The Secret Life of Kathy McCormick


8:00 pm - 10:00 pm, Thursday, November 20 on WHTV BingeTV (18.1)

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About this Broadcast
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A grocery clerk (Barbara Eden) gains entry to high society and a wealthy suitor (Josh Taylor) who thinks she's a stockbroker. Janice: Judith-Marie Bergan. Lisa: Jenny O'Hara. Ray: Dick O'Neill. Babs: Judy Geeson. Sid: Robert Costanzo. Directed by Robert Lewis.

1988 English HD Level Unknown
Comedy-drama

Cast & Crew
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Judy Geeson (Actor) .. Babs
Robert Costanzo (Actor) .. Sid
Jennifer Savidge (Actor) .. Marsha
Paul Kent (Actor)
Dick O'neill (Actor) .. Ray
Liz Sheridan (Actor) .. Mrs. Van Adams
Sally Kemp (Actor) .. Emily
Elizabeth Robinson (Actor) .. Edna
Victor di Mattia (Actor) .. Sean
Peggy Mannix (Actor) .. Customer
Mary Pat Gleason (Actor) .. Waitress
Zachary Bostrom (Actor) .. Young Boy
Roberta Haynes (Actor) .. Woman #2
John Fleck (Actor) .. Photographer
Christopher St. John (Actor) .. City Mayor
Peter Schreiner (Actor) .. Valet #1
Sheldon Feldner (Actor) .. Doctor Harris
Marjorie Stapp (Actor) .. Clara

