Florence Agnes Henderson (February 14, 1934 – November 24, 2016) was an American actress. With a career spanning six decades, she is best known for her starring role as Carol Brady on the ABC sitcom The Brady Bunch. Henderson also appeared in film, as well as on stage, and hosted several long-running cooking and variety shows over the years. She appeared as a guest on many scripted and unscripted (talk and reality show) television programs and as a panelist on numerous game shows. She was a contestant on Dancing with the Stars in 2010.
Henderson hosted her own talk show, The Florence Henderson
Show, and cooking show, Who's Cooking with Florence Henderson, on Retirement
Living TV during the years leading up to her death at age 82 on Thanksgiving
2016 from heart failure.
Early life
Henderson, the youngest of 10 children, was born on February
14, 1934, in Dale, Indiana, a small town in the southwestern part of the state]
She was a daughter of Elizabeth (née Elder), a homemaker, and Joseph Henderson,
a tobacco sharecropper. During the Great Depression, she was taught to sing at
the age of two by her mother, who had a repertoire of 50 songs. By the time she
was eight, her family called her "Florency",
and by age 12, she was singing at local grocery stores.
Henderson graduated from St. Francis Academy in Owensboro,
Kentucky, in 1951 and shortly thereafter went to New York City, enrolling in
the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. She was an Alumna Initiate of the Alpha
Chi chapter of Delta Zeta sorority.
Career
Henderson started her career on the stage performing in
musicals, such as the touring production of Oklahoma! and South Pacific at
Lincoln Center.
She debuted on Broadway in the musical Wish You Were Here in
1952, and later starred on Broadway in the long-running 1954 musical, Fanny
(888 performances) in which she originated the title role. Henderson appeared
with Gordon MacRae in the Oklahoma! segment of the 90-minute television special
General Foods 25th Anniversary Show: A Salute to Rodgers and Hammerstein
(1954). She later appeared in "The
Abbe and the Nymph", an episode of the 1950s TV series I Spy (not to
be confused with the 1960s series of the same name). She also portrayed Meg
March in a CBS-TV musical adaptation of Little Women, which aired on October 16,
1958.
Henderson appeared in two episodes of The United States
Steel Hour. She portrayed Mary Jane in an episodic adaptation of Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn, which aired on November 20, 1957. She also appeared in "A Family Alliance", an
episodic adaptation of a short story from A Harvest of Stories (1956) by
Dorothy Canfield Fisher, which aired on June 4, 1958.
Henderson, along with Bill Hayes, appeared in the Oldsmobile
commercials from 1958 through 1961 on The Patti Page Show for which Oldsmobile
was the sponsor.[citation needed] In 1959, she sang "Don't Let a Be-Back Get Away", in Good News About Olds,
an industrial musical for Oldsmobile. Bill Hayes and she also gave a musical
performance on the January 13, 1960, broadcast of Tonight Starring Jack Paar.
Henderson also appeared on Broadway in The Girl Who Came to Supper (1963).
In 1962, she won the Sarah Siddons Award for her work in
Chicago theatre, and the same year became the first woman to guest host The
Tonight Show in the period after Jack Paar left as the show's host, and before
Johnny Carson began his 30 years as the show's longest-serving host in October
1962. She also joined the ranks of what was then called The Today Girl on NBC's
long-running morning show, doing weather and light news, a position also once
held by Barbara Walters.
She gave later musical performances on Paar's subsequent
talk show in 1963, including the January 25 and February 22 broadcasts. She
performed in the May 19, 1963, broadcast of The Voice of Firestone, alongside
baritone Mario Sereni. She also released her albums under RCA Victor as part of
her music career.
Henderson's most
famous role was as Carol Brady – the mother on the classic 1970s sitcom The
Brady Bunch.
Her most widely recognized role was as Carol Brady in The
Brady Bunch which aired on ABC from 1969 until 1974. Henderson's best friend,
Shirley Jones, had turned down the role, but the following year, she accepted
the similar role of a mother with five children, named Shirley Partridge, in
The Partridge Family, which aired from 1970 to 1974.
