Quotes
Am I sounding better or am I just getting used to my voice?
(brainyquote.com)
My musical director, Mark Cherry, is the most wonderful person who ever lived on God`s good green Earth. He`s my director, he does the arrangements. Really, he does everything - including certain janitorial chores!
(brainyquote.com)
I had to give up martinis - I enjoyed them too much.
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You know, I`m a television personality. It`s not like I`m a famous hooker or something!
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I don`t know a high C from a low C.
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In fact, people have been very complimentary about my act and very tolerant of my singing ability.
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You know, when it was done originally, they always had to fight to keep it going at the end of each season. Now, The Odd Couple has become part of our language and culture.
(brainyquote.com)
Anything that loosens you up and makes you freer is good, because that`s what acting and performing is all about - being free. It gives you a better connection to the audience.
(brainyquote.com)
Trivia
Although she separated from Jack Klugman in 1974, neither ever filed for divorce.
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Mother of Adam Klugman, David Klugman and a daughter, Leslie.
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In 1957, she played a "wise-cracking broad" in the Broadway play "Maybe Tuesday," which ironically opened on a Wednesday and closed before Tuesday...a fact she joked about in her circa-2002 cabaret show. Other future TV stars in the cast of "Maybe Tuesday" were Alice Ghostley (later "Esmeralda" on "Bewitched" (1964)) and Louis Edmonds ("Roger" on "Dark Shadows" (1966) and "Langley" on "All My Children" (1970)). "Maybe Tuesday" is described extensively in Craig Hamrick's 2003 book "Big Lou", the biography of Louis Edmonds. The author, a longtime fan of Somers, presented her with a copy of the book at one of her cabaret shows in New York City.
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She was not originally on the celebrity panel of "The Match Game". When her husband Jack Klugman appeared on the first week of the program in 1973, he suggested that producers bring her aboard. Her wit and dry humor proved extremely successful, and she would remain a regular panelist for the remainder of the show's nine year network and syndicated run.
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Often traveled from New York to Los Angeles with "Match Game 73" (1973)host Gene Rayburn to tape the show.
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Close friends with actress Marcia Wallace who appeared frequently as a panelist on "Match Game 73" (1973).
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She and Jack Klugman made many television appearances as a couple. Somers appeared on several episodes of "The Odd Couple" (1970), playing the ex-wife of Klugman's character.
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An Evening with Brett Somers opened in New York to rave reviews in 2003. At the age of seventy-nine, Brett found herself back in the limelight and won Backstage's prestigious Bistro Award. She was diagnosed with cancer not long after. It went into remission for a time after surgery and chemotherapy, but returned inoperable in 2007.
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Brett married Jack Klugman in 1953 and went by the name Brett Somers Klugman at one point. The couple had two children, David Klugman and Adam Klugman, before separating in 1974. They never divorced.
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In 2005 Jack and Brett reunited on stage in "Danger, People at Large," three short comedies by Fred Stroppel at Fairfield University's Regina A. Quick Center for the Arts. The special evening marked the first time in about three decades that Klugman and Somers had performed together.
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Daughter Leslie Klein, who was a product of Brett's first marriage to Robert Klein, died in 2003 of lung cancer.
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Grew up in Portland, Maine. Ran away from home at age 17 and headed to New York City, where she settled in Greenwich Village. Changed first name to Brett after the female lead character in the Ernest Hemingway novel, "The Sun Also Rises". Somers was her mother's maiden name.
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A self-described Bohemian, she was born Audrey Johnston and ran away from home at age 17. Moving to New York's Greenwich Village to pursue a career, she abruptly changed her first name to Brett after the lead female character in the Ernest Hemingway novel "The Sun Also Rises." Somers was her mother's maiden name.
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Made her Broadway debut in the short-lived play "Maybe Tuesday" in 1958, which lasted only five performances. She also appeared in "Happy Ending" with Paul Winfield, "The Seven Year Itch" with Art Carney and Lee Remick, and in "The Country Girl" with husband Klugman.
(imdb.com)
She appeared on several episodes of "The Odd Couple" (1970) playing the ex-wife (Blanche) of Klugman's Oscar character. The estranged couple also made countless TV appearances together. For many years they were sought after guests on the 1970's game and talk show circuit, including "The Tonight Show", "The Mike Douglas Show", "He Said, She Said" and, of course, "The Match Game".
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Best known as a panelist on "Match Game 73" (1973). On nearly every episode, she is the comic foil to Charles Nelson Reilly (and vice versa).
(imdb.com)
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