Nancy Kovack
Nancy Kovack is a Michigan native who was born within Flint. She graduated from college aged 19 with 8 titles, and began her journey as a tv actress at age 15. Kovack began her acting profession in New York as one of the Jackie Gleason's "Glea girls" and later, with more prominent roles, The Dave Garroway show (1953), Today (1952) and Beat the Clock(1950). A stage role was the first step in opening Hollywood possibilities for Kovack as she enrolled to Columbia. Later, she racked up an impressive number of episodic television credits as well as an Emmy nomination for a guest-spot in 1969 on Mannix (1967). Kovack is the wife of the famous and renowned maestro Zubin Mehta, of the New York Philharmonic, publicly states the fact that Susan McDougal a key figure in Whitewater was recently swindled by her (to the tune of $150,000). She has appeared on five occasions in the situation comedy Bewitched (1964) The show featured three of her appearances portrayed Darrin Stephens' eccentric former lover Sheila Summers. Her father worked as an executive at General Motors executive. The couple lives at Los Angeles with her husband Zubin Mehta. In 1954, she graduated from the University of Michigan Ann Arbor in Michigan. Her best-known role in the public eye is for the role of sexy Native medicine woman Nona, in Star Trek: Second Season Episode A Private Little War (1998).



Comments
Post a Comment