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Barbara Eden (Actor)
Born: August 23, 1934
Birthplace: Tucson, Arizona, United States
Trivia: Born in Arizona on August 23, 1934, actress Barbara Eden was three years old when her family moved to San Francisco, where as a teenager she plunged into acting and singing classes at San Francisco State College's Conservatory of Music. After briefly working as a band singer, Eden took up residence at Hollywood's Studio Club, an inexpensive rooming house for aspiring actresses. Other Studio Club residents would note in later years that Eden would look at the club's bulletin board and apply for every show business job available, even those that she was advised would "ruin" her career. Persistence paid off, and in 1956 Eden made her film debut in Back from Eternity. She worked steadily in television, finally attaining leading-lady status on the 1958 sitcom How to Marry a Millionaire, in which she played a myopic "Marilyn Monroe"-type golddigger. Good film and TV roles followed for the lovely blonde actress, and full stardom arrived with the NBC comedy series I Dream of Jeannie. Eden played the curvaceous bottle imp from 1965-70, reviving the character in a brace of TV movies, the last one produced in 1991. Eden's post-Jeannie career has included several films, TV guest star appearances, theatrical and nightclub engagements, and still another sitcom, 1981's Harper Valley P.T.A.In 1983, Eden joined the cast of Jaws 3, and played a role in Chattanooga Choo Choo (1984) before participating in The Fantasy Film Worlds of George Pal in 1985. The actress would return to her Genie roots throughout her later career, including in the 1985 comedy I Dream of Jeannie: 15 Years Later, and I Still Dream of Jeannie (1991). Eden also made her mark in other sitcom-based films, most notably A Very Brady Sequel (1996). After starring alongside Hal Linden for the play Love Letters and taking a guest-starring role on Army Wives, a drama from Lifetime, Eden joined the cast of Always and Forever, a made-for-television movie for The Hallmark Channel (2009). In 2011, Eden published a memoir titled Jeannie Out of the Bottle that spoke candidly of her personal life, including detailed accounts of her failed marriages and the tragic death of her son.
Josh Taylor (Actor)
Born: September 25, 1943
Birthplace: Princeton, Illinois, United States
Judith-Marie Bergan (Actor)
Born: November 25, 1948
Died: August 20, 2016
Birthplace: Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Trivia: Grew up in Louisville, Kentucky and Highland Park, Illinois.Made her film debut playing a kidnapped young newspaper heiress in the 1975 thriller Abduction.First joined Oregon Shakespeare Festival acting company in their 1997 season, playing Elena Guarneri in the world premiere of The Magic Fire, and went on to be a member for 16 years.Some of the theatres she worked with include Chicago Shakespeare Theatre, PlayMakers Repertory Company, Yale Repertory Theatre, Berkeley Repertory Theatre and Los Angeles Shakespeare Festival, among others.The Oregon Shakespeare Festival dedicated the 2017 theater season to her honor.
Jenny O'Hara (Actor)
Born: February 24, 1942
Birthplace: Sonora, California
Trivia: Jenny O'Hara is part of a performing family whose influence encompasses regional and New York theater from Warren, PA, to Greenwich Village and Broadway, and rock music from England to New York. Born in Sonora, CA, her father, John B. O'Hara, was a salesman and her mother, Edith, a journalist and drama teacher. Jenny, her singer/actress younger sister Jill O'Hara, and her singer/guitarist brother Jack O'Hara, grew up amid their mother's pursuit of a theatrical career, leading a gypsy-like existence in half-built houses and other accouterments of a struggling existence. Edith O'Hara directed a children's theater in Warren, where the two daughters occasionally participated as actresses during their teens, though neither took it seriously. Jenny spent a year at Carnegie Tech and a summer playing in stock theater, and then came to New York to study with Lee Strasberg and Sanford Meisner. She was in touring companies of Cactus Flower and Brecht on Brecht, with Lotte Lenya; off-Broadway productions of Arms and the Man, Play With the Tiger, and Hang Down Your Head and Die; and stock productions of Paint Your Wagon and Take Me Along, among many other musicals and straight plays. She also appeared on ABC's Time for Us. O'Hara's biggest stage credit of the '60s was in Dylan (opposite Alec Guinness) as Annabelle Graham-Pike. In 1970, O'Hara succeeded her younger sister Jill in the musical Promises, Promises. By the mid-'70s, Edith O'Hara was running the 13th Street Theatre in Greenwich Village (a major venue for off-off-Broadway and children's theater), and her brother Jack was in London, playing guitar and bass and singing with the band Eggs Over Easy, pioneering the pub rock scene in England. Meanwhile, Jenny had graduated to television, both in series and made-for-TV features, including a starring role in Brink's: The Great Robbery, The Return of the World's Greatest Detective (in which she took over a role originated by Joanne Woodward in the movie They Might Be Giants), Blind Ambition, and Blinded by the Light. She later worked in movies such as Career Opportunities, Mystic River, and Matchstick Men, and television series such as Law & Order, NYPD Blue, and ER.
Judy Geeson (Actor) .. Babs
Born: September 10, 1948
Trivia: Trained for an acting career from childhood, Judy Geeson was a busy juvenile player on television before making her screen debut at 18 in To Sir, With Love. She spent the early stages of her film career playing "jail bait" teenagers, then moved on to more conservative leading-lady assignments. In 1979, Geeson was a regular on the BBC serial Danger UXB, which aired in America on PBS' Masterpiece Theatre. More recently, she has specialized in elegant, landed-gentry roles. Once married to actor Kristoffer Tabori, Judy Geeson is also the sister of actress Sally Geeson, best known for her work on the TV series Star Maidens and Bless This House.
Robert Costanzo (Actor) .. Sid
Born: October 20, 1942
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Actor Robert Costanzo is generally typecast an urban Italian-American, prone to mouthing such lines as "You gotta problem with that?" Costanzo began popping up with regularity in such films as Saturday Night Fever in the late '70s. The first of his many TV-series stints was as plumber Vincent Pizo, the blue-collar father of Travolta clone Joe Piza (Paul Regina), in 1978's Joe and Valerie. He retained his man-of-the-people veneer as maintenance engineer Hank Sabatino in the weekly series Checking In (1980), Lt. V.T. Krantz in the 1990 TVer Glory Days, and the voice of Detective Bullock in Warner Bros.' Batman: The Animated Series (1992). In 1995, Robert Costanzo joined the cast of television's NYPD Blue as Detective Giardella.
Jennifer Savidge (Actor) .. Marsha
Born: July 06, 1952
Ernie Lively (Actor)
Paul Kent (Actor)
Born: October 13, 1930
Died: October 07, 2011
Dick O'neill (Actor) .. Ray
Born: August 29, 1928
Died: November 17, 1998
Trivia: American character actor Dick O'Neill began showing up in films in 1961. Most of O'Neill's movie roles were in the supporting category, e.g. his portrayal of Sol Zuckermann in The Buddy Holly Story. His extensive TV credits include recurring roles on at least four weekly series. Dick O'Neill was seen as Judge Praetor D. Hardcastle in Rosetti and Ryan (1977), street-smart Malloy in Kaz (1978), corporate vice president Arthur Broderick in Empire (1984), and Fred Wilkinson in the 1987 episodes of Falcon Crest. Fans of the detective series Cagney and Lacey will remember O'Neill for playing Charlie Cagney. Before entering film and television, O'Neill was a well established supporting actor on the New York stage where he appeared on and off Broadway. In the early '50s, O'Neill was a charter member of the Arena Stage in Washington, D.C. For the last seven years of his life, O'Neill served on the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Screening Committee.
Liz Sheridan (Actor) .. Mrs. Van Adams
Born: April 10, 1929
Died: April 15, 2022
Birthplace: Rye, New York, United States
Trivia: Liz Sheridan is an actress mostly associated with comedic roles, and best known for her portrayal of Helen Seinfeld, the mother of Jerry Seinfeld, on the series Seinfeld. Born in Westchester County and raised on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, she graduated from Mamaroneck High School. Sheridan started out in entertainment as a dancer, and was also a pianist and singer. During the early '50s, she crossed personal paths with James Dean; the two became very close, and this period in her life was recounted in Sheridan's book Dizzy and Jimmy: My Life With James Dean (2000). She lived in the Caribbean from 1953 until the mid-'60s, when she returned to New York to embark on an acting career, principally on-stage. Sheridan made a small number of television appearances, on programs such as Kojak, but her real TV career didn't begin until the 1980s, when she started getting guest roles shows such as Gimme a Break, St. Elsewhere, The A-Team, Hill Street Blues, and Scarecrow & Mrs. King, as well as in various made-for-television movies and miniseries, interspersed with the occasional feature film such as Star 80 (1983) and Legal Eagles (1986). She was probably most visible during this period in the role of Selma the housekeeper in the pilot episode of Moonlighting (1985). In 1986, Sheridan became a regular on the series Alf, which ran for four seasons, portraying Mrs. Ochmonek. At the end of that run, she auditioned for and won the role of Helen Seinfeld on Seinfeld. As Jerry Seinfeld's well-meaning but slightly high-strung mother, always trying to mediate between the generations in her family, she revealed a delightful range of comedic skills, working alongside such diverse talents as Jerry Seinfeld, Michael Richards, Barney Martin, Julia Louis-Dreyfuss, Jason Alexander, et al. In the years since the cancellation of the series, she has continued to work regularly in television and feature films, primarily portraying matronly and grandmother-type roles.
Sally Kemp (Actor) .. Emily
Born: February 07, 1933
Elizabeth Robinson (Actor) .. Edna
Victor di Mattia (Actor) .. Sean
Peggy Mannix (Actor) .. Customer
Mary Pat Gleason (Actor) .. Waitress
Born: February 23, 1950
Trivia: Actress Mary Pat Gleason debuted onscreen in the early '80s (with a bit part in the 1983 Rodney Dangerfield comedy Easy Money) and tackled a series of character portrayals in a variety of genres over the following decades. She specialized in playing dowdy, overweight, and slightly assertive matronly types, including waitresses, nurses, and librarians. Gleason's extensive resumé includes the films Soapdish (1991), Speechless (1994), Bruce Almighty (2003), and Moving McAllister (2007).
Zachary Bostrom (Actor) .. Young Boy
Roberta Haynes (Actor) .. Woman #2
Born: August 19, 1929
Trivia: A statuesque lead actress, onscreen from 1952, she later worked behind the scenes in TV productions.
John Fleck (Actor) .. Photographer
Born: May 07, 1951
Christopher St. John (Actor) .. City Mayor
Peter Schreiner (Actor) .. Valet #1
Sheldon Feldner (Actor) .. Doctor Harris
Born: March 16, 1936
Marjorie Stapp (Actor) .. Clara
Trivia: A blonde leading lady of horror flicks and B-Westerns, Marjorie Stapp from Little Rock, AR, worked as a secretary for mobster Bugsy Siegel -- "but I didn't know it until he was murdered and I recognized his picture in the papers," she later stated. She also had a walk-on in Danny Kaye's The Kid from Brooklyn (1946), then returned to school until signing with 20th Century Fox in 1949. She didn't do much for Fox, however, but did pop up in two Durango Kid B-Western entries for Columbia -- Laramie and The Blazing Trail (1949) -- as well as playing Queen Guinevere in the serial Adventures of Sir Galahad (1949). Stapp's modicum of fame, however, rests with her sometimes rather brief appearances in low-budget horror and sci-fi movies of the 1950s, including The Indestructible Man (1956), The Monster That Challenged the World (1957), and Kronos (1957). Extremely busy on television as well, Stapp popped up in such diverse series as The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show, The Millionaire, Ann Sothern, The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, The Brady Bunch, Jake and the Fatman, Quantum Leap, and a 1991 Columbo TV-movie Death Hits the Jackpot.

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