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Linda Kelsey (born July 28, 1946) is an American actress. She is perhaps best known for her role as Billie Newman on the CBS-TV drama series ''Lou Grant''. ==Life and career== Kelsey's professional career began with stage appearances in her home of Minneapolis, Minnesota, with her good looks and striking mane of red hair winning her success that ultimately landed her in Los Angeles in 1972, with appearances in small roles on television shows like ''Emergency!'' and ''The Rookies,'' and the television movie ''The Picture of Dorian Gray'' (1973). Her first recognition came with an appearance on an episode of ''The Mary Tyler Moore Show'' as a rival to the "Happy Homemaker" character Sue Ann Nivens (played by Betty White), where she met Ed Asner on the set, with whom she later worked on the spin-off show, ''Lou Grant''. Her appearance on ''The Mary Tyler Moore Show'' led to prominent guest appearance on shows like ''M *A *S *H'', ''The Streets of San Francisco,'' ''Barnaby Jones,'' ''Spencer's Pilots'', ''Quincy M.E.'', ''The Rockford Files'', the television movies ''The Last of Mrs. Lincoln'' (1976) ''Something for Joey'' (1977), and ''Eleanor and Franklin'' (1976), ''Eleanor and Franklin: The White House Years'' (1977), and the miniseries ''Captains and the Kings'' (1976). She also appeared in the episode "The Mask of Adonis" from the 1977 series ''Quinn Martin's Tales of the Unexpected'' (known in the United Kingdom as ''Twist in the Tale'').〔(Classic Television Archive: Quinn Martin's Tales of the Unexpected (1977) )〕 Her big break came when producers of the television series ''Lou Grant'', decided that the actress playing the female reporter on the show was too young and perky, and recast the part after three episodes with Kelsey in the role of Billie Newman, the crusading reporter for the fictional ''Los Angeles Tribune'', which also co-starred Asner. Kelsey won five consecutive Emmy Award nominations (1978 through 1982) for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series, losing four times to her ''Lou Grant'' costar Nancy Marchand and once to Kristy McNichol in ''Family.'' After ''Lou Grant'' went off the air in 1982, Kelsey was primed for stardom by NBC as the lead in the sitcom ''Day by Day'' (1988) as a woman who runs a daycare center out of her home. The show ran for two seasons. Kelsey continued to make guest appearances in television series and TV movies through the late 1990s, notably in the TV movie ''The Babysitter's Seduction'' and on several episodes of ''Murder, She Wrote''. After television work stopped trickling in, Kelsey returned to her native Twin Cities' area where she has continued her career in regional theater productions, memorably in the title role of ''Mary Stuart'' at the Park Square Theater, a performance that Talkin' Broadway described as "beautiful, feminine, determined and regal throughout, even when she's giggling with her lady-in-waiting. She affects every man who comes to see her."〔(Talkin' Broadway ), "A nipped and tucked Mary Stuart takes off at Park Square"〕 In 2009, she revisited her television past, playing Sue Ann Nivens for a week in a Minneapolis theatre company's restaging of ''The Mary Tyler Moore Show'' scripts, including the episode in which she originally appeared.〔http://www.playbill.com/news/article/132295-Torch_Theatre_to_Present_The_Mary_Tyler_Moore_Show_Live_Onstage〕〔http://minneapolis.broadwayworld.com/article/Torch_Theater_Will_Recreate_The_Mary_Tyler_Moore_Show_Onstage_As_Fundraiser_91126_20090827〕 Kelsey married an actor in 1971 and they were divorced in 1973.〔http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20075595,00.html〕 She married carpenter Glenn Strand, who later became a computer programmer, in 1979.〔https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2206&dat=19830210&id=KrslAAAAIBAJ&sjid=EfMFAAAAIBAJ&pg=3513,2893535〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Linda Kelsey」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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