I read in the paper today that Jean Stapleton (“Dingbat” on Norman Lear’s All in the Family) couldn’t make Carrol O’Connors funeral as she had something else going on.
I could have swore she passed away several years ago.
Has this ever happened to you? Finding out someone has passed on without your awares is disconcerting enough, but believing someone is 6 feet under when they are quite alive is really odd.
This was in ‘Parade’ magazine, the weekly sunday supplement, if that matters.
I figured you meant Maureen Stapleton, who I REALLY thought was dead, but I looked 'em up on Dead People Server and, by golly, they’re BOTH alive! I guess this is great news. have a nice night.
No, just Edith passed away. I actually had the same problem since I wasn’t terribly old when the character died. Imagine my surprise to find out a few years later that the actress was still ok.
I’m with you, though, Tedster. I would have sworn up and down that Jean Stapleton was as dead as Al Capone, and when she popped up in You’ve Got Mail it was as if a ghost had walked onto the screen. I was sitting these thinking “Hey, wait a second, that’s Jean Stapleton. I thought she was dead,” when a person a few rows behind us said to their party, “Hey, that’s Jean Stapleton. I thought she was dead!”
I wonder if people tell her that and if she says “Yeah, I get that a lot,” like Snake Plissken.
I would have bet the farm that Nancy Dussault was dead. I know I heard it on the radio or TV back in the late 80’s. She was the wife of Ted Knight in the sitcom “Too Close for Comfort.” I thought how ironic, because Ted Knight died about a year after the series run. I thought I heard of her death within three years of that. I of course told just about everyone I knew, and said “wasn’t it a shame? Some kind of cancer.” Now I am glad that we have the handy-dandy internet to check up on stuff like that and save face in the process.
“Fay Wray has no right to be still alive, but she is.”
—Ahem. There are so few silent stars left, there’s no need to be pushing the old dears in front of trucks, bib.
• Fay Wray (b. 1907, entered films 1923)
• Anita Page (b. 1910, entered films 1925—a good friend of mine)
• Mary Brian (b. 1908, entered films 1924)
• Baby Peggy (b. 1918,. entered films 1921)
• Mickey Rooney (b. 1920, entered films 1926)
Plus a few more I won’t remember till I see their obits in “Classic Images.”
I thought Jean Stapleton was dead as well, until Caroll O’Connor died and I read that she couldn’t be there at the funeral.
For years, I thought that John Gielgud was dead. My husband would say, “No, no, you’re thinking of Alec Guiness. He’s dead.” I would always get them confused (no idea why). Then, last year (IIRC) they both up and died within months of each other. (This is bad to say, but at least I don’t have to worry about that anymore).
I thought Frank Oz was dead. The other day, I was reading that he’s going to be in some new movie (don’t remember what). I said, “Oh, he must have filmed it before he died.” My husband said he wasn’t dead. We looked it up and to my surprise, he’s still around. I thought he died a few years ago!
Jean Stapleton is not only alive but well and very active. She does at least one or two movies or movies for television a year, in addition to her work on the stage.
Earlier this year she did a great job in “Like Mother, Like Son”, the TV movie about the Kimes (the grifters who killed their landlady in New York – Jean played the landlady).
TV stars tend to fade from consciousness unless they’re on a big hit show.
Actually, no. The reason that I remember it being Frank Oz that died (well, not really, but I thought so) is that I remember thinking, “Oh, he was the voice of Miss Piggy. How sad.” I know for a fact that Jim Henson died many years ago, because I can still remember my shock over it when my mom told me about it. I was still a kid. The Frank Oz thing was not long ago. In fact, I could swear that my husband told me about it.