Patricia Smith (actress)


Patricia Smith was an American actress who appeared in film and television roles from the early 1950s through the 1990s.

Career

Born in New Haven, Connecticut, Smith appeared in a 1953 episode of Kraft Television Theater titled "A Room and a Half". A Neighborhood Playhouse alumna and a life member of The Actors Studio, Smith appeared in two films in 1957, The Bachelor Party with Don Murray and The Spirit of St. Louis with James Stewart.
She appeared in Gunsmoke in 1958, then primarily on television during the 1960s and 1970s, including the role of murderer Wanda Buren in the 1965 Perry Mason episode "The Case of the Candy Queen," and the role of Sylvia Bayles in The Twilight Zone episode "Long Distance Call" ; as Norma Bartlett in The Fugitive episode "Goodbye my Love" in 1967, and was the focus of the second Hawaii Five-O show of the first season, "Full Fathom Five", playing detective Joyce Weber. She also appeared in a 1975 episode of The Streets of San Francisco.
Smith was a regular on the 1969-70 short-lived television sitcom The Debbie Reynolds Show playing Reynolds' sister Charlotte. Patricia Smith had an earlier role in the second season of Barnaby Jones, episode titled, "Blind Terror". She had a recurring role on The Bob Newhart Show during its initial season, played Jack Lemmon's wife in the 1973 feature film Save the Tiger, for which Lemmon won an Oscar, and appeared in the episode "You're Not Alone" from the 1977 anthology series Quinn Martin's Tales of the Unexpected. She also appeared on the TV series Highway to Heaven in the season 1 episode "A Child of God".
Smith continued to appear in supporting roles on television and in films through the late 1990s. She played Doctor Sara Kingsley in the episode Unnatural Selection |"Unnatural Selection". Her final acting role was in the 1997 film Mad City.

Marriage

Smith and her husband, John Lasell, had two children.

Death

Smith, a diabetic for many years, died of heart failure on January 2, 2011 in Los Angeles, California, aged 80.

Partial filmography