What you are about to read is a continuation of a feature found on that other blog, but here, the entries will focus on celebrities better known through their work on Cobweb TV. This series serves to remind us of the two simplest reasons why Charlie Sheen (and his ego) was never worth all the money he asked for (and got) while appearing on Two and a Half Men (CBS, 2003-present):
1) There are better performers who can act circles around the guy. (He hasn't had a real acting challenge in years.)
2) Sometimes, hiring a jerk to play a jerk on TV makes them an even bigger jerk.
The people to be profiled here are (or were) good actors and actresses with none (or little) of the hangups Sheen now basks in, and their body of quality Cobweb TV work outpaces Sheen's best work on TV and motion pictures combined. Also, they (more often than not) give great performances at a fraction of the cost Sheen squeezed out of those saps at Warner Brothers Television. (To Sheen's credit, after months of constantly being in the media spotlight, he appears to have calmed some and is currently keeping a lower profile.)
Joanna on Banacek (All Banacek images courtesy NBCUniversal.) |
THANKS to the DVD format, one of my favorite Cobweb TV actresses I've had the pleasure to catch up with is the underrated Joanna Pettet. If one considers she (basically) went from an aspiring career in movies to TV, one would think there was something wrong with her. Watching her act in both, however, I feel she consistently delivered good performances, regardless of the scripts. From a visual standpoint, she had a slim, refined (almost regal) beauty made for being seen on a big screen, and once she began appearing on the small screen with regularity, Cobweb TV was more than graced with her presence.
(Google images) |
As "Mata Bond" in Casino Royale. (Google images) |
Despite being featured in such a big hit, film roles began to lessen in frequency around the time she married actor Alex Cord (and gave birth to a son, Damien) in 1968. Fortunately, her TV work began to pick up at the close of the decade into the 1970s. One of my favorite TV guest shots of hers around this time was on the 1972 Night Gallery segment "The Caterpillar", featuring Laurence Harvey as the ill-fated recipient of the title character. (She did four NG storys in total, one where she co-starred with Alex.)
Joanna kept active from the '70s through the '80s, guest starring on shows ranging from Banacek to Murder, She Wrote, even becoming a (temporary) series regular on nine episodes of Knot's Landing. She also starred in TV movies (Pioneer Woman, Winner Take All, The Return of Frank Cannon), a miniseries (Captains and the Kings), Hollywood Squares and even an ABC Afterschool Special (her last TV work, according to IMDb).
Joanna with Alan Bates in 2003. (Google images) |
(Shout! Factory) |
In closing, let's enjoy some more screen captures from Joanna's appearance on the Banacek episode "Project Phoenix"!
With George Peppard |
THE END (Love those patches!) |
NEXT TIME ON... COBWEB TV!
(Discovery Communications, Inc.) |
Keeping it trivial....
R.A.M.'67
I always loved her! Great post.
ReplyDeleteShe is on Banacek right now. What a beauty!
DeleteThank you for reading, Donna!
ReplyDeleteI agree that Joanna Pettet was an underrated actress as well as a classic beauty.
ReplyDeleteIn the Banacek episode “Project Phoenix,” IIRC, she played an engineer who was involved in designing the experimental car that mysteriously vanished. When Banacek visits her at her home-cum-workshop, he comments rather snidely on how the place noticeably lacks any feminine touches, as if she’s overcompensating for being a woman in a male-dominated field. But she greets him dressed in tight jeans and a midriff-baring tied shirt! Engineer, schmengineer. When you’ve got it, flaunt it!
Best of all, Joanna's character is introduced running a drill press!
ReplyDeleteShe and Peppard were great together in their scenes. If Banacek had a longer network run, I like to think she would've been invited back for at least one more episode.
Thanks for reading, Scot!