The Denver Post

Housekeepe­r on TV’s “Two and a Half Men” dies

- By Anita Gates

Conchata Ferrell, the award- winning theater actress who became a television star as the gruff housekeepe­r of a toxic Malibu bachelor on the sitcom “Two and a Half Men,” died Monday in Los Angeles. She was 77.

The death, in Sherman Oaks Hospital, was confirmed by her daughter, Samantha Anderson.

Ferrell was hospitaliz­ed in December for a kidney infection, which spread to her bloodstrea­m. In May, a heart attack put her in intensive care for four weeks. She was then moved to long- term care, remaining on a respirator and on dialysis until her death.

When CBS was casting “Two and a Half Men,” the character Berta — who cleaned the oceanfront home of Charlie Harper ( Charlie Sheen), a successful writer of jingles and children’s songs — was written as Eastern European. But Ferrell preferred to do it in her own voice. “It works better in Trailer Park,” she told the producers, who quickly agreed — and even changed their minds about having Berta disappear after two episodes.

In a role that brought her two Emmy Award nomination­s for best supporting actress in a comedy series, Ferrell appeared as Berta in more than 200 episodes between 2003 and 2015. Her Berta was a merciless, unshakable, ungrammati­cal old hippie with an expansive knowledge of the phone numbers of local drug dealers. She also gave other characters unwelcome nicknames.

Ferrell had achieved acclaim decades earlier in New York theater, appearing as the prostitute April in Lanford Wilson’s “The Hot L Baltimore” ( 1973), a role he wrote for her. The play won multiple awards, including an Obie for best Off Broadway play, and ran for three years.

Ferrell collected her own off- Broadway prizes, including the Drama Desk Award for best actress in a play and an Obie, for her performanc­e as a disillusio­ned waterfront- bar owner in “The Sea Horse” ( 1973). She also received her first Emmy nomination in 1992 for a recurring role as Susan Bloom, a ruthless entertainm­ent lawyer with more money than manners, on “L. A. Law.”

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