Beverly Garland
About Beverly Garland
Beverly Garland never had a showy role in a critically-acclaimed motion picture, nor did she star on a high-brow TV series, but the blonde, lithe actress has managed a career of almost non-stop work since 1950. Over 40 years later, she has remained a frequent TV presence with her warm, inviting smile yet strong, determined demeanor. Garland's career as a working actress has continued long after some of her more celebrated peers have spent time with plastic surgeons and dreaming of a comeback.
Garland began her professional career on stage in Tustin, CA, an Orange County community just south of Long Beach. In 1949, she made her film debut--billed as Beverly Campbell--in the original version of the film "D.O.A." By 1950, she was on TV in the L.A.-produced series "Mama Rosa", sort of an Italian "I Remember Mama" that ran for about six months. She then began acting in episodics, and in 1954 earned an Emmy nomination for Best Actress in a Single Performance as a leukemia victim in an episode of "Medic" (NBC). At the same time, she continued to appear in features, although mostly in B pictures. In 1953, she appeared with Edward G. Robinson in the behind-the-scenes in TV mystery "The Glass Web". She was a woman with whom Barry Sullivan can redeem himself in "Miami Story" (1954), and had a small role alongside Humphrey Bogart in William Wyler's "Desperate Hours" (1955). In "The Steel Jungle" (1956), Garland was a pregnant wife of a bookie who chooses jail over informing on the mob--or being with her. By 1959, Garland was in the low budget "Alligator People", playing a woman who searches for her missing husband only to find him at a Southern mansion partly transformed into a reptile. Film work became more sporadic in the 60s as Garland devoted herself to TV series work, but in 1974 she could be seen briefly in "Airport 1975", as the wife of Dana Andrews, who calls her just before he gets into his single-engine craft, has a heart attack, and slams into Karen Black's plane. Garland was Linda Blair's shallow mother in "Roller Boogie" (1979) and co-starred in Claudia Weil's enchanting 1980 comedy "It's My Turn".
Garland is undoubtedly better remembered for her TV series work. From 1957-58, Garland was female cop Casey Jones on the syndicated series "Decoy", which is considered the first series to feature a woman police officer as a lead. She played wife to Bing Crosby on "The Bing Crosby Show" (ABC, 1964-65), and, in perhaps her most memorable TV role, was the widow who married Fred MacMurray on "My Three Sons" (CBS, 1969-72). From 1983-87, on "Scarecrow & Mrs. King" (CBS), she was Kate Jackson's mother, confused about how her daughter spent her days. Garland has also played recurring roles as a mother on other series, including NBC's "Remington Steele" (as Stephanie Zimbalist's mom) and, more recently, on ABC's "Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman" (as Lois Lane's nagging mother helping her prepare for her wedding).
| Name: | Relation: | Notes: |
|---|---|---|
| Richard Garland | husband | married in 1952; divorced in 1956 |
| Robert Campbell | husband | divorced |
| Fillmore Paseau Crank | husband | married from 1960 until his death on March 10, 1999 |
| Filmore Crank Jr | step-son | married to former actress Tina Cole who co-starred on "My Three Sons" |
| Carrington Kendall Crank | daughter | appeared on the NBC soap "Santa Barbara"; married to attorney Carlos Goodman; gave birth to daughter Tula Pajeau Goodman on November 9, 1999 |
| Amelia Rose Fessenden | mother | |
| James Atkins Fessenden | father |
| Had recurring role as Lois Lane's mother in episodes of "Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman" (ABC) | |
| Played Fred MacMurray's new wife on "My Three Sons" (CBS) | |
| Played Grandma on "Camp Wilder" (ABC) | |
| Played confused mother of Kate Jackson on "Scarecrow and Mrs. King" (CBS) | |
| Played the wife on "The Bing Crosby Show" (ABC) | |
| 1949 | Acted with professional stock company |
| 1950 | Made film debut in "D.O.A." (billed as Beverly Campbell) |
| 1950 | TV series debut as regular, "Mama Rosa" |
| 1953 | Made first film as Beverly Garland with small role in "The Glass Web" |
| 1954 | Earned Emmy nomination for her appearance on episode of "Medic" |
| 1957 - 1958 | Starred on syndicated series "Decoy" as female cop |
| 1959 | Co-starred with Lon Chaney Jr in "The Alligator People" |
| 1968 | Acted in "Pretty Poison" |
| 1970 | Made TV-movie debut, "Cutter's Trail" |
| 1974 | Was in all-star cast of "Airport 1975" |
| 1983 | Made appearances on "Remington Steele" as Laura Holt's mother |
Notes
Beverly Garland is a former honorary mayor of North Hollywood, a part of the City of Los Angeles in the San Fernando Valley.
For many years, Garland and her husband owned a Howard Johnson's hotel in North Hollywood, California, which was later named the Beverly Garland Hotel. They owned a second one in Sacramento, California.
Garland earned her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1983.
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Quick Facts
Also known as
Birth Name : Beverly Fessenden
Born
October, 17 1926 in Santa Cruz, California
Education
- Glendale Community College, Glendale, California
Professions
actor, businessperson, department store model, elevator operator, hotel owner, mail girl for mortuary, office nurse, waitress