actress Kathleen Nolan was the first) to be
elected to the position.
For
years, Duke dealt with an emotional disability for which there was as
yet no name. It led her to attempt suicide several times, and
commitments to mental hospitals. Only in 1982, was she finally
diagnosed with bipolar disorder and given proper medication, which
included lithium as a medication and therapy.
The treatment
stabilized her and she became an activist for numerous mental health
causes. She lobbied Congress and joined forces with the National
Institute of Mental Health and National Alliance on Mental Illness in
order to increase awareness, funding, and research for people with
mental illness.
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