Primarily owing to her role on The Brady Bunch, Henderson
was ranked by TV Land and Entertainment Weekly as number 54 on their list of
the 100 Greatest TV Icons.
An avid game-show fan, Henderson was a frequent panelist on
the original version of Hollywood Squares and made occasional appearances on
The $25,000 Pyramid. Her other game show appearances include Password, the
original Match Game, What's My Line (as a panelist and a mystery guest), To
Tell The Truth, I've Got A Secret, Snap Judgment, Personality, The Magnificent
Marble Machine, and Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?. She also appeared alongside
her Brady Bunch co-star Robert Reed on the John Davidson-hosted version of
Hollywood Squares and teamed with Reed, Maureen McCormick, Christopher Knight
and Susan Olsen on one of the original Family Feud's All-Star weeks, where they
finished in second place.
Henderson was the spokeswoman for Wesson cooking oil from
1974 to 1996. During that time, she hosted a cooking show on TNN, Country
Kitchen, and did ads for Prange's, a Wisconsin department store chain.
Henderson co-hosted the short-lived NBC morning talk show Later Today
(1999–2000), with Jodi Applegate and Asha Blake.
In the 2000s, she was the spokeswoman for Polident. In 2003,
Henderson seemed to poke fun at her wholesome image by appearing in a Pepsi
Twist television commercial with Ozzy Osbourne.
Henderson also appeared with her TV children, as she did
with Christopher Knight on the reality television series My Fair Brady. She was
also in the sixth season of VH1's The Surreal Life.
Beginning in the mid-1990s, Henderson would perform the song
"God Bless America" at the
Indianapolis 500, accompanied by the Purdue All-American Marching Band, at the
request of the Hulman-George family, the owners of the Indianapolis Motor
Speedway and friends of Henderson's.
She appeared in the "Weird
Al" Yankovic video for "Amish
Paradise". In 2002, she made a memorable guest appearance on
improvisational comedy show Whose Line Is It Anyway?, participating in on-screen
kisses with Ryan Stiles and Colin Mochrie.
From 2007 to 2009, Henderson co-hosted the daily talk show
Living Live with former Designing Women star Meshach Taylor on Retirement
Living TV. The show was reworked to focus on her and was renamed The Florence
Henderson Show. The show was nominated for an Emmy award in 2010. On the July
12, 2010, edition of WWE Raw, Henderson appeared as the night's guest host.
Henderson was one of 12 celebrities competing on the 11th
season of Dancing with the Stars, which premiered on September 20, 2010. Her
professional partner was Corky Ballas, father of two-time champion Mark Ballas.
On October 19, 2010, she was the fifth contestant eliminated.
Henderson voiced Barbara, Cleveland Brown's childhood nanny,
in the episode "The Men In Me" of
The Cleveland Show, which originally aired on March 25, 2012. The episode
features a depressed and confused Cleveland singing a parody version of his
show's theme before Barbara interjects and gets Cleveland to realize it does
not matter who he is or who others perceive him to be as long as he accepts
himself for who and what he is. At the end of the episode, Cleveland says, "Florence Henderson, everyone!"
Henderson made a special appearance on May 11, 2012, in a
special Mother's Day episode on The Price Is Right with Drew Carey, displaying
prizes, as well as one of the showcases.
In February 2013, she began hosting a cooking show, Who's
Cooking with Florence Henderson, on Retirement Living TV. Henderson hosted
several times the beauty pageants Mrs. America and Mrs. World.
Charity appearances
In the 2000s, Henderson became a public benefactor to the
Sisters of St. Benedict in Ferdinand, Indiana. Some of the nuns there had been
early educators of Henderson. She appeared in a number of their promotional
videos and helped in fundraising efforts. She won money for the sisters on the
game show Weakest Link and on a classic television-themed episode of Who Wants
to Be a Millionaire in 2001, winning $32,000 in their name. When Henderson
appeared on The Surreal Life, she refused to wear a nun's habit in a comedy
skit.
