The Daily Telegraph

Actress who played Wednesday in the original

Addams Family

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LISA LORING, who has died aged 64 following a stroke, was an actress who played Wednesday Addams in The Addams Family, the 1960s American sitcom that ran for only two series but lodged itself in the public’s affections with its depiction of a macabre family with unearthly powers.

Based on the longrunnin­g cartoons by Charles Addams in The New Yorker,

the show presented an antidote to the regular nuclear family, hinging on their lack of awareness that they were in any way different. Lisa Loring set the template for future portrayals of Wednesday, notably by Christina Ricci in two film adaptation­s and Jenna Ortega in the current Netflix series Wednesday.

The Addams Family was a rival to The Munsters, and in an interview given in her teens, Lisa Loring perceptive­ly observed that her show, with its relatively sophistica­ted wit, had been the Marx Brothers to the slapstick of the Munsters’

Three Stooges.

She was born Lisa Ann Decinces on February 16 1958 in Kwajalein Atoll, now part of the Marshall Islands in the Pacific; her parents were both serving in the US Navy there, but they divorced soon after she was born. She grew up initially in Hawaii then moved with her mother to Los Angeles.

By the age of three she was modelling, and her first acting job was in a 1964 episode of Dr Kildare.

“I learnt to memorise lines before I could read,” she recalled. By then she had already won the part of Wednesday Addams, preferred to a 13-year-old hopeful because she looked more like Carolyn Jones, the actress who was to play her mother, Morticia.

Wednesday was a pleasant if suitably odd child, who kept a black widow spider and a lizard named Lucifer as pets and liked to play with her headless doll, Marie Antoinette. Unlike many child stars, Lisa Loring had pleasant memories of her time in the spotlight: “It was like a real family: you couldn’t have picked a better cast and crew. Carolyn Jones, John Astin – Morticia and Gomez – they were like parents to me.”

The Addams Family came to an end after 64 episodes, and for the rest of the 1960s and into the following decade Lisa Loring worked sporadical­ly, in episodes of shows such as The Girl From U.N.C.L.E. and Fantasy Island. Between 1980 and 1983 she had a recurring role in the long-running daytime soap As the World Turns as Cricket Montgomery, a rebellious teenager who has an illegitima­te child.

Later that decade she appeared in the slasher films Blood Frenzy, Savage Harbor and Iced, but subsequent roles were low-profile and fleetingly rare, and she worked as a make-up artist and for an interior design firm in Santa Monica.

Lisa Loring’s private life, meanwhile, cleaved to the archetype of the former child star for whom subsequent years prove difficult. Following struggles with substance abuse, she entered rehab in the 1990s.

Her marital history was chequered. Her mother died of alcoholism when Lisa was only 14, and within a year she had married her childhood sweetheart, Farrell Foumberg; the union was brief but produced a daughter. In 1981 she married a soap actor, Doug Stevenson. They were together for slightly longer – two years – and she had another daughter.

Her third marriage proved to be more problemati­c. In 1986 she was working as a writer and make-up artist on the film Traci’s Big Trick, based on the legal troubles of the porn star Traci Lord, when she met the adult film actor Jerry Butler.

They married, but Lisa Loring was unhappy that Butler continued to act in the porn industry. He resorted to working secretly, and she divorced him in 1992.

In 2003 she married Graham Rich; they separated in 2008 and divorced in 2014.

Lisa Loring is survived by her two daughters.

Lisa Loring, born February 16 1958, died January 28 2023

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 ?? ?? Wednesday Addams, and below, Lisa Loring in 2015
Wednesday Addams, and below, Lisa Loring in 2015

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