Madlyn Rhue
{{short description|American actress (1935–2003)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2022}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Madlyn Rhue
| image = Madlyn Rhue 1961.JPG
| caption = Rhue in 1961
| birth_name = Madeline Roche
| birth_date = {{birth date|1935|10|3}}
| birth_place = Washington, D.C., U.S.
| death_date = {{death date and age|2003|12|16|1935|10|3}}
| death_place = Los Angeles, California, U.S.
| occupation = Actress
| yearsactive = 1958–1996
| spouse = {{marriage|Tony Young|1962|1970|end=divorced}}
}}
Madlyn Soloman Rhue (née Madeline Roche),{{cite news |last1=Buck |first1=Jerry |title=Actress Madlyn Rhue doesn't let MS slow her |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/22291838/madlyn_rhue/ |work=Springfield News-Leader |agency=Associated Press |date=September 28, 1989 |page=18 |via=Newspapers.com |access-date=July 28, 2018}} {{Open access}} (October 3, 1935 – December 16, 2003) was an American film and television actress.
Early life and education
Rhue was born in Washington, D.C.,{{Cite news |agency=Associated Press |date=December 20, 2003 |title=Madlyn Rhue, 68, Television Actress |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/20/arts/madlyn-rhue-68-television-actress.html |access-date=March 18, 2022 |url-access=subscription |issn=0362-4331 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171228223704/https://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/20/arts/madlyn-rhue-68-television-actress.html |archive-date=2017-12-28 |url-status=live}} graduated from Los Angeles High School, and studied drama at Los Angeles City College.
Entertainment career
Rhue debuted in show business at age 17 as a dancer at the Copacabana night club in New York City.{{cite news |last1=Rosenbert |first1=Howard |title=Stricken with MS, Madlyn Rhue still a working actress |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-08-14-ca-727-story.html |work=Los Angeles Times |date=August 14, 1987 |page=72 |access-date=October 26, 2022 |url-access=subscription |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221026144913/https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-08-14-ca-727-story.html |archive-date=2022-10-26 |url-status=live}} At that time she decided to create a stage name for herself by adapting the title of the film 13 Rue Madeleine (1947). From the 1950s to the 1990s, she appeared in some 20 films, including Operation Petticoat (1959); The Ladies Man (1961); A Majority of One (1961); It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963); Kenner (1969); and Stand Up and Be Counted (1972).
Rhue guest-starred in dozens of television series, beginning with Cheyenne (1955). She played Ricardo Montalbán's wife in a 1960 episode of Bonanza, "Day of Reckoning". That year, she also played the title role of Marian Ames in the Perry Mason episode "The Case of the Wayward Wife" and appeared in Route 66 Season 3 Episode 9.
Later in the 1960s, her appearances included Stagecoach West (1961), Rawhide (1963), The Defenders (1965) in "Whipping Boy" as Christine Knox and the classic Star Trek episode "Space Seed" (1967) where she once again appeared opposite Ricardo Montalbán (who played Khan Noonien Singh) playing his love interest Lt. Marla McGivers.{{cite web|last1=DeCandido|first1=Keith|title=Star Trek The Original Series Rewatch: Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan|url=http://www.tor.com/2017/05/23/star-trek-the-original-series-rewatch-star-trek-ii-the-wrath-of-khan/|website=Tor.com-Blog|publisher=Tor.com|access-date=May 25, 2017|date=May 23, 2017}}
Rhue played regulars Marjorie Grant in Bracken's World (1969–70){{cite book|last1=Terrace|first1=Vincent|title=Encyclopedia of Television Shows, 1925 through 2010|date=2011|publisher=McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers|location=Jefferson, N.C.|isbn=978-0-7864-6477-7|page=129|edition=2nd}} and Hilary Madison in Executive Suite (1976–77).{{r|etvs|page1=316}} Other guest appearances included Have Gun – Will Travel, Gunsmoke (S5E15). "Tag You're It". The Alfred Hitchcock Hour (as Consuela Sandino in episode "The Dark Pool"), Route 66 (as Ara Rados in the episode, "Every Father's Daughter"), The Untouchables, The Rebel, Perry Mason, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., The Fugitive, Ironside, The Wild Wild West, Mannix, Hawaii Five-O, Mission: Impossible, Longstreet, Fantasy Island, Charlie's Angels (as Georgia in "Angels on the Street" in 1979) and Fame (as Angela Schwartz). She also appeared in the television movie Goldie and the Boxer, and made appearances on the game show Match Game during 1974–1976.
