Hope Lange#Date of birth
{{Short description|American actress (1933–2003)}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Hope Lange
| image = Hope Lange 1957.jpg
| caption = Lange in 1957
| birth_name = Hope Elise Ross Lange
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1933|11|28}}
| birth_place = Redding, Connecticut, U.S.
| death_date = {{Death date and age|2003|12|19|1933|11|28}}
| death_place = Santa Monica, California, U.S.
| alma_mater = Reed College
| occupation = Actress
| years_active = 1942–1998
| spouse = {{plain list|
- {{marriage|Don Murray|1956|1961|end=divorced}}
- {{marriage|Alan J. Pakula|1963|1971|end=divorced}}
- {{marriage|Charles Hollerith, Jr.|1986}}
}}
| children = 2, including Christopher Murray
}}
Hope Elise Ross Lange (November 28, 1933 – December 19, 2003){{cite book|last1=Chase|first1=William D.|author2=Helen M. Chase|title=Chase's Annual Events: Special Days, Weeks and Months in 1988|publisher=McGraw-Hill|year=1988|page=263|quote=Hope Lange, actress, born at Reading Ridge, CT, Nov. 28, 1933|isbn=978-0-8092-4667-0}} was an American film, stage, and television actress. She was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress and the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her portrayal of Selena Cross in the 1957 film Peyton Place. In 1969 and 1970, she twice won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series for her role as Carolyn Muir in the sitcom The Ghost & Mrs. Muir.
Early life
File:Radio Electronics Cover June 1949.jpg", 1949]]
Lange was born into a theatrical family in Redding, Connecticut.{{cite news|title=Hope Lange|newspaper=The Independent|date=23 December 2003|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/hope-lange-549138.html|access-date=March 3, 2009}}{{dead link|date=August 2021|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}} Her father, John George Lange, was a cellist and the music arranger for Florenz Ziegfeld and conductor for Henry Cohen; her mother, Minette (née Buddecke), was an actress.{{cite news|title=Mrs. John G. Lange|newspaper=The New York Times|date=October 31, 1970}} "Mrs. Minette Buddecke Lange, who ran Minette's restaurant in Macdougal Street from 1944 to 1956, died Oct. 23 in a nursing home in Hanover, N. H. Her age was 71. She was the widow of John George Lange, composer and conductor." They had two other daughters, Minelda and Joy, and a son, David.{{cite news|title=Jiras-Lange|newspaper=The New York Times|page=70|date=August 28, 1949}} Minelda Lange, daughter of Mrs. John G. Lange married Robert Jiras. Minelda attended American Academy of Dramatic Arts.{{cite web|title=Harry Boardman 1920–2009|publisher=Whetstone Inn, Inc.|url=http://whetstoneinn.com/harry|access-date=September 12, 2009}} "During this time [1949–1954], he met and married Joy Lange, for whose family he had worked as a waiter at their Macdougal Street restaurant—Minette’s of Washington Square—and whose sister, Hope, was beginning to make a name as a Hollywood star in movies such as Bus Stop and Peyton Place."Birth and death years for Minelda L Jiras and Joy L Boardman are from the Social Security Death Index. John worked in New York City and the family moved to Greenwich Village when Hope was a young child.{{Citation needed |date=September 2023}}
Lange sang with other children in the play Life, Laughter and Tears, which opened at the Booth Theatre in March 1942.{{cite news|title=News of the Stage|work=The New York Times|page=14|date=February 21, 1942|quote=Life, Laughter and Tears arrives at the Booth on March 11. Mildred Dunnock, Gene Ross, Mervin Taylor, Hope Lange and Joan Shepherd are recent additions to the cast.}} Her father died in September 1942. The family stayed in New York City after his death.{{cite news | title = Deaths | newspaper = The New York Times | page = 23 | date = September 15, 1942}} John George Lange, September 13, 1942. At age 9, she had a speaking part in the award-winning Broadway play The Patriots, which opened in January 1943.{{cite book|last1=Nathan|first1=George Jean|author2=Charles Angoff|author2-link=Charles Angoff|title=The Theatre Book of the Year, 1942–1943|publisher = Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press|year=1972|page=225|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mMYVBiogCVsC&pg=PA225|isbn=978-0-8386-7946-3}} The Patriots opened January 29, 1943. Hope Lange played Anne Randolph.{{cite news|last=Corry|first=John|title=Broadway|work=The New York Times|page=41|date=July 1, 1977|quote=Miss Lange was on Broadway at the age of 9, appearing in something called The Patriot}} From 1944 to 1956 Minette ran a restaurant on Macdougal Street, near Washington Square Park, called Minette's of Washington Square. (Some sources confuse it with Minetta Tavern, an Italian restaurant on Macdougal Street, founded in 1937.) The entire family worked there; Minelda ran the cash register, and Joy and Hope waited on tables.{{cite news | last = Scott | first = Vernon | title = Hope Lange is a divorcee off of stage | newspaper = Boca Raton News | location = Boca Raton, Florida | pages = 5B | date = January 5, 1972 | url = https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1291&dat=19720105&id=0MwPAAAAIBAJ&sjid=CY0DAAAAIBAJ&pg=5351,367454}}{{cite journal | last = Gehman | first = Richard | title = Moveland marriage with a mission | journal = Coronet | volume = 45 | issue = 38 | pages =38–40 | date = May 1959}}
