The death of popular actress Bea Arthur, who starred in the US television sitcom The Golden Girls, has been reported in Los Angeles.
The death of popular actress Bea Arthur, who starred in the US television sitcom The Golden Girls, has been reported in Los Angeles.
Arthur, who played Dorothy Zbornak to the late Estelle Getty's Sophia Petrillo, died at home of cancer at the age of 86, a family spokesman said.
Arthur, who played Dorothy Zbornak to the late Estelle Getty's Sophia Petrillo, died at home of cancer at the age of 86, a family spokesman said.
She was also famous for the sitcom Maude, first creating the character in the comedy series All In The Family.
She was also famous for the sitcom Maude, first creating the character in the comedy series All In The Family.
Arthur also won an Emmy Award for the musical Mame.
Arthur also won an Emmy Award for the musical Mame.
The tall, deep-voiced actress's razor-sharp delivery of comedy lines made her a TV star, the Associated Press news agency notes.
She won Emmy Awards for both The Golden Girls and Maude.
Dan Watt, her personal assistant for six years, announced the death, saying she had died peacefully.
"She was a brilliant and witty woman," he recalled.
"Bea will always have a special place in my heart."
The 'new girl'
Arthur first appeared in All In The Family as Edith Bunker's loudly outspoken, liberal cousin, Maude Finley.
She proved a perfect foil for blue-collar bigot Archie Bunker (Carroll O'Connor), and their blistering exchanges were so entertaining that producer Norman Lear fashioned Arthur's own series.
In a 2008 interview with AP, Arthur said she had been lucky to be discovered by TV after a long stage career, recalling with bemusement CBS executives asking about the new "girl".
"I was already 50 years old," she said.
"I had done so much off Broadway, on Broadway, but they said: 'Who is that girl? Let's give her her own series.'"
Maude was an instant hit when it aired in September 1972.
Golden Girls (1985-1992) was another groundbreaking comedy, finding surprising success in a television market increasingly skewed toward a younger audience.
The series concerned three retirees - Arthur, Betty White and Rue McClanahan - and the mother of Arthur's character, Estelle Getty, who lived together in a Miami apartment.
In contrast to the violent Miami Vice, the comedy was nicknamed Miami Nice, AP recalls.
As Dorothy Zbornak, Arthur seemed as caustic and domineering as Maude.
She was unconcerned about the similarity of the two roles.
"Look, I'm five feet nine [1.75m], I have a deep voice and I have a way with a line," she told an interviewer.
"What can I do about it? I can't stay home waiting for something different. I think it's a total waste of energy worrying about typecasting."
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