In the early 1960s, Rhue was injured in an automobile accident that resulted in lost teeth and a cut lower lip. She was hospitalized before returning to acting.{{cite news |last1=Glazer |first1=Barney |title=Barney Glazer's Hollywood |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/22291906/madlyn_rhue/ |work=Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle |date=August 11, 1961 |page=2 |via=Newspapers.com |access-date=July 28, 2018}} {{Open access}}
In 1962, Rhue married actor Tony Young{{Cite magazine |date=December 20, 2003 |title=Madlyn Rhue |url=https://variety.com/2003/scene/people-news/madlyn-rhue-1117897422/ |access-date=March 18, 2022 |magazine=Variety |language=en-US}} and acted with him in the Western He Rides Tall. They divorced in 1970.
= Multiple sclerosis and later entertainment career =
In 1977, Rhue was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.{{cite news |first=Dennis |last=McLellan |title=Madlyn Rhue, 68; TV Actress Kept Working With Multiple Sclerosis |newspaper=Los Angeles Times |date=December 18, 2003 |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2003-dec-18-me-rhue18-story.html |access-date=August 10, 2013 |url-access=subscription |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200804092210/https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2003-dec-18-me-rhue18-story.html |archive-date=2020-08-04 |url-status=live}} She continued to work, including a role in Days of Our Lives, but by 1985, Rhue's legs had become so weak from the multiple sclerosis that she could only get around by wheelchair. Once becoming a wheelchair user, Rhue described feelings of fear and anxiety over being unable to land on-screen work in the entertainment industry for a period of 11 months. Regarding the matter, she was quoted as stating, "It became apparent that I would have to invent a giant accident to explain the wheelchair or start telling the truth."
Despite being reliant on a wheelchair, Rhue managed to resume her entertainment career and was praised by media outlets for not allowing her health issues to disrupt her career. She played intermittent roles that did not require her to walk or stand, sometimes incorporating the wheelchair as part of the character. For example, she played a wheelchair-using ballistics expert on the CBS police-based legal drama, Houston Knights.{{cite news |title=Wheelchair-Bound Star Holds On to Her Dream |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/hattiesburg-american-madlyn-rhue-1935-2/173657502/ |work=Hattiesburg American |date=October 16, 1987 |location=Hattiesburg, MS |page=19 |access-date=June 2, 2025 |via=Newspapers.com}} {{Open access}} She also played a judge role in the scripted court show, Trial by Jury, lasting only the 1989–90 television season. She performed the role in a wheelchair, unseen to viewers as she presided from the judge's bench. Her part as a female judge was uncharacteristic for court shows, the genre dominated by men performing the judge role to that point. She also performed a recurring role in Murder, She Wrote, said to be her last television role.{{cite magazine |first=Madlyn |last=Rhue |title=After Years of Lying, Actress Madlyn Rhue Reveals Truth About Her Multiple Sclerosis |magazine=People |date=November 16, 1987 |volume=28 |issue=20 |url=https://people.com/archive/after-years-of-lying-actress-madlyn-rhue-reveals-the-truth-about-her-multiple-sclerosis-vol-28-no-20/ |access-date=August 11, 2013}} Angela Lansbury created a role for her when she heard that Rhue was at risk of losing her health insurance because she could no longer work enough hours.
Contrary to rumors, her illness apparently had nothing to do with her not reprising the Star Trek role of Lt. Marla McGivers in the film Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982). At the time of the film's production start in late 1981, Rhue was still mobile and appearing in television roles, but hiding her diagnosis for fear of it impacting her career. Director Nicholas Meyer stated that he wrote McGivers out of his drafts of the film (with a line referencing the character's death) in order to give the Khan character additional motivation for seeking vengeance.{{Cite web|title=Trek II Myths Rhue the Day|url=https://www.facttrek.com/blog/rhue|access-date=September 20, 2021|website=FACT TREK|language=en-US}}
In 1991, in her last movie, she played a wheelchair-using character in the made for television thriller A Mother's Justice.
Death
Rhue eventually became completely incapacitated by multiple sclerosis and died from pneumonia at the age of 68 at the Motion Picture & Television Country House and Hospital in Woodland Hills in Los Angeles, California.
Religion and politics
Rhue adhered to Judaism outside of her marriage to Young, during which she partook in Catholicism.{{citation |title=An Interview With Madlyn Rhue |first=Skip E. |last=Lowe |date=1996}} She was also a registered Republican who supported the administrations of Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan, and George H. W. Bush.
Filmography
=Film=
class="wikitable sortable" | |||
Year
! Title ! Role ! class="unsortable" | Notes | |||
---|---|---|---|
1958
|{{sortname|The|Kiss|The Kiss (1958 film)}} |Girl in Park |Short | |||
1959 | {{sortname|The|Miracle|The Miracle (1959 film)}} | Nun who warns Teresa about her singing love songs | Uncredited |
1959 | Operation Petticoat | Lieutenant Reid, NC, USAR | |
1961 | {{sortname|The|Ladies Man}} | Miss Intellect | |
1961 | A Majority of One | Alice Black | |
1962 | Escape from Zahrain | Laila | |
1963 | It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World | Secretary Schwartz | |
1964 | He Rides Tall | Ellie Daniels | |
1969 | Kenner | Anasuya | |
1972 | Stand Up and Be Counted | Gloria Seagar |
=Television=
class="wikitable sortable" | |||
Year
! Title ! Role ! class="unsortable" | Notes | |||
---|---|---|---|
1958
|{{sortname|The|Court of Last Resort}} |Janice Lowell |Season 1 Episode 22: "The Stephen Lowell Case" | |||
1958
|Phyllis Bolling |Season 2 Episode 10: "Seven Orchids" | |||
1958–1959
|Jean Nelson / Elizabeth DeVries |2 episodes | |||
1959
|Linda |Season 2 Episode 5: "Aces and Eights" | |||
1959
|{{sortname|The|Third Man|The Third Man (TV series)}} |Hassani |Season 1 Episode 20: "Five Hours to Kill" | |||
1959
|Julie Reynolds |Season 1 Episode 19: "Client: Reynolds" | |||
1959
|Loretta Danzig |Season 2 Episode 40: "Death Is a Clock" | |||
1959
|Cassie Baird |Season 1 Episode 3: "About Roger Mowbray" | |||
1959
|Ellen Lassiter |Season 4 Episode 6: "Prisoner of Moon Mesa" | |||
1959
|Judy Brannen |Season 1 Episode 10: "The Money Fight" | |||
1959
|{{sortname|The|Rebel|The Rebel (American TV series)}} |Beth Lassiter |Season 1 Episode 10: "In Memoriam" | |||
1959
|Linda |Season 4 Episode 13: "Woman with a Gun" | |||
1959
|Rusty |Season 5 Episode 15: "Tag, You're It" | |||
1959
|Eve |Season 1 Episode 16: "The Pass" | |||
1959
|Mary |Season 1 Episode 10: "The Trap" | |||
1959–1960
|Lenore Lamartine / Nita Roulas |2 episodes | |||
1960
|Sarah Carter |Season 1 Episode 15: "Sundance Goes To Kill" | |||
1960
|Marian Ames |Season 3 Episode 13: "The Case of the Wayward Wife" | |||
1960
|{{sortname|The|Troubleshooters|The Troubleshooters (American TV series)}} |Rhoda Spencer |Season 1 Episode 21: "Incident at Rain Mountain" | |||
1960
|{{sortname|The|Alaskans}} |Fay Loomis |Season 1 Episode 24: "Disaster at Gold Hill" | |||
1960
|Ellen Fairchild |Season 1 Episode 3: "The Last Mile" | |||
1960
|Rose Dabney |Season 1 Episode 2: "Ballad for a Badman" | |||
1960
|Agnes Musgrave |Season 1 Episode 2: "A Night with Nora" | |||
1960
|{{sortname|The|Roaring 20's|The Roaring 20's (TV series)}} |Julie Fiore |Season 1 Episode 1: "Burnett's Woman" | |||
1960
|Hatoya |Season 2 Episode 7: "Day of Reckoning" | |||
1960
|Nora Sutton |Season 4 Episode 2: "A Noose for Nora" | |||
1960
|Lola |Season 1 Episode 5: "The Jade Empress" | |||
1960
|Irene Thorne |Season 1 Episode 7: "Target: Tycoon" | |||
1960
|Deborah |Season 9 Episode 14: "The Other Wise Man" | |||
1960
|{{sortname|The|Untouchables|The Untouchables (1959 TV series)}} |Chickie Bernstein / Sally Karpeles |2 episodes | |||
1960
|{{sortname|The|Westerner|The Westerner (TV series)}} |Carla |Season 1 Episode 13: "The Painting" | |||
1961
|Maria Lorenz |Season 1 Episode 26: "Fort Wyatt Crossing" | |||
1961
|Sherry Drake |Season 3 Episode 9: "The Assassins" | |||
1961
|Gloria White |Season 1 Episode 14: "Jaws of Darkness" | |||
1962
|Margarita Safa |Season 1 Episode 28: "Women of Silure" | |||
1962
|Ara Rados |Season 3 Episode 9: "Every Father's Daughter" | |||
1963
|{{sortname|The|Nurses|The Nurses (TV series)}} |Rhoda Green |Season 1 Episode 24: "A Question of Mercy" | |||
1963
|Mrs. Knight |Season 5 Episode 25: "Flight 307" | |||
1963
|{{sortname|The|Alfred Hitchcock Hour|Alfred Hitchcock Presents}} |Consuela Sandino |Season 1 Episode 29: "The Dark Pool" | |||
1963
|Inez Maldenado |Season 5 Episode 29: "Incident at Rio Doloroso" | |||
1963
|Girl |Season 3 Episode 15: "Man Without a Witness" | |||
1963
|Christina Ortega |Season 1 Episode 3: "Tears from a Silver Dipper" | |||
1963
|{{sortname|The|Lieutenant}} |Jackie Madian |Season 1 Episode 14: "The Alien" | |||
1963–1971
|{{sortname|The|Virginian|The Virginian (TV series)}} |Marie Valonne / Frankie Grace |2 episodes | |||
1964
|Susan Wilder |Season 1 Episode 16: "We the Hunted" | |||
1964
|Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre |Lillian |Season 1 Episode 24: "The Game with Glass Pieces" | |||
1964–1966
|{{sortname|The|Fugitive|The Fugitive (1963 TV series)}} |Sophie / Liz Roland |2 episodes | |||
1964–1967
|{{sortname|The|Man from U.N.C.L.E.}} |Clara Valder / Angela Abaca |2 episodes | |||
1965
|Ester Moncour |Season 1 Episode 13: "The Hostages" | |||
1965
|{{sortname|The|Defenders|The Defenders (1961 TV series)}} |Christine Knox |Season 4 Episode 14: "Whipping Boy" | |||
1965
|Lupe Leon |Season 1 Episode 17: "Question: Does Nero Still at Ringside Sit?" | |||
1965
|Manicurist (uncredited) |Season 3 Episode 3: "Steam Heat" | |||
1965
|Jean |Season 1 Episode 8: "The Time of the Knife" | |||
1965
|Ann Clayton |Season 1 Episode 12: "A Special Talent for Killing" | |||
1966
|Dona Dolores |Season 1 Episode 29: "The Would-Be Gentleman of Laredo" | |||
1966
|Angela Burnett |Season 1 Episode 10: "The Man from New Chicago" | |||
1967
|Lt. Marla McGivers |Episode: "Space Seed" | |||
1967
|Amanda Woolf |Season 1 Episode 10: "Who's Afraid of Amanda Woolf?" | |||
1967
|{{sortname|The|Wild Wild West}} |Carlotta Waters |Season 3 Episode 1: "The Night of the Bubbling Death" | |||
1967
|Alma Britten |TV Movie | |||
1967–1974
|Margaret Blackwell / Betty Julian / Kate Dunhill / Amy Frost |4 episodes | |||
1968
|Christie Blaine |Season 1 Episode 23: "Work of Art" | |||
1968
|Melinda Garcia |Season 2 Episode 1: "One Night on Soledade" | |||
1968
|{{sortname|The|Guns of Will Sonnett}} |Marion Hagger |Season 2 Episode 6: "The Straw Man" | |||
1969–1970
|Majorie Grant |27 episodes (Recurring role) | |||
1969–1975
|Laura Giles / Marcia Inman / Nedda Kordic |3 episodes | |||
1970
|Bertha Fry |Season 2 Episode 20: "The Deadly Dart" | |||
1970–1973
|(1) Madge | (1) Season 3 Episode 13: "The Payoff" (1970) (2) Season 5 Episode 17: "Here Today... Gone Tonight" (1973) | ||
1971
|{{sortname|The|Courtship of Eddie's Father|The Courtship of Eddie's Father (TV series)}} |Dolores Carew |Season 3 Episode 7: "Two's Company" | |||
1971
|Kim Anderson |Season 1 Episode 11: "This Little Piggy Went to Marquette" | |||
1972
|{{sortname|The|Manhunter|nolink=1}} |Teresa Taylor |TV Movie | |||
1972
|Holly Allencamp |Season 1 Episode 1: "Let's Hear It for a Living Legend" | |||
1972
|Adele Cooper |Season 7 Episode 10: "Ultimatum" | |||
1972
|Georgia Strauss |Season 1 Episode 12: "Creatures of the Canyon" | |||
1973
|Frances Emerson |TV Movie | |||
1973
|Myra Stayley |Season 2 Episode 8: "The Deadly Prize" | |||
1973
|Owen Marshall, Counselor at Law |Neva Boland |Season 3 Episode 10: "Snatches of a Crazy Song" | |||
1974
|{{sortname|The|Sex Symbol|nolink=1}} |Joy Hudson |TV Movie | |||
1974
|Maria |Season 1 Episode 6: "Firefall" | |||
1974–1976
|Gloria Norlan / Phyllis Behr |2 episodes | |||
1975
|Sue Ellen |Season 2 Episode 13: "Headhunter" | |||
1975
|Sharon Fowler |Season 1 Episode 1: "He'll Never See Daylight" | |||
1975
|Ellen Walker |Season 1 Episode 17: "A Lonely Victim" | |||
1975
|Mrs. Doran |TV Movie | |||
1975–1977
|Evelynn Thurston / Donna Mendarez |2 episodes | |||
1976
|Belinda Williams |Season 1 Episode 17: "Losing Streak" | |||
1976
|{{sortname|The|Streets of San Francisco}} |Crystal |Season 4 Episode 20: "Clown of Death" | |||
1976–1977
|Hilary Mason/Madison |Series regular | |||
1977
|Millie |Season 1 Episode 7: "A Space Odyssey" | |||
1978
|{{sortname|The|Tony Randall Show}} |Evelyn |Season 2 Episode 19: "Phantom of the Poconos" | |||
1979
|{{sortname|The|Best Place to Be}} |Emily Stockwood |TV Movie | |||
1979
|Georgia |Season 4 Episode 7: "Angels on the Street" | |||
1979
|Charlotte Fleming |Season 1 Episode 8: "Max in Love" | |||
1979
|Marsha |TV Movie | |||
1979–1983
|Madlyn Rhue (uncredited) / Mildred Sloane |3 episodes | |||
1980
|Laura Stedman |Season 5 Episode 16: "Unhappy Hour" | |||
1981
|Lucy |2 episodes | |||
1981
|Tina Claremont |Season 4 Episode 3: "The Model" | |||
1982
|Fantasies |Rebecca |TV Movie | |||
1982
|Lillie Langtry |Season 6 Episode 3: "The Perfect Gentleman/Legend" | |||
1982
|Games Mother Never Taught You | |TV Movie | |||
1982–1984
|Daphne DiMera |66 episodes | |||
1982–1985
|Fame |Mrs. Angela Schwartz |8 episodes | |||
1986
|Carolyn Ryan |Series regular | |||
1987
|Judge Wyatt (uncredited) |Season 2 Episode 3: "Cannon of Ethics" | |||
1987–1988
|Annie Hartung |18 episodes (Recurring role) | |||
1989
|Judge |Season 1 Episode 1: "Episode #1.1" | |||
1989-1996 | Murder, She Wrote | (1) Doris West (2) (3) (4) (5) Jean O'Neill | (1) Season 6 Episode 2: "Seal of the Confessional" (1989) (2) Season 10 Episode 3: "The Legacy of Borbey House" (1993) (3) Season 10 Episode 21: "Wheel of Death" (1994) (4) Season 12 Episode 5: "Home Care" (1995) (5) Season 12 Episode 14: "Murder on Tempo" (1996) |
1991
|A Mother's Justice |Lois Greenfield |TV Movie |
References
{{reflist}}
External links
{{Portal|Biography|United States|California|Television|Film}}
- {{IMDb name}}
{{Memory Alpha}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Rhue, Madlyn}}
Category:20th-century American actresses
Category:20th-century American Jews
Category:21st-century American Jews
Category:21st-century American women
Category:Actresses from Los Angeles
Category:Actresses from Washington, D.C.
Category:American film actresses
Category:American television actresses
Category:Deaths from pneumonia in California
Category:Los Angeles City College alumni
Category:Los Angeles High School alumni
Category:People with multiple sclerosis
Category:California Republicans
Category:Washington (state) Republicans