Patty will be missed so and I wanted to take this time to say Fly High Patty Duke may you RIP you will be sorely missed !! Here is article on her in the LA Times.
Kimberly
TV REALITY MOM
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http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/tv/showtracker/la-et-st-patty-duke-dead-story.html
Patty Duke dies at 69; former child star and Academy Award winner
"This morning, our beloved wife, mother, grandmother, matriarch and the exquisite artist, humanitarian, and champion for mental health, Anna 'PATTY DUKE' Pearce, closed her eyes, quieted her pain and ascended to a beautiful place," son and actor Sean Astin posted to his Facebook page. "We celebrate the infinite love and compassion she shared through her work and throughout her life."
The actress died at 1:20 a.m. "Her cause of death was sepsis from a ruptured intestine" in Coeur D'Alene, Idaho, Duke's manager said in a statement Tuesday morning.
Duke’s life was marked with both success and struggle, with the earliest years of her life marred by an alcoholic father and a violently depressive mother. From the time she was 8, Duke was raised by talent managers John and Ethel Ross. In her memoir “Call Me Anna,” Duke revealed that the Rosses left her little control over her career or life and began supplying her with alcohol and prescription medication when she was 13.
“It seems like a dream,” she told The Times in 1963 after her Oscar win. “I’m still not sure if it happened. When they announced it, I just sat there. I couldn’t move.”
Duke had already won acclaim for the role onstage. She noted that had she grown faster, she might never have had the opportunity to play the role of the young Keller, who could not see, speak or hear after a childhood illness. Duke said a clause in her contract when she took the role in 1959 allowed the producers to cut her if she grew 2 inches.
Duke debuted on “The Patty Duke Show” in 1963, in which she played both main characters Patricia “Patty” Lane, all-American teenager, and Catherine “Cathy” Lane, her identical cousin from Scotland.
“Patty was very embarrassing to me,” the 66-year-old told The Times in 2013. “They would write those outrageous things for her to do. I would dive in and do it, but I couldn’t wait to get to Cathy. She was sensible, and I’d like to think she was classy.”
The show had a slightly surreal concept and a catchy theme song — “Where Cathy adores a minuet / the Ballet Russes and crêpes suzette / our Patty loves to rock and roll / a hot dog makes her lose control — what a wild duet!” It also boasted such guest stars Sammy Davis Jr., Peter Lawford, Frankie Avalon, Sal Mineo and the British pop duo Chad and Jeremy.
After her successful stint as Patty and Cathy Lane on television, Duke tried to transition back to film with a controversial performance as Neely O’Hara in “Valley of the Dolls,” in which the actress portrayed an alcoholic, drug-addled star.
In addition to being an actress, Duke also was a fierce advocate for mental illness awareness, after her own diagnosis with bipolar disorder in 1982. Duke credited medication and therapy for helping her recovery; she was the first celebrity, via her 1987 autobiography, to make her struggle with bipolar disorder public.
Duke had said she was grateful for her close relationships with son and “The Lord of the Rings” star Sean Astin, 45, and his actor brother, Mackenzie Astin, 42, despite the rough childhood to which she subjected them before her illness was diagnosed. Her family called her Anna Banana. After Sean had his own children, she became Nana Anna Banana.
“I had no patience,” she admitted to The Times. “This was not all the time. The thing that these kids had going against them was that you never knew when what was all hunky-dory was going to fly out the window and you were going to be screamed at and berated and either ostracized or made to do some humiliating punishment.”
FROM THE ARCHIVES:
Review of Patty Duke’s Oscar-winning performance: A ‘Miracle’ Picture? Seeing Is Believing
Follow Libby Hill on Twitter @midwestspitfire
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