In high school, Lange studied dance, modeled, and worked in the family restaurant. She sometimes walked the dog of former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, who had a nearby apartment.{{cite book | last1= Beasley | first1= Henry R. |author2= Holly Cowan Shulman | title = The Eleanor Roosevelt encyclopedia | publisher = Greenwood Publishing Group | year = 2001 | page = 382 | isbn = 978-0-313-30181-0}} Eleanor Roosevelt lived at 29 Washington Square West from 1945 to 1949 When her photo appeared in the newspaper, she received an offer to work as a New York City advertising model.{{cite news | last = Polgreen | first = Lydia | title = Hope Lange, Versatile Actress And Emmy Winner, Dies at 70 | work = The New York Times | date = December 22, 2003 | page = 7| url = https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9405EFD8133FF931A15751C1A9659C8B63}} She appeared on the June 1949 cover of Radio-Electronics magazine wearing the "Man from Mars" Radio Hat. This portable radio built into a pith helmet was a sensation in 1949.{{cite journal | title = The Radio Hat | journal = Radio Electronics | volume = 20 | issue = 9 |pages=4, 32–33 | date = June 1949}} Cover description: The Radio Hat, posed by Hope Lange. [http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Radio_Electronics_June_1949_pg04.jpg page 4]
Lange attended Reed College in Portland, Oregon,{{cite web|url=https://www.deseret.com/1992/11/3/19014233/where-s-hope-lange/|work=Deseret News|author=Associated Press|author-link=Associated Press|date=November 3, 1992|title=Where's Hope Lange?|archive-url=https://archive.today/20240729024923/https://www.deseret.com/1992/11/3/19014233/where-s-hope-lange/|archive-date=July 29, 2024|url-status=live}} studying dance and theater. At Reed, she was a student of artist Xenia Cage.{{cite web|work=Reed Magazine|url=https://www.reed.edu/reed_magazine/june2016/articles/letters/sculptor.html|title=Sculptor of the Surreal...|url-status=live|date=June 2016|archive-url=https://archive.today/20240729024719/https://www.reed.edu/reed_magazine/june2016/articles/letters/sculptor.html|archive-date=July 29, 2024}} After completing her first year of studies, Lange transferred to Barmore Junior College in New York,{{cite book|title=The Young Actors' Guide to Hollywood|year=1964|page=41|last1=Benner|first1=Ralph|last2=Clements|first2=Mary Jo|publisher=Coward-McCann|location=New York|oclc= 702220902}} where she met her first husband, Don Murray.{{cite news | last = Stone | first = Judy | title = Nothing Haunted About Hope | work = The New York Times | page = D19 | date = February 16, 1969}}
Career
Lange began working in television in the 1950s with appearances on Kraft Television Theatre. She was seen by a Hollywood producer and contracted to 20th Century Fox. She came to prominence in her first film role in Bus Stop with Marilyn Monroe and Don Murray, whom she married on April 14, 1956. Murray later said that Monroe grew jealous of another blonde being hired for the movie and asked the producers to dye Lange's blonde hair light brown.
File:Hope Lange in Death Wish.jpg (1974)]]
After favorable reviews, Lange landed a major role in the then-risqué 1957 film Peyton Place. Her strong performance earned her a nomination for a Golden Globe Award and another for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. She subsequently became well known for such supporting ingénue roles, and said that the resulting typecasting shortened her movie career.{{cite news | last = Oliver | first = Myrna | title = Hope Lange, 70; Drew an Oscar Nomination for 'Peyton Place' | work = Los Angeles Times | date = December 22, 2003 | url = https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2003-dec-22-me-lange22-story.html | access-date = March 13, 2009 }}
She went on to appear in Nicholas Ray's film The True Story of Jesse James (1957) as James' wife, opposite Robert Wagner; and in The Young Lions with Montgomery Clift. She starred as the wife of Jeffrey Hunter's character in Anton Myrer's wartime drama In Love and War (1958). These roles led to her earning top billing in The Best of Everything (1959), with Suzy Parker and Joan Crawford.
Lange appeared as Elvis Presley's older psychologist love interest in Wild in the Country (1961), despite being only 13 months Elvis's senior. She then appeared in Frank Capra's final movie, Pocketful of Miracles, with Glenn Ford (for whom she had left her husband, fellow actor Don Murray). The next year, she co-starred with Ford again, in the romantic comedy Love Is a Ball.
Lange returned to television for a 1966 role on the series The Fugitive (1963). She starred from 1968 to 1970 on the television series, The Ghost & Mrs. Muir for which she earned two Emmy Awards.[https://www.emmys.com/awards/nominees-winners/1969/outstanding-lead-actress-in-a-comedy-series 1969 Emmy Award][https://www.emmys.com/awards/nominees-winners/1970/outstanding-lead-actress-in-a-comedy-series 1970 Emmy Award] and a Golden Globe Award nomination. This success was followed by three seasons on The New Dick Van Dyke Show as Dick Van Dyke's wife, Jenny Preston, from 1971 to 1974, after which she declined to return for a fourth season of the show. She also appeared in twelve television movies, one being Crowhaven Farm where she played the role of a witch. In 1977, she returned to the Broadway stage where her acting career had originally begun. She also played the murdered wife of Charles Bronson's vigilante character in Death Wish (1974). In 1985, she appeared in A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge, and in 1986, she took a role as Laura Dern's mother in David Lynch's Blue Velvet. She took a Broadway role in Same Time, Next Year and then made appearances in the television movie based on Danielle Steel's Message from Nam and in Clear and Present Danger (1994).
Lange made appearances in the Maine town in which Peyton Place had been filmed during the film's 40th anniversary celebrations in 1998.
Personal life
=Date of birth=
Lange's year of birth is often reported as 1931, but the correct year is 1933. A possible source of this error is the Reader's Digest Almanac and Yearbook.{{cite book | title = Reader's Digest Almanac and Yearbook, 1980 | year = 1980 | page = 277 | publisher = Reader's Digest Association | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=LCAwAAAAMAAJ&q=%22Hope+Lange%22| quote = Hope Lange (1931– ) actress | isbn = 978-0-89577-079-0}} It had shown the year as 1931 from as early as its 1980 edition up until its 2009 issue. (The Almanac and Yearbook's 1976 and earlier editions had consistently reported Lange's year of birth as 1933.){{cite book | title = Reader's Digest Almanac and Yearbook, 1976 | year = 1976 | page = 262 | publisher = Reader's Digest Association | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=MhwwAAAAMAAJ&q=%22Hope+Lange%22|quote=Hope Lange (1933– ) actress}} Other references such as Chase's Annual Events have always shown 1933, as does her Social Security Death Index entry.
The 1933 year also matches the ages given in newspaper accounts of Lange in her youth. The New York Times covered the annual "Young People's Concert" awards given at Carnegie Hall. Lange received an award in April 1945{{cite news|title=Ganz Plays Works By Girl, 13, Boy, 14|work=The New York Times|page=36|date=April 8, 1945}} an annual "Young People's Concerts" award and again in April 1946, when her age was given as 12.{{cite news|title=Youth Awards Given For Music Notebooks|work=The New York Times|page=40|date=April 7, 1946}} Lange's age of 12 in April 1946 would correspond to a birthdate in November 1933, not 1931.
Also, a short feature story was published in February 1951 about Hope Lange's culinary skills. The first paragraph gives the biography of a 17-year-old Hope Lange of Greenwich Village, New York. Her late father was "director of music for Florenz Ziegfield [sic]" and her mother had a catering business. In addition to modeling, acting, and dancing, Hope could make "terrific" sandwiches. The article gives her recipes for "Sardine Strips" and "Cheese Ribbon" sandwiches.{{cite news|title=Versatile Greenwich Villager, 17, Tells Her Sprightly Buffet Recipes|work=The Lowell Sun|page=4|date=February 20, 1951}} This wire-service story was published in several newspapers. Born in 1933, Lange would have been 17 years old in February 1951.
=Marriages and relationships=
Lange's first marriage was to actor Don Murray. They married while he was filming his breakout role in Bus Stop with Marilyn Monroe in 1956; they had two children, actor Christopher Murray and photographer Patricia Murray. Lange left Don Murray in 1961 for actor Glenn Ford, the associate producer and co-star of Pocketful of Miracles. They had a four-year relationship but never married. From October 19, 1963, until their divorce in 1971, Lange was married to film director Alan J. Pakula.{{Cite news |last=Sterngold |first=James |date=1998-11-20 |title=Alan J. Pakula, Film Director, Dies at 70 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1998/11/20/movies/alan-j-pakula-film-director-dies-at-70.html |access-date=2024-01-28 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}
In 1972, Hope dated Frank Sinatra and began a relationship with the married novelist John Cheever.{{cite book|last=Donaldson|first=Scott|title=John Cheever: A Biography|publisher=iUniverse|year=2001|page=237|url =https://books.google.com/books?id=1DecfKQ6vU0C&pg=PA237|isbn=978-0-595-21138-8|access-date=March 13, 2009}} In 1986, she married theatrical producer Charles Hollerith, Jr. (1927–2011), with whom she remained for the rest of her life.
Death
Lange died on December 19, 2003, at St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica, California, as a result of an ischemic colitis infection at the age of 70. Her body was cremated.{{cite news|url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4188/is_20031222/ai_n11418924/|title=Hope Lange, actress in 'Peyton Place,' dies|date=2003-12-22|newspaper=Deseret News |location=Salt Lake City|access-date=2009-05-17}}
Filmography
=Film=
=Television=
class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable" style="margin-right: 0;" |
scope="col" | Year
! scope="col" | Title ! scope="col" | Role ! scope="col" class="unsortable" | Notes ! scope="col" class="unsortable" | {{Tooltip|Ref.|Reference}} |
---|
scope="row" | 1956
| Randy | Episode: "Snapfinger Creek" | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1957–1958
| Raiya | 3 episodes | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1962
| Cyrano De Bergerac | Roxane | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1962; 1975
| Roxane | 2 episodes | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1966
| Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre | Rachel Douglas | Episode: "Shipwrecked" | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1966
| Annie Johnson | Episode: "The Last Oasis" |
scope="row" | 1967
| CBS Playhouse | Lois Graves | Episode: "Dear Friends" |
scope="row" | 1968–1970
| Carolyn Muir | 50 episodes | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1970
| Maggie Porter | Television film |
scope="row" | 1971–1974
| Jenny Preston | 72 episodes |
scope="row" |1972
| Janet Salter | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1973
| The 500 Pound Jerk | Karen Walsh | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1974
| I Love You, Good-bye | Karen Chandler | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1974
| Fer-de-Lance | Elaine Wedell | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1975
| Pat Durant | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1975
| Medical Story | Diana Hopkins | Episode: "Woman In White" | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1975
| The Rivalry | Mrs. Douglas | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1976
| Harriet | Episode: "Afternoon Waltz" | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1977
| Ann Wells | Episode: "Nightmare on a Sunday Morning" | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1977
| The Love Boat II | Elaine Palmer | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1978
| Sandra Newberry | Episode: "Where Is It Written?/Julie's Aunt/The Big Deal" |
scope="row" | 1978
| Herself (panelist) | 5 episodes | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1979
| Like Normal People | Roz Meyers | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1980
| Claudia | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1980
| Deborah Kendrick | Miniseries |
scope="row" | 1980
| Madelaine Calvert | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1982
| Kate Riley | Episode: "Recipe for Murder" | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1983
| Marion Stamford | Episode: "Naughty Marietta/The Winning Ticket" | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1983–1986
| Hotel | Gwen Andrews | 2 episodes | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1984
| Catherine Connally Smith | Episode: "Maxwell Ltd: Finder of Lost Loves Pilot" | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1985
| Survival Guide | | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1985
| Mrs. Coles | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1987
| Ford: The Man and the Machine | Clara Ford | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1987
| Frances Fletcher | Episode: " A Family Tree" | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1987–1993
| Charlotte Newcastle | 2 episodes |
scope="row" | 1989
| Gloria Daye | 7 episodes |
scope="row" | 1993
| Virginia DeSilva | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1993
| Cassie Willette | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1993
| Message from Nam | Marjorie Wilson | Television film | align=center| |
scope="row" | 1998
| Before He Wakes | Helen Rawlings | Television film, (final film role) | align=center| |
Awards and nominations
References
{{Reflist|2}}
External links
{{Commons category|Hope Lange}}
- {{IBDB name}}
- {{IMDb name|0486136}}
- {{Tcmdb name}}
{{EmmyAward ComedyLeadActress}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lange, Hope}}
Category:20th-century American actresses
Category:Actresses from Manhattan
Category:American child actresses
Category:Female models from Connecticut
Category:American film actresses
Category:American stage actresses
Category:American television actresses
Category:Outstanding Performance by a Lead Actress in a Comedy Series Primetime Emmy Award winners
Category:Infectious disease deaths in California