Suzanne Marie Mahoney
(born October 16, 1946) is an American actress, author and businesswoman, best known for her roles on Three's Company
and Step by Step
. Somers later became the author of a series of best-selling self-help books, including Ageless: The Naked Truth About Bioidentical Hormones
(2006), a book about bioidentical hormone replacement therapy. [1] She has also released two autobiographies, four diet books, and a book of poetry entitled "Touch Me" (1980). She currently features items of her design on the Home Shopping Network.
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SUZANNE SOMERS TICKETS
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Biography
Somers was born
Suzanne Marie Mahoney
in
San Bruno, California, the third of four children in an
Irish Catholic family
[2] [3] [4]. Her mother, Marion Elizabeth (née Turner), was a medical secretary, and her father, Francis Mahoney, was a laborer (loading beer into boxcars)http://www.wisegeek.com/who-is-suzanne-somers.htm and gardener
[5].
In September 1964, she was accepted at San Francisco College for Women (commonly referred to as "Lone Mountain College") on a music scholarship, a Catholic school that is now a campus of the
University of San Francisco. She left during her sophomore year, after becoming pregnant. She gave birth to her son Bruce Jr. on
November 8,
1965, after marrying the boy's father, Bruce Somers. She left her husband three years later and began modeling. In 1971, her son was severely injured when he was hit by a car.
In 1968, Suzanne won a job as a prize model on the short-lived game show,
The Anniversary Game
hosted by her future husband,
Alan Hamel. She has been married to Hamel since 1977. Hamel was her business manager during the failed negotiations which led to her leaving
Three's Company
.
Career
Early acting roles
She began acting in small roles during the late 1960s and early 1970s (including on various talk shows promoting her book of poetry, and bit parts in movies such as the "Blonde in the T-Bird" in
American Graffiti
, and an episode of the American version of the sitcom
Lotsa Luck
as the
femme fatale in the early 1970s) before landing the role of the ditzy blonde "
Chrissy Snow" on the
ABC sitcom
Three's Company
in 1977.
Three's Company
At the beginning of the fifth season, Suzanne demanded a raise from
$30,000 to $150,000 an episode and 10% ownership of the show's profit. Those close to the situation suggested that
Suzanne's rebellion was due to husband/manager Hamel's influence over her.
When ABC denied her request, Somers boycotted the second and fourth shows of the season, due to several excuses such as a broken rib (which was false). She finished the remaining season on her contract, but her role was decreased to 60 seconds per episode. After her contract was terminated, she sued ABC for $2 million, claiming that her credibility in show business had been damaged. It went to an arbitrator who decided that Suzanne was owed only $30,000 for a missed episode she had not been paid. Other rulings favored the producers. Somers has said she was fired because she asked to be paid as much as the male actors on the show.
[6]
Before the feud with
Three's Company
producers and
ABC had even ended, rival network
CBS knew that Somers was ultimately going to be available. They eventually signed her to a contract and a development deal for her own sitcom, which was going to be called
The Suzanne Somers Show
, in which she played an "over-the-top" airline stewardess. Once she was indeed available (after her firing from
Three's Company
), CBS gave Somers – and the public – a timeframe in which to expect the show to hit the air, but due to a change in administration at CBS's entertainment division in early 1982, the brass ended up passing on the project. Also, Suzanne claimed in her book
After the Fall
(
1998), that the producers of
Three's Company
kept sending "cease & desist" forms to CBS stating that Suzanne could not use any of her Chrissy Snow characterization, and that chilled the creative process.
Spokeswomen for the Thighmaster
During the 1980s, Somers became a
Las Vegas entertainer. She was the spokeswoman for the
Thighmaster, a piece of
exercise equipment that is squeezed between one's
thighs. Thighmaster was one of the first products responsible for launching the
infomercial concept. During this period of her career, she also performed for U.S. servicemen overseas.
[7] [8]
Playboy
pictorials
Somers appeared in two
Playboy
cover feature nude pictorials: in 1980 and 1984. The 1980 pictures were taken years before, when Suzanne was a struggling model and actress and did a test photoshoot for the magazine.
She's the Sheriff
At the height of her exposure as official spokesperson for
Thighmaster infomercials, Somers made her first return to a series, although not on network television. In 1987, she starred in the sitcom
She's the Sheriff
, which ran in
first-run syndication. Somers portrayed a widow with two young kids who decided to fill the shoes of her late husband, a sheriff of a southern town. The show ran for two seasons.
Step by Step
In 1990, Somers returned to network TV, appearing in numerous guest roles and made-for-TV movies, mostly for
ABC. Her roles in these, including the movie
Rich Men, Single Women
, attracted the attention of
Lorimar Television and
Miller-Boyett Productions, who were developing a new sitcom. For Lorimar, this was asking Somers back, since they alone had produced
She's the Sheriff
.
In September 1991, Somers bounced back to series TV by starring in the successful sitcom
Step By Step
(with
Patrick Duffy), which ran for seven seasons. Playing off her rejuvenated career, Somers also launched a daytime talk show in 1994, albeit briefly, aptly titled
Suzanne Somers
. During ''Step By Step
s final season, on CBS, she began co-hosting
Candid Camera'' with
Peter Funt.
Candid
cohost
From 1997–99, Somers cohosted the revised
Candid Camera
show, when CBS chose to bring it back with
Peter Funt (the series was in the network's top 10 for five years in the mid 1960s). Somers stayed for two years before PAX TV renewed the series without her.
Bout with breast cancer
Somers announced in spring 2001 that she had breast cancer and she was treated with conventional surgery and
radiation therapy.
Somers is also a supporter of
bioidentical hormone replacement therapy. Her book,
Ageless
,
[9] includes interviews with 16 leading practitioners of bioidentical hormone therapy, but gives extra discussion to the so-called '
Wiley Protocol'.
The Blonde in the Thunderbird
In summer 2005, Somers made her
Broadway debut in a one-woman show,
The Blonde in the Thunderbird,
a collection of stories about her life and career. The show was supposed to run until September, but negative publicity and disappointing ticket sales caused a late July closing. Somers blamed the harsh reviews (the
New York Times:
"...a swan dive into narcissism"
;
New York Post: "smug and remorseless") and told the Post:
"These men [New York critics] are curmudgeons, and maybe I went too close to the bone for them. I was lying there naked, and they decided to kick me and step on me, just like these visions you see in Iraq."
[10]
Wildfire at her Malibu home
On
January 9,
2007, the Associated Press reported that a wildfire in
Southern California had destroyed Somers'
Malibu home, and all she had left was the clothes on her back.
[11] Appearing on television, Somers told reporters they planned to rebuