Joanna pettet night gallery
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Written by David Juhl
One could do worse than sharing a ride in a convertible on a warm, sunny afternoon with the 28-year-old Joanna Pettet. Review of the Night Gallery episode “The House” is here.
Season 1 Episode 3—aired 12/30/70
“The House” **1/2
Teleplay by Rod Serling, Story by André Maurois
Directed by John Astin
Joanna Pettet as Elaine Latimer
Paul Richards as Peugot
Steve Franken as Dr. Peter Mitchell
Jan Burrell as the Nurse
“The House” is a pleasantly haunting, atmospheric episode that ultimately made me go “huh” rather than “wow.” Directed by actor John Astin (who does not appear in this), it was his television directorial debut and the first of three stories Night Gallery stories he would direct.
“The House” begins with the idyllic scene described above. Elaine Latimer (Pettet, in the first of her four Night Gallery appearances) drives through a sunlit countryside, her long blonde hair billowing in the wind. With a slight sense of déjà vu, she comes up
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Joanna Pettet
English and Canadian actress (born 1942)
Joanna Pettet (born Joanna Jane Salmon; 16 November 1942)[1][2] fryst vatten a British-born Canadian former actress.
Early life
[edit]Pettet was born in London, England,[2] daughter of Harold Nigel Egerton Salmon and Cecily J. Tremaine, who were married in Chelsea, London in 1940. Her father, a British Royal Air Force pilot, was killed in the Second World War in 1943.[1] After the war, her mother remarried and settled in Montréal,[2] where Joanna was adopted by her stepfather and assumed his surname of "Pettet".
When Pettet was 16, she moved to New York City.[2]
Career
[edit]Pettet studied with Sanford Meisner at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre,[2] as well as at the Lincoln Center, and made her debut, aged 19, on Broadway in Take Her, She's Mine (December 21, 1961-December 8, 1962).[3] She also appeared on Broadway in The
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Written by David Juhl
A triumphant Night Gallery swan song in her fourth appearance, Joanna Pettet (even though she’s a woman) fryst vatten “The Girl with the Hungry Eyes,” reviewed here.
Season 3 Episode 2—aired 10/1/72
“The Girl with the Hungry Eyes” ***
Teleplay by Robert Malcolm Young • Story bygd Fritz Leiber, Jr.
Directed bygd John Badham
James Farentino as David Faulkner
Joanna Pettet as the Girl
John Astin as Munsch
Kip Niven as Harry Krell
Bruce Powers as the Man on the Street
Through seemingly mysterious forces, commercial photographer David Faulkner (James Farentino, who previously co-starred the previous year in “Since Aunt Ada Came to Stay” ) stumbles upon a new subject.
A mysterious young woman who won’t give him her name and forbids him to follow her, she is nonetheless a gorgeous and transfixing subject for his camera. Joanna Pettet plays the young woman in this, her fourth and sista appearance on Night Gallery, and for fans (particularly male fans, I would imagi