Monster M*A*S*H
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Shelley Long
Shelley-Long-9542581-1-402
Shelley Long made a guest appearance as Nurse Mendenhall in the Season 9 M*A*S*H TV series episode titled "Bottle Fatigue".
Personal Information
Gender: Female
Birthname Shelley Lee Long
Born: (1949-08-23) August 23, 1949 (age 74)
Birthplace Fort Wayne, Indiana, U.S.
Occupation/
Career:
Actress
Years active: 1975–present
Spouse(s): Ken Solomon (?-?, divorced)[1]
Bruce Tyson (1981–2004; 1 child)
Character information
Appeared on/in: M*A*S*H
Episodes appeared in: "Bottle Fatigue" in Season 9
Also hosted Memories of M*A*S*H
Character(s) played: Nurse Mendenhall


Shelley Lee Long (born August 23, 1949) made a guest appearance as Nurse Mendenhall, in the Season 8 episode of the CBS-TV series M*A*S*H titled "Bottle Fatigue". Later, in 1991, she hosted the retrospective documentary Memories of M*A*S*H.

Shelley is best known for her role as Diane Chambers on the long running NBC-TV sitcom Cheers,[2] for which she won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress[3] and two Golden Globe Awards.[4] She has also starred in several motion pictures throughout her career like Night Shift (1982), her Golden Globe nominated role in Irreconcilable Differences (1984),The Money Pit (1986), Outrageous Fortune (1987), Hello Again (1987), Troop Beverly Hills (1989), The Brady Bunch Movie (1995), and Dr. T & the Women (2000). Most recently she has had a recurring role as DeDe Pritchett on the ABC comedy series Modern Family.

Early life[]

Shelley Long was born in Fort Wayne, Indiana on August 23, 1949. She is the daughter of Ivadine, a school teacher, and Leland Long, who worked in the rubber industry before becoming a teacher. She was active on her high school speech team, competing in the Indiana High School Forensic Association, and in 1967 she won the National Forensic League National Championship in Original Oratory. education in high school entitled, "[5] After graduating from South Side High School in Fort Wayne, she studied drama at Northwestern University, but left before graduating to pursue a career in acting and modelling. Her first break as an actress occurred when she began doing commercials in the Chicago area for a furniture company called Homemakers.

Career[]

Early roles[]

In Chicago, she joined The Second City comedy troupe. She appeared in several episodes of the popular sketch comedy show SCTV as well. In 1975, she began writing, producing, and co-hosting the television program Sorting It Out. The local NBC broadcast went on to win three Regional Emmys for Best Entertainment Show. Long also appeared in the 1970s in V05 Shampoo print advertisements, Homemakers Furniture, and Camay Soap commercials. In 1978 she guest starred in an episode of The Love Boat. Her first notable role came in the 1979 television movie The Cracker Factory, in which she portrayed a psychiatric inmate, opposite Natalie Wood. The same year she guest starred on Family and Trapper John, M.D.. In 1980 she appeared in her first feature film role in A Small Circle of Friends with Brad Davis and Karen Allen.[6] The film about social unrest at Harvard University during the 1960s was a critical success. In 1981, she played the role of Tala in the Ringo Starr film Caveman, starring opposite Dennis Quaid.

In 1982, she starred as Belinda in Ron Howard's comedy Night Shift (co-starring Henry Winkler and Michael Keaton), about life working on the night shift at a city morgue, and starred with Tom Cruise in the 1983 comedy film Losin' It. She was offered the role of Mary, the mother in the classic film E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, but she declined because she already signed on to star in Night Shift.

Cheers[]

Although she had already been in feature films, Long became famous for her role in the long-running television sitcom Cheers as the character Diane Chambers, who mainly has an on-and-off relationship with Sam Malone.[6] The show was slow to capture an audience but eventually became one of the most popular on the air. Amid much controversy, Long left Cheers after season five in 1987.

In the Cheers biography documentary, costar Ted Danson admitted there was tension between them but "never at a personal level and always at a work level" due to their different modes of working. He also stated that Long was much more like her character than she would like to admit, but also said that her performances often "carried the show."

Long said in later interviews that it did not occur to her, when deciding to leave, that she was going to 'sabotage a show' and she felt confident that the rest of the cast could continue without her.

In a 2003 interview on The Graham Norton Show, Long said she left for a variety of reasons, the most important of which was her desire to spend more time with her newborn daughter. In a 2007 interview on Australian television, Long claimed Danson was "a delight to work with" and talked of her love for costar Nicholas Colasanto who was "one of my closest friends on set." She said she left the show because she "didn't want to keep doing the same episode over and over again and the same story ... I didn't want it to become old and stale." She went on to say that "working at Cheers was a dream come true ... it was one of the most satisfying experiences of my life. So, yes, I missed it, but I never regretted that decision."

Film[]

While simultaneously appearing on Cheers, she continued starring in several motion pictures. In 1984, she was nominated for a Best Leading Actress Golden Globe Award for her performance in Irreconcilable Differences. She then starred in a series of comedies, such as The Money Pit with Tom Hanks, Outrageous Fortune with Bette Midler and Peter Coyote and Hello Again with Corbin Bernsen. She was also offered lead roles in Working Girl, Jumpin' Jack Flash and My Stepmother is an Alien.

Post-Cheers projects[]

Her first post-Cheers project was Troop Beverly Hills, a comedy in which she plays a housewife who takes leadership of a "Wilderness Girl" troop for bonding with her daughter and to distract herself from divorce proceedings.

In 1990, Long returned to television for the fact-based ABC-TV miniseries Voices Within: The Lives of Truddi Chase. She received critical praise for the role, which required her to portray nearly 20 different personalities. This introduced her to more dramatic roles in TV films, after which she starred in several more throughout the 90s.

Major feature film roles followed such as the romantic comedy Don't Tell Her It's Me with Jami Gertz and Steve Guttenberg and Frozen Assets, a comedy about a sperm bank, which reunited her with Hello Again co-star Corbin Bernsen.

In 1992, she starred in Fatal Memories: The Eileen Franklin Story, a fact-based television drama about a woman who remembers the childhood trauma of being raped by her father and his cronies, and witnessing him murder her childhood friend to prevent the child from "telling on him." The still controversial "recovered memories" basis for the prosecution resulted in the conviction and sentence of life imprisonment of George Franklin, Sr.,[7] a conviction that was later overturned.[8] She also appeared in A Message From Holly co-starring with Lindsay Wagner, which she stars as a workaholic who finds out that her best friend has cancer with only 6 months to live, and then stays with her in her last months.

In 1993, the actress returned to Cheers for its series finale, and picked up another Emmy nomination for her return as Diane.[9] She also starred in the sitcom Good Advice with Treat Williams and Teri Garr, but the show lasted just two seasons.[10] She later resurfaced as Diane for several episodes of the Kelsey Grammer spinoff series Frasier, for which she was nominated for yet another Emmy Award.

Later work[]

Long appeared as Carol Brady in the 1995 hit film The Brady Bunch Movie, a campy take on the popular television show. In 1996, she reprised her role in A Very Brady Sequel, which had more modest success.

A series of ventures followed such as the made for TV remake of Freaky Friday, and the family sitcom Kelly Kelly, which only lasted for a few episodes. She played the Wicked Witch of the Beanstalk in a 1997 episode of Sabrina, the Teenage Witch.

In 1999 she starred in another TV drama film Vanished Without a Trace, about a woman who simply refuses to accept the kidnapping of her 13-year-old daughter and relentlessly pursues the villain's capture. (Not to be confused with the 1993 film of the same name about the 1976 Chowchilla kidnapping.)

In 2000, Long appeared as one of the women in the Richard Gere film, Dr. T and the Women, directed by Robert Altman. She later returned for a third go-around as Carol Brady in the TV film The Brady Bunch in the White House.

In recent years, she has guest starred in several TV shows such as 8 Simple Rules, Yes, Dear, Strong Medicine, and Boston Legal. She has a recurring role on the popular ABC sitcom Modern Family. Long starred in several TV films such as Honeymoon with Mom, Falling in Love with the Girl Next Door, and the Hallmark holiday movie A Holiday Engagement, which premiered on November 27, 2011. Also, she starred in several independent films such as the 2007 film Trust Me, A Couple of White Chicks at the Hairdresser and Zombie Hamlet. She continues to be active in several guest appearances on sitcoms, TV movies, and films. On March 6, 2012, she guest starred on the ABC Family series Switched at Birth. On May 30, 2012, the writers of Modern Family announced that she would return as DeDe Pritchett for her third guest appearance on the show the next season. Shelley is slated to appear in the 2014 film A Matter of Time appearing in the part of "Nona".

Personal life[]

Long's first marriage ended in divorce.[11] In 1979, Long met her second husband, securities broker Bruce Tyson. They married in 1981 and had a daughter, Juliana, on March 27, 1985. Another attempt at pregnancy resulted in a miscarriage in 1989. Shelley also has a stepson. Long and Tyson separated in 2003, and then divorced in 2004.

On November 16, 2004, Long was hospitalized after an overdose of painkillers and spent seven days in the hospital before being released.

References[]

  1. http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20095698,00.html
  2. Cheers | Where Everybody Knows Your Name. Cheersboston.com. Retrieved on July 4, 2010.
  3. Shelley Long Primetime Emmy Award database, Emmy.com
  4. New York Times. Movies.nytimes.com. Retrieved on May 24, 2012.
  5. "Original Orations" National Forensic League file
  6. 6.0 6.1 Shelley Long Biography – Yahoo! Movies. Movies.yahoo.com (August 23, 1949). Retrieved on July 4, 2010.
  7. Wadler, Joyce Exhuming the horror / For 20 Years, Eileen Franklin Repressed a Memory of Murder; Now She's Healing—and Her Father Is in Jail People, November 4, 1991
  8. Workman, Bill `Memory' Case Put To Rest – No Retrial / Franklin to go free after almost 7 years SFGate, July 3, 1996
  9. Bird, J.B. Cheers / U.S. Situation Comedy The Museum of Broadcast Communications, Undated
  10. Good Advice (TV Series 1993–1994) at IMDb
  11. Haller, Scot (February 23, 1987). Cheers and Tears: the Long Goodbye. People. Retrieved on May 24, 2012.

External links[]

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