Bethel Leslie


Jane Bethel Leslie was an American actress and screenwriter. In a career spanning half a century, she was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award and a Laurel Award in 1964, a Tony Award in 1986, and a CableACE Award in 1988.

Early years

Jane Bethel Leslie was born in New York, New York. Her parents were a lawyer, Warren Leslie, and Jane Leslie, a newspaperwoman. Bethel was a student at Brearley School in New York City. She had a brother, writer Warren Leslie.
While a 13-year-old student at Brearley School, Leslie was discovered by George Abbott, who cast her in the play Snafu in 1944. In a 1965 newspaper article, Leslie described herself as "a 'quick study' – able to learn my lines rather fast."

Career

Stage

Over the next four decades, Leslie appeared in a number of Broadway productions, including Goodbye, My Fancy, The Time of the Cuckoo, Inherit the Wind, Catch Me If You Can, and Long Day's Journey Into Night. In 1950, Leslie was cast as Cornelia Otis Skinner in The Girls, a television series based on Skinner's Our Hearts Were Young and Gay. She departed the show after two months to appear with Helen Hayes in the play The Wisteria Trees, adapted from Anton Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard, by Joshua Logan.

Television

Leslie began working in television in the 1940s and frequently was a guest on the many anthology series popular in the early to mid-1950s, such as Studio One and Playhouse 90. She appeared with Ronald Reagan and Stafford Repp in the 1960 episode "The Way Home" of CBS's The DuPont Show with June Allyson. Later, she was one of the repertory of actors starring in The Richard Boone Show.
Leslie made three guest appearances on Perry Mason, and was featured as Perry's client in all three episodes. In 1958, she played Janet Morris in "The Case of the Fugitive Nurse" and Evelyn Girard in "The Case of the Purple Woman". In 1960, she played Sylvia Sutton in "The Case of the Wayward Wife". In 1962, she portrayed the part of Martha Hastings in the episode "The Long Count" on CBS's Rawhide. She guest-starred in many western television series, including The Texan, Mackenzie's Raiders, The Man from Blackhawk, Riverboat, Wanted: Dead or Alive, Trackdown, Bat Masterson, The Rifleman, The High Chaparral, Gunsmoke, Maverick, Pony Express, Stagecoach West, Bonanza, The Wild Wild West, Have Gun – Will Travel, and Wagon Train.
Her other credits were on drama series, such as Alfred Hitchcock Presents; Richard Diamond, Private Detective and The Fugitive, both starring David Janssen; The Eleventh Hour; The Lloyd Bridges Show; Mannix; Route 66 ; Straightaway; Bus Stop; Target: The Corruptors!; The Investigators; The Man and the Challenge; Adventures in Paradise; Ben Casey; One Step Beyond; Thriller and Empire. She became a regular on the NBC soap The Doctors, when she took over the role of Maggie Powers after Ann Williams left the part. Leslie was also featured in the 1964 episode "The Fluellen Family" in the NBC western Daniel Boone. She had recurring roles on Another World and All My Children and was featured in the television adaptations of In Cold Blood and Saint Maybe.

Writing

Leslie was the head writer for The Secret Storm in 1970. She also scripted episodes for Gunsmoke, Bracken's World, Barnaby Jones, McCloud, The New Land, Matt Helm, and Falcon Crest. In 1970, producer Howard Christie referred to Leslie as "a good actress who has turned into a fine scriptwriter."

Filmography

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1958Perry MasonJanet MorrisEpisode: "The Case of the Fugitive Nurse"
1958Perry MasonEvelyn GirardEpisode: "The Case of the Purple Woman"
1958MaverickJanet KilmerEpisode: "The Thirty Ninth Star"
1959Wanted Dead or AliveCarol EasterEpisode: "Secret Ballot"
1959Alcoa Presents: One Step BeyondMrs. BarrettEpisode: "The Riddle"
1960Alfred Hitchcock PresentsMabel GravesEpisode: "The Man with Two Faces"
1960Perry MasonSylvia SuttonEpisode: "The Case of the Wayward Wife"
1960Wagon TrainGreta HalstadtEpisode: "The Joshua Gilliam Story"
1960Route 66Jo GallowayEpisode: "Layout at Glen Canyon"
1961The RiflemanTess MillerEpisode: "Stopover"
1961Wagon TrainHelen MartinEpisode: "The Janet Hale Story"
1962Route 66Lori BartonEpisode: "City of Wheels"
1962Bonanza Ann GrantEpisode: "The Jackknife"
1962Rawhide Martha HastingsEpisode: "The Long Count"
1962Gunsmoke Rose EllenEpisode: "The Summons"
1963Have Gun - Will TravelKim Sing and Jin HoEpisode: "The Lady of the Fifth Moon"
1963Daniel BooneZerelda FluellenEpisode: "The Family Fluellen"
1963–1964The Richard Boone Show25 episodes
1964The FugitiveMarcie KingEpisode: "Storm Center"
1964Gunsmoke Elsa PoeEpisode: "Innocence"
1965Wagon TrainMary Lee McIntoshEpisode: "The Miss Mary Lee McIntosh Story"
1965–1968The DoctorsDr. Maggie Van Alen116 episodes
1969 The Virginian A woman of Stone
1971Dr. Cook's GardenEssie BullittTV movie
1974The New Perry MasonElinor FurleyEpisode: "The Case of the Tortured Titan"
1974Kung FuRita CoblenzEpisode: "The Passion of Chen Yi"
1987The EqualizerWoman on StreetEpisode: "A Place to Stay"
1991–1992All My ChildrenClaudia Conner13 episodes
1994One Life to LiveEthel Crawford
1996As the World TurnsJoanEpisode: 1996-06-10

Awards and recognition

Leslie was a regular on NBC's The Richard Boone Show, which garnered her an Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Single Performance by an Actress in a Leading Role for her work in the episode "Statement of Fact." Media critic John Crosby wrote about Leslie's work in that anthology series, "During the season Bethel played everything from a seductive ax murderess to a dumb gangster's moll, to an Irish scrub woman, through a whole series of witchy mothers."
A poll of media critics and editors named her Most Promising New Talent in Radio Television Daily's 1963 All-American Favorites—Television.
Leslie's 1986 Broadway portrayal of a drug-addicted mother in Long Day's Journey into Night brought her a Tony Award nomination for Best Featured Actress.

Personal life

Leslie was married to director Andrew McCullough. They had one child, daughter Leslie McCullough.

Death

Bethel Leslie died of cancer at 70 in her Manhattan apartment.