Personal life
Henderson married her first husband, Ira Bernstein, in 1956.
They had four children together before divorcing in 1985. In 1987, she married
her second husband, hypnotherapist Dr. John George Kappas, whom she had met
when he treated her for depression and stage fright in the early 1980s. They
remained married until his death in 2002. Henderson had five grandchildren.
Death
Henderson died on November 24, 2016, at Cedars-Sinai Medical
Center in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 82. She had been hospitalized
the previous day. According to her manager, Kayla Pressman, Henderson died of
heart failure. Three days before her death, Henderson had attended the
recording of Dancing with the Stars to support her friend and former on-screen
daughter Maureen McCormick, who was a contestant. Pressman stated that
Henderson was not ill prior to her sudden hospitalization and that her death
was a "shock". She was
cremated, and her ashes interred at Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in
Los Angeles.
Awards
At the 33rd Annual Gracie Awards Gala (2008), Henderson won
an Individual Achievement Award and an Outstanding Host (Information or
Entertainment) for The Florence Henderson Show.
She won another Outstanding Host (Information or
Entertainment) at the 37th Annual Gracie Awards Gala (2012) for co-hosting Good
Food, Good Deeds.
A 1+1⁄16-mile (1.7 km) turf horse race for 3-year old and
older fillies and mares born and bred in Indiana held at Indiana Grand Racing
& Casino since 2004 is named in her honor, the Florence Henderson Stakes,
on the Tuesday after Labor Day in September.
Selected filmography
Film
1970 Song of
Norway Nina Grieg
1992 Shakes the
Clown The Unknown Woman
1994 Naked Gun
33+1⁄3: The Final Insult Herself Cameo appearance
1995 The Brady
Bunch Movie Grandma
(Carol's mother) Cameo
appearance
1996 For Goodness
Sake II Video Store Customer
1998 Holy Man Herself Cameo appearance
1999 Get Bruce Herself Documentary
2003 Dickie
Roberts: Former Child Star Herself Cameo appearance
2008 For Heaven's
Sake Sarah Miller
2010 The Christmas
Bunny Betsy Ross
2016 Fifty Shades
of Black Mrs. Robinson
2017 Bad Grandmas Mimi Released
posthumously
Television
1954 General
Foods 25th Anniversary Show: A Salute to Rodgers and Hammerstein Laurey TV
special
1956 I Spy Nymph Episode:
"The Abbe and the Nymph"
1957 The United
States Steel Hour Mary Jane Wilk Episode: "The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn"
1958 The United
States Steel Hour Gladys Pratt Episode: "A Family Alliance"
1958 Sing Along Herself Regular Cast
1958 Little Women Meg March TV
musical special
1958–62 Tonight
Starring Jack Paar Herself Regular guest
1959–60 The
Today Show Herself Today Girl
1962–67 Password Herself Contestant
1966 The Bell
Telephone Hour Self - singer "The
Lyrics of Alan Jay Lerner" w/Barbara Harris, Edward Villella, Patricia
McBride, John Cullum and Stanley Holloway
1968 The Dean
Martin Show Herself Guest appearance
1969–74 The
Brady Bunch Carol Ann Brady 117 episodes
1976 The Love
Boat Monica Richardson TV movie pilot
1976 The Muppet
Show Herself Series 1 Episode 7: "Florence Henderson"
1976 The Paul
Lynde Halloween Special Herself TV special
1976–77 The
Brady Bunch Hour Carol Ann Brady 9 episodes
1981 The Brady
Girls Get Married Carol Ann Brady TV reunion movie
1981 The Love
Boat Annabelle Folker Episode: "Country Cousin Blues"
1981 The Brady
Brides Carol Ann Brady 5 episodes
1982 Police
Squad! Shot woman Episode: "Rendezvous at Big Gulch (Terror in the Neighborhood)"
1982–86 Pyramid
(all versions) Herself Celebrity Panelist
1983 Alice Sarah James Episode: "It Had to
Be Mel"
1986 Murder, She
Wrote Maria Morgana Episode: "Death
Stalks the Big Top" (Parts 1 & 2)
1987 It's Garry
Shandling's Show Herself Guest appearance
1988 A Very Brady
Christmas Carol Ann Brady TV reunion movie
1990 The Bradys Carol Ann Brady 6 episodes; also sang third version of theme song
1990 Murder, She
Wrote Patti Sue Diamond Episode: "Ballad for a Blue Lady"
1993 Bradymania:
A Very Brady Special Herself (host) TV special
1993–95 Dave's
World Maggie Occasional; Beth's mother
1994 Roseanne Flo Anderson Episode: "Suck Up or
Shut Up"
1995 Fudge Muriel Episode:
"Fudge-a-mania"
1995 Caroline in
the City Herself Episode: "Caroline
and the Balloon"
1995–96 Our
Generation Herself Co-host
1996 Ellen Madeline Episode:
"Joe's Kept Secret"
1997 Nightmare
Ned Herself Episode: "Monster
Ned"
1999–2000 Later
Today Herself Presenter
2000 Saturday
Night Live Herself (parody) Guest appearance (uncredited)
Episode: "Jackie
Chan/Kid Rock" (May 20, 2000)
2000 The King of
Queens Lily Carrie Heffernan's stepmother
Episode: "Dark
Meet"
2001 Who Wants to
Be a Millionaire Herself Contestant
2001 Legend of
the Candy Cane Thelma (voice) TV movie
2002 Mom's on Strike Betty TV movie
2002 Whose Line
Is It Anyway? Herself Guest appearance
2003 Mrs. America
Pageant Herself Host
2003 The 26th
Annual Kennedy Center Honors: A Celebration of the Performing Arts Herself Special appearance
2004 The Brady
Bunch 35th Anniversary Reunion Special Herself TV reunion special
2006 The Surreal
Life Herself Cast member
2006 Loonatics
Unleashed Mallory "Mastermind" Casey 3 episodes
2007 The Ellen
DeGeneres Show Herself Guest appearance
2007–09 The
Florence Henderson Show Host 52 episodes
2008 Ladies of
the House Rose Olmstead TV movie
2009 Samantha
Who? Loretta Guest appearance
2010 WWE Raw Herself Guest host
2010 Dancing with
the Stars Herself Contestant
2012 The
Cleveland Show Nanny Barbara (voice) Episode: "The
Men in Me"
2012 Handy Manny Aunt Ginny Episode:
"Handy Manny and the Seven
Tools"
2012 Happily
Divorced Elizabeth Episode: "Meet the
Parents"
2012 30 Rock Herself Episode:
"My Whole Life Is Thunder"
2012 Matchmaker
Santa Peggy Hallmark Channel TV movie
2013 Who's
Cooking with Florence Henderson Host 12 episodes
2014 Trophy Wife Frances Harrison Episode: "The
Wedding - Part Two"
2014 Rachael vs.
Guy: Celebrity Cook-Off Herself Episode: "Boardwalk
Bites"
2016 K.C.
Undercover Irma Episode: "Dance Like No One's Watching"
2016 The Eleventh Regina 2
episodes (web series short)
2016 Chelsea Herself Episode: "Ellen Page
& Inspiring Role Models"
2016-2018 Sofia
the First Grand Mum (voice) 2 episodes
Stage
1949 Carousel Carrie Pepperidge
1952 Wish You
Were Here The New Girl
1952 Oklahoma! Laurey
1953 The Great
Waltz Resi
1954 Fanny Fanny
1961–62, 1968, 1978 The
Sound of Music Maria Rainer
1963–64 The
Girl Who Came to Supper Mary Morgan
1965 The King and
I Anna
1967 South
Pacific Nellie Forbush
1974, 1981 Annie
Get Your Gun Annie Oakley
Book
Henderson, Florence (September 20, 2011). Life Is Not a
Stage: From Broadway Baby to a Lovely Lady and Beyond. Center Street. ISBN
978-1-599-95388-5.
Comments
Post a Comment