The Day

Judy Carne, ‘Sock it to me’ girl on TV’s ‘Laugh-In,’ dies at 76

- By JESSICA GELT

Judy Carne, the troubled English actress who shot to fame as the “Sock it to me” girl on “Rowan & Martin’s LaughIn” in the late 1960s, has died. Shewas 76.

The actress and 1960s personalit­y died Sept. 3 at Northampto­n General Hospital in England, according a hospital spokeswoma­n. The cause of death was not specified.

Carne also was known for her tumultuous 1963 marriage to Burt Reynolds, whom she contended abused her in her 1985 autobiogra­phy, “Laughing on the Outside, Crying on the Inside: The Bitterswee­t Saga of the ‘Sock It to Me’ Girl.”

The book also expounded on her drug addiction and her many resulting brushes with the law, as well as a suicide attempt, a one-night stand with Steve McQueen, an alleged passed- up threesome with Warren Beatty and various other affairs with both men and women.

Although the peppy, redhaired actress was on “LaughIn” for only two years (she left in the middle of the third season, complainin­g that it had become a bore), she made an indelible mark as the goofball fall girl who got doused with a bucket of water, bonked on the head or dropped through a trap door every time she uttered the anticipate­d punchline, “Sock it to me!”

But life was no laughing matter for Carne, who gained unwanted notoriety in the 1970s when she battled a heroin addiction and suffered a string of arrests on suspicion of — among other things — grand theft auto and possession of marijuana and methamphet­amines.

In 1978, she broke her neck in a car accident while celebratin­g a recent acquittal for heroin possession.

Carne was born Joyce Audrey Botterill in Northampto­n, England, on April 27, 1939. Her parents were greengroce­rs in Kingsthorp­e. She was a petite and vivacious childwhotr­ained in music and dance and showed an early talent for both.

Carne made her television debut in 1956 in “The First Day of Spring” and built up a respectabl­e acting career in Britain. She engaged in a number of notable romances during this time, including with Vidal Sassoon, Stirling Moss and actor Anthony Newley.

She had the good fortune of moving to America in 1962, just in time for the pop- culture phenomenon known as the British Invasion. Her first introducti­on to American audiences was in the role of Heather Finch, a plucky British exchange student on the TV comedy “Fair Exchange.” Other roles included a regular turn on the 1964 sitcom “The Baileys of Balboa” and the lead on the 1966 romantic comedy series “Love on a Rooftop,” in which she played a San Francisco art student who falls in love with an architect.

After leaving “Laugh- In,” Carne appeared in smaller roles on a variety of TV series, talk shows and game shows, but never again enjoyed the level of popularity she reached in the late 1960s.

Her life calmed down after moving in the 1990s to the village of Pitsford, Northampto­nshire, where she lived with her two dogs — in harmony with her neighbors and out of the headlines, according to the Northampto­n Herald & Post.

 ?? DOUG PIZAC/AP FILE PHOTO ?? Actors Alan Sues and Judy Carne of “Rowan And Martin’s Laugh-In,” are shown in this Sept. 13, 1983, photo during a “Laugh-In” reunion party in Los Angeles. Carne has died in a British hospital. She was 76.
DOUG PIZAC/AP FILE PHOTO Actors Alan Sues and Judy Carne of “Rowan And Martin’s Laugh-In,” are shown in this Sept. 13, 1983, photo during a “Laugh-In” reunion party in Los Angeles. Carne has died in a British hospital. She was 76.

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