Laurette Spang-McCook
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Laurette Spang-McCook | |
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Born | Laurette Spang May 16, 1951 Buffalo, New York, U.S. |
Occupation | Actress |
Spouse(s) | John McCook (m. 1980); 3 children |
Laurette Spang-McCook (born May 16, 1951) is an American television actress. She is best-known for playing the character Cassiopeia in the original Battlestar Galactica (1978).
Contents
Biography
Early life/family
Spang was born in Buffalo, New York and raised in Ann Arbor, Michigan. During her youth, she was an active letter-writer, penning letters to actors. She was also a fan of the gothic soap opera, Dark Shadows and of the television western, Bonanza. She is related to Bollywood producer-actor Stegath Dorr.
At 16, she accompanied her father on a business trip to New York City, where she waited at the stage door of Dark Shadows. The stage guard allowed her to walk in, leading her to actress Kathryn Leigh Scott. After their meeting, Spang would answer Scott's fan mail through high-school.
Career
The summer of her junior year, Spang auditioned to be an apprentice at Williamstown Summer Theater. A year later, Scott set up an audition for Spang at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. She received a scholarship and graduated from there two years later. Following graduation in 1969, Spang returned to Michigan where she attended Adrian College, living dorm life on a small campus, but not far from her family in Ann Arbor.[citation needed]
After a Universal Studios talent agent spotted her in 1972, Spang signed a 7-year contract with the studio. She then had a succession of guest-starring roles in television shows including Emergency!, Adam-12 (Episode: Venice Division), The Streets of San Francisco, The Six Million Dollar Man, Happy Days, Chase, Isis, Charlie's Angels, and Lou Grant. Spang also appeared in the TV movies Short Walk to Daylight, Runaway!, and Sarah T. - Portrait of a Teenage Alcoholic. She co-starred in a production of Winesburg, Ohio on KCET's Hollywood Television Theatre.[1]
Towards the end of her contract with Universal(by which time, according to People Weekly Magazine,[volume & issue needed] her money was almost exhausted and she had been evicted from an apartment she had been renting), Spang was cast as Cassiopeia in the Battlestar Galactica pilot movie, "Saga of a Star World". An initial draft of the script had her killed off in the pilot film, in which the reptiloid Ovions consumed her, almost cannibal-style. However, the character survived and the network kept her on in a regular role in the subsequent weekly series, but "Standards And Practices" (network censors) forced a change of profession upon her. (The censors would no longer allow her to be a socialator, so Glen Larson and Donald P. Bellisario had her character become a medtech in the series, beginning with "Lost Planet Of The Gods, Parts One And Two").[1]
Spang's later acting performances were in The Love Boat, Fantasy Island, The Dukes of Hazzard, and Magnum, P.I.. She took a de facto retirement from acting in 1984, though she made a brief appearance in the 2007 horror film Plot 7, which also featured her by-then husband John McCook. In 2002, Spang appeared in the Battlestar Galactica episode of Sciography documentary series on the Sci-Fi Channel in 2002. In 2003, she appeared in another Battlestar Galactica documentary included as an extra feature in the DVD boxset of the series released for the show's 25th anniversary.[1]
Personal life
Spang married actor John McCook on February 16, 1980; the couple has three children.[1]
Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1972 | The Bold Ones: The New Doctors | Real Estate Lady | Episode: "Is This Operation Necessary?" |
1972 | Short Walk to Daylight | Sandy | TV film |
1972 | Emergency! | Betsy Power | Episode: "Dinner Date" |
1973 | Alias Smith and Jones | Emma Sterling | Episode: "Only Three to a Bed" |
1973 | Winesburg, Ohio | Helen White | TV film |
1973 | Marcus Welby, M.D. | Episode: "The Panic Path" | |
1973 | Chase | Jill Bronston | Episode: "Foul-Up" |
1973 | Runaway! | Coed | TV film |
1973 | Emergency! | Sally | Episode: "The Old Engine" |
1973 | Adam-12 | Carla Rogers | Episode: "Venice Division" |
1973 | The Streets of San Francisco | Kim | Episode: "Harem" |
1973 | Maneater | Polly | TV film |
1973 | Owen Marshall: Counselor at Law | Sherry | Episode: "A Girl Named Tham" |
1974 | Happy Days | Arlene Holder | Episode: "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do" |
1974 | The Six Million Dollar Man | Yeoman Helen Maychick | Episode: "Survival of the Fittest" |
1974 | Airport 1975 | Arlene | |
1974 | The Rangers | Julie Beck | TV film |
1975 | Emergency! | Mrs. Long | Episode: "Kidding" |
1975 | Sarah T. – Portrait of a Teenage Alcoholic | Nancy | TV film |
1975 | Sunshine | Cathy | Episode: "Jill" |
1975 | Happy Days | Denise Hudson | Episode: "Kiss Me Stickly" |
1976 | The Love Boat | Juanita Havlicek | TV film |
1976 | Isis | Ann | Episode: "The Cheerleader" |
1976 | Gemini Man | Maggie | Episode: "Run, Sam, Run" |
1976 | Charlie's Angels | Tracy Martel | Episode: "Consenting Adults" |
1977 | McNamara's Band | Helga Zimhoff | TV pilot episode |
1977 | Happy Days | Arlene | Episode: "The Graduation: Part 1" Episode: "Hollywood: Part 1" Episode: "Hollywood: Part 2" Episode: "Hollywood: Part 3" |
1978 | Lou Grant | Joanie Hume | Episode: "Airliner" Episode: "Spies" |
1978 | The Love Boat | Melanie Taylor | Episode: "A Very Special Girl" |
1978 | Man from Atlantis | Amanda Trevanian | Episode: "The Siren" |
1978 | Colorado C.I. | Chris Morrison | TV pilot episode |
1978 | Battlestar Galactica | Cassiopeia | |
1978 | Project U.F.O. | Linda Collins | Episode: "Sighting 4015: The Underwater Incident" |
1978–79 | Battlestar Galactica | Cassiopeia | 21 episodes |
1979 | B.J. and the Bear | Snow White | Episode: "Snow White and the Seven Lady Truckers: Part 1" Episode: "Snow White and the Seven Lady Truckers: Part 1" |
1980 | Barnaby Jones | Lucy | Episode: "The Final Victim" |
1980 | Tourist | RoseAnne Wicker | TV film |
1980 | Three's Company | Inga | Episode: "Downhill Chaser" |
1981 | B.J. and the Bear | Snow White | Episode: "B.J. and the Seven Lady Truckers: Part 2" |
1981 | The Love Boat | Linda | Episode: "Split Personality" |
1981 | Aloha Paradise | Episode: "Blue Honeymoon" | |
1981 | Fantasy Island | Karen Saunders-Holmes | Episode: "The Searcher" |
1981 | The Dukes of Hazzard | Mindy Lou | Episode: "The Fugitive" |
1982 | The Day the Bubble Burst | Frances Pierce | TV film |
1984 | Magnum, P.I. | Marge Atherton / Zelda Fitzgerald | Episode: "The Case of the Red-Faced Thespian" |
2003 | Galacticon | Cassiopeia | Video short |
2007 | Plot 7 | Lady in White |
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Laurette Spang-McCook at the Internet Movie Database
External links
- Articles with hCards
- No local image but image on Wikidata
- Articles with unsourced statements from March 2015
- Articles with unsourced statements from November 2014
- Official website not in Wikidata
- 1951 births
- American film actresses
- American television actresses
- Actresses from Buffalo, New York
- Actresses from Michigan
- Living people
- Actors from Ann Arbor, Michigan