Los Angeles Times

TV’s iconic mom

- By Anh Do

Florence Henderson has died at age 82. She raised six children as Carol Brady on “The Brady Bunch” from 1969 to 1974, creating an idealized mother figure for an entire generation.

Florence Henderson, whose portrayal of Carol Brady on “The Brady Bunch” created an idealized mother figure for an entire generation, died Thursday. She was 82.

Henderson died of heart failure about 7:30 p.m. while surrounded by her four children, according to her longtime manager and publicist, Kayla Pressman.

“The Brady Bunch” ran from 1969 to 1974. But the sitcom about a blended family of three girls and three boys growing up under one roof in Los Angeles became a cultural icon, the subject of countless sequels, movies, plays, books, satires, spoofs and memes. Its 1970s fashion has been celebrated and mocked. The Studio City home that served as the exterior for the Brady home has become something of a landmark.

And to many, Henderson’s perenniall­y upbeat, smiling Carol Brady was the center of the show, cheerfully mothering her brood in an era when divorce was becoming more common.

Henderson later marveled at the influence of the show and how it changed the

lives of the cast. “We had to have security guards with us. Fans were hanging on our doors. We couldn’t go out by ourselves. We were like the Beatles,” she told the Associated Press.

Henderson acted regularly after the series ended, but she knew that to much of the world, she would always be Carol Brady. In a 2010 interview with The Times, Henderson said she still was overwhelme­d by the interest in the show.

“I get so much mail from Russia, Poland and from all parts of the world, it’s astounding,” she said.

Pressman, who had worked with Henderson for 43 years — starting as her personal assistant — said the actress was “the most vibrant, beautiful-inside-andout person I’ve ever known in my entire life. We just never left each other. She was so wonderful to be with, and she was most loyal.”

Fidelity proved to be one of Henderson’s trademarks, she said, adding that the actress stayed with the same business manager from the time she was 18 until he died, and then worked with his son. Henderson also had the same agent for more than 30 years. “She keeps long relationsh­ips,” Pressman said. “I can’t say enough about the remarkable person she is.”

Henderson was a wellknown nightclub entertaine­r performing in Texas when she was asked to audition for the role that would change her life.

Hoping to jet into Los Angeles, have a screen test for “Brady Bunch” creator Sherwood Schwartz and get back in time for the evening’s shows in Texas, Henderson was delayed by L.A. traffic and rushed onto the Paramount lot two hours late, franticall­y looking for a makeup artist to get her ready for the test. Finally, she found someone with a few spare minutes — on the set of “Star Trek.”

“I was sitting in a makeup chair between William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy and like six or eight space monsters. None of them had any idea who I was or made any attempt to be friendly, which really bugged me,” she recalled in TV son Barry Williams’ 1992 memoir, “Growing Up Brady.”

Bothered by what she believed to be a shoddy makeup job, Henderson joked through the screen test about how bad she looked, and Schwartz, impressed with her comic timing, gave her the role.

“Maybe I should thank that terrible makeup man because in a way, his botch job helped me get the part,” she said in the book.

Henderson’s slyly sexy chemistry with co-star Robert Reed made “The Brady Bunch” thrive. The pair helped broaden acceptance of blended families. Carol, a single mother of three daughters, was married to Mike Brady, a single father of three sons.

Born on Valentine’s Day 1934 in Dale, Ind., Henderson was the youngest of 10 children of a homemaker and a tobacco sharecropp­er.

She later joked in a 2010 interview with The Times that she came out of the womb singing. By age 2, she knew 50 songs by heart.

“I don’t remember ever not singing,” she says. “My mother loved music, and she taught me songs, country music, spirituals. I would sing for people and pass the hat when I was 4.”

She began her show business career at 17 when she attended New York’s American Academy of Dramatic Arts. Henderson left the school after her first year because she got a job in the chorus of the Broadway musical “Wish You Were Here,” directed by Josh Logan. She segued from the chorus to the lead role in the final national touring company of Rodgers and Hammerstei­n’s “Oklahoma!”

Logan remembered her from “Wish You Were Here” and cast her in the lead role of the 1954 musical “Fanny” with Ezio Pinza and Walter Slezak.

She appeared in other Broadway musicals, including Noel Coward’s final musical effort, 1963’s “The Girl Who Came to Supper.” From 1959 to 1960, she was the “Today Girl” on the “Today” show, presenting weather and light news stories. Later, in the 1970s, she was the first female guest host of “The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson.”

After her years on “The Brady Bunch,” Henderson became a commercial spokeswoma­n and co-produced “Country Kitchen,” a Nashville Network series.

Besides her Brady clan, Henderson had children of her own.

In the 2010 Times interview, she said she still kept up regularly with members of her TV family.

“When I was in New York, I spent time with Eve Plumb [who played Jan]. I am always in touch with Susan Olsen [Cindy], the youngest, and Chris Knight [Peter].”

Friends and fans marked her passing on Twitter. The actress who played daughter Marcia on the show, Maureen McCormick, tweeted: “You are in my heart forever Florence.”

Henderson was also known as an advocate for gay rights. Reed, who played her husband on the “Brady Bunch,” was gay and was suffering from AIDS when he died of cancer in 1992.

Henderson said in a 2014 interview with Gay Star News that if the show were being made today, she hoped the Mike Brady character would be openly gay.

“At the time that we actually did the show, they wouldn’t have addressed that,” she said. “But if the show were on today, I think it would definitely be addressed. After all, their father was gay.”

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? PERENNIALL­Y UPBEAT Henderson’s Carol Brady cheerfully mothered her TV brood in an era when divorce was on the rise.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times PERENNIALL­Y UPBEAT Henderson’s Carol Brady cheerfully mothered her TV brood in an era when divorce was on the rise.
 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ??
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times
 ?? Hulton Archive Getty Images ?? BLENDED SITCOM FAMILY Florence Henderson, center top, and the rest of the Brady clan in 1972, clockwise from lower left: Mike Lookinland, Eve Plumb, Maureen McCormick, Barry Williams, Christophe­r Knight, Susan Olsen and Robert Reed.
Hulton Archive Getty Images BLENDED SITCOM FAMILY Florence Henderson, center top, and the rest of the Brady clan in 1972, clockwise from lower left: Mike Lookinland, Eve Plumb, Maureen McCormick, Barry Williams, Christophe­r Knight, Susan Olsen and Robert Reed.

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