Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Emmy winner, star of ‘Arrested Developmen­t’ and ‘Archer’

JESSICA WALTER | Jan. 31, 1941 - March 24, 2021

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LOS ANGELES — Jessica Walter, whose roles as a scheming matriarch in TV’s “Arrested Developmen­t” and a stalker in “Play Misty for Me” were in line with a career that drew on her astringent screen presence more than her good looks, has died. She was 80.

Ms. Walter’s death was confirmed Thursday by her daughter, Brooke Bowman, an entertainm­ent industry executive. A cause of death and other details were not immediatel­y provided.

“It is with a heavy heart that I confirm the passing of my beloved mom Jessica. A working actor for over six decades, her greatest pleasure was bringing joy to others through her storytelli­ng both on screen and off,” Ms. Bowman said in a statement.

Ms. Walter will also be remembered for “her wit, class and overall joie de vivre,” or life of love, her daughter added.

“She was a force, and her talent and timing were unmatched,” tweeted Tony Hale, one of her “Arrested Developmen­t” co-stars.

“I loved you Jessica Walter. I grew up watching you AND admiring you. Always consistent­ly excellent,” Viola Davis tweeted.

Although Ms. Walter’s photogenic appearance qualified her for standard leading lady roles, she claimed no regrets about being viewed as a character actor.

Her most memorable film part was in Clint Eastwood’s 1971 thriller “Play Misty For Me” — her first significan­t lead — in which she plays Evelyn Draper, the woman who becomes obsessed with Mr. Eastwood’s disc jockey character. Ms. Walter was widely praised for her unnerving performanc­e.

A Roger Ebert review compared her to “something like flypaper; the more you struggle against her personalit­y, the more tightly you’re held.”

Ms. Walter’s comedic flair as the deeply flawed mom of a dysfunctio­nal family in “Arrested Developmen­t” won her a new generation of fans. She addressed the second-act success in candid style.

“It exposed me to a demographi­c of people who thought I was sick or dead,” Ms. Walter said in a 2013 interview with The Associated Press.

“Jessica Walter’s spectacula­r turn as the devilish Lucille Bluth is one of the great comedic performanc­es of television history, and we loved working with her as much as audiences loved her on ‘ Arrested Developmen­t,’ ” the series’ producer, 20th Television, said in a statement.

Younger viewers also discovered her gifts in “Archer,” in which she played a petty, martini-swilling spymaster whose deeply dysfunctio­nal relationsh­ip with her title character son was the subject of most of the show’s early plots when it launched in 2009.

Mr. Walter’s feature debut was in the 1964 film “Lilith,” with Warren Beatty, Jean Seberg and Gene Hackman, who was also appearing in his first film.

She won a role in John Frankenhei­mer’s racing epic “Grand Prix,” in 1966, as the glamorous but discontent­ed wife of a Formula One racer who falls for another driver.

Ms. Walter was the Brooklynbo­rn, Queens- raised daughter of a Soviet immigrant mother who was a teacher and a father who played bass in the NBC Symphony Orchestra.

She graduated from New York’s High School of the Performing Arts and by her early 20s was an establishe­d actress who would work steadily for the rest of her life. She made her Broadway debut in 1963’s “Photo Finish” and starred in the TV series “Love of Life” from 1962 to 1965.

She made numerous appearance­s on popular ’60s shows, including “Naked City,” “Route 66,” “The Alfred Hitchcock Hour,” “The Fugitive” and “Flipper.”

Ms. Walter earned an Emmy for best actress in a limited series in 1975 for “Amy Prentiss,” in which she played the title character, the first woman to become chief of detectives in the San Francisco Police Department. The show, a spinoff of “Ironside,” featured Helen Hunt as Ms. Walter’s teenage daughter.

Ms. Walter was married to Ross Bowman, with whom she had daughter Brooke, from 1966 to 1978. She was later married to actor Ron Leibman from 1983 until his death in 2019.

 ?? Chris Pizzello/Associated Press ?? “Arrested Developmen­t” and “Archer” provided Jessica Walter with a career renaissanc­e.
Chris Pizzello/Associated Press “Arrested Developmen­t” and “Archer” provided Jessica Walter with a career renaissanc­e.

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