Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Mary Tyler Moore, TV's Iconic Independent Career Woman, Has Died

Mary Tyler Moore, the sitcom star best known for her seven season run as the star of The Mary Tyler Moore Show, has died at 80 years old, according to the Hollywood Reporter. Hers was the first sitcom centered around a single-by-choice woman with serious professional aspirations, opening the door for shows like 30 Rock, Parks and Recreation, and Girls decades later. 

In her twenties, Moore played the long-suffering wife of the protagonist on The Dick Van Dyke Show, another of the most well-regarded TV comedies in American history. The Mary Tyler Moore Show, which was about a woman in her thirties who moved to Minneapolis after a breakup and found herself producing a local TV news show, also left a feminist mark in Hollywood. Premiering in 1970, it came along at a time when perhaps only a token woman might be added to a TV writing staff. However, one third of the 75 writers hired over the history of the show were women. 

The two legendary roles place Moore at the center of an interesting continuum: both a feminist icon, and a symbol for the kind of idyllic, midcentury domestic bliss people get nostalgic for, even though it never really existed.

After The Mary Tyler Moore Show ended in 1977, Moore turned briefly to drama. She was nominated for an Oscar for her role in the Robert Redford-directed family drama Ordinary People. In the film, the son of Moore's character attempts suicide—suicide would claim her real-life son and only child shortly after the release of the film

Moore largely gravitated back to TV later in her career. In one memorable turn, she played a talk show host on That 70s Show, despite the headache-inducing conceit that her character's show was contemporaneous with the The Mary Tyler Moore Show

She was also immortalized in the chorus of the song "Buddy Holly," by Weezer, famous for its video which is also a nostalgia trip (despite no appearance by Moore herself).

According to the Reporter, Moore is survived by her third husband, a cardiologist named Robert Levine.

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