Georgia Engel in Toronto in 2007, where she was starring in The Drowsy Chaperone.Georgia Engel in Toronto in 2007, where she was starring in The Drowsy Chaperone.

Georgia Engel, The Mary Tyler Moore Show’s Georgette, is dead at 70

The actress also starred in Everybody Loves Raymond and on Broadway in The Drowsy Chaperone and Half Time.

LOS ANGELES—Georgia Engel, who played the charmingly innocent, small-voiced Georgette on The Mary Tyler Moore Show and amassed a string of other TV and stage credits, has died. She was 70.

Engel died Friday in Princeton, N.J., said her friend and executor, John Quilty. The cause of death was unknown because she was a Christian Scientist and didn’t see doctors, Quilty said Monday.

“I know the world will be sad and sorry. She touched so many people,” said her agent, Jacqueline Stander.

Engel was best known for her role as Georgette on The Mary Tyler Moore Show, the character who was improbably destined to marry pompous anchorman Ted Baxter, played by Ted Knight.

Engel also had recurring roles on Everybody Loves Raymond and Hot in Cleveland. She was a five-time Emmy nominee, receiving two nods for the late Moore’s show and three for Everybody Loves Raymond.

She was “the sweetest, kindest, dearest woman. And crazy talented. I will miss her,” Valerie Bertinelli, who starred in Hot in Cleveland, said in a Twitter post.

Georgia Bright Engel was born in July 1948 in Washington, D.C., to parents Benjamin, a Coast Guard officer, and Ruth Engel. She studied theatre at the University of Hawaii.

Her prolific career included guest appearances on a variety of series, including The Love Boat, Fantasy Island, Coach and Two and a Half Men. Her Hot in Cleveland role reunited her with Betty White, her co-star in The Mary Tyler Moore Show (1972-77) and The Betty White Show (1977-78).

Engel appeared on Broadway in plays and musicals including Hello, Dolly!, The Boys from Syracuse and, most recently, The Drowsy Chaperone in 2006-07. She starred in an off-Broadway production of Uncle Vanya in 2012.

In 2007, Engel told the Star’s Richard Ouzounian about how she got the job on Mary Tyler Moore after Moore saw her perform in the play The House of Blue Leaves in Los Angeles. The character of Georgette was written specifically for Engel.

“It was only going to be one episode and I was just supposed to have a few lines in a party scene, but they kept giving me more and more to do,” Engel recalled.

“Then the following Monday morning, there was a buzz on my door and I looked through the peeper and there was this giant potted palm with a note that said, ‘Welcome to the MTM Family.’”

Engel could be as upbeat as the fictional Georgette, as was demonstrated during a panel discussion last year promoting the 2018 PBS special Betty White: First Lady of Television.

She recalled that a possible Everybody Loves Raymond spinoff set to include her and Fred Willard never come to fruition, which she called a great disappointment.

“But if that hadn’t happened,” she said, “I wouldn’t have been able to star” in writer-actor Bob Martin’s Drowsy Chaperone, which led to her custom-tailored role in Martin’s Half Time. The musical, about older adults who school themselves in hip hop to perform in halftime shows, was staged in New Jersey last year.

“It’s given me such joy,” said Engel, who had hoped to see it move to Broadway.

Her real-life voice was as sweet as the one familiar from her screen roles. “What you see is what you get. That’s not a character voice, that’s our girl,” a smiling White said in a 2012 interview with Engel, calling her a “pure gold” friend and colleague.

Engel’s final credited television appearance came last year in the Netflix series One Day at a Time.

Funeral services for Engel, whose survivors include her sisters Robin Engel and Penny Lusk, will be private, Quilty said.

With files from Star staff
JOIN THE CONVERSATION

Conversations are opinions of our readers and are subject to the Code of Conduct. The Star does not endorse these opinions.

More from The Star & Partners

More Entertainment

Top Stories