LOS ANGELES (AP) - Suzanne Pleshette got a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on Thursday, less than two weeks after she died of respiratory failure. On what would have been her 71st birthday, Pleshette received the walk's 2,355th star.[...] Read more!
Suzanne Pleshette" align="left" hspace="5" />It's never too late to honor the best in the business.
Suzanne Pleshette posthumously received the 2,355th star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on Thursday, which would have been her 71st...
Beloved actress SUZANNE PLESHETTE was posthumously honoured with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on Thursday (31Jan08) - a week after the U.S. TV favourite was buried in ...
Suzanne Pleshette" align="left" hspace="5" />As the singular phenomenon known as awards season regularly proves, Hollywood loves to honor its favorite sons and daughters, even if only in spirit.
In turn, Suzanne Pleshette's induction...
Suzanne Pleshette, who played Bob Newhart's wife on The Bob Newhart Show from
1972 to 1978, died Saturday in Los Angeles just days short of her 70th birthday on
Jan. 31, ...
Suzanne Pleshette, the beautiful, husky-voiced film and theater star best known for her role as Bob Newhart's sardonic wife on television's long-running "The Bob Newhart Show," has died, said her attorney.
Suzanne Pleshette" align="left" hspace="5" />Suzanne Pleshette, the raspy-voiced beauty who got her start in such movies as Alfred Hitchcock's "The Birds" before finding fame as Bob Newhart's wife on the classic 1970s sitcom "The...
TMZ.com: TV wife Suzanne Pleshette died at her home in Los Angeles last night at age 70, after a courageous battle with lung cancer. Just last September, while undergoing treatment, she appeared at a 35th anniversary event celebrating "The Bob Newhart... Read more
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Suzanne Pleshette, the husky-voiced star best known for her role as Bob Newhart's sardonic wife on television's long-running ''The Bob Newhart Show,'' has died at age 70.[...] Read more!
Suzanne Pleshette, the beautiful, husky-voiced star who found her greatest fame portraying Bob Newhart's sardonic wife on television's long-running "The Bob Newhart Show," dies of respiratory failure.
LOS ANGELES — Suzanne Pleshette, the husky-voiced star best known for her role as Bob Newhart's sardonic wife on television's long-running "The Bob Newhart Show," has died at age 70.
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Suzanne Pleshette is very much alive, and ever her saucy self. In a rare public appearance Monday night for a 35th-anniversary tribute to "The Bob Newhart Show" (1972-78), her most enduring work, the veteran actress showed that a year of serious personal and health matters hasn't dampened her spitfire personality.
Tom Poston didn't necessarily make TV history. But he racked up a lot TV history.
The deadpan comic actor, whose prime-time career spanned the early days of network television right up to the Disney Channel present, with memorable stops along the way on "Newhart," "The Bob Newhart Show" and "That '70s Show," died Monday at his Los Angeles home after what reports described as a brief illness.
He was 85.
Poston's survivors include wife and fellow "Bob Newhart Show" alum Suzanne Pleshette, who announced last year that she'd been diagnosed with lung cancer.
An Emmy winner back in 1959 for his work on Steve Allen's namesake sketch-variety show, Poston earned three more Emmy nominations, although no more statuettes, for "Newhart." Poston played the Stratford Inn's not-necessarily handy handyman George Utley on the 1982-1990 sitcom.
Happy Birthday to *NSync member Justin Timberlake (1981), "Arrested Development" actress Portia de Rossi (1973), British actress/singer Minnie Driver (1970), Slayer guitarist Jeff Hanneman (1964), British singer/songwriter Lloyd Cole (1961), American actress Kelly Lynch (1959), "Without a Trace" star Anthony LaPaglia (1959), Sex Pistols singer Johnny Rotten (1956), seven-time no-hitter hurler Nolan Ryan (1947), blues harp player Charlie Musselwhite (1944), American actress Jessica Walter (1940), "The Bob Newhart Show" actress Suzanne Pleshette (1937), baseball legend Ernie Banks (1931), English actress Jean Simmons (1929), author Norman Mailer (1923), actress Carol Channing (1921), first African-American MLB player Jackie Robinson (1919; d. 1972), and Austrian composer Franz Schubert (1797;d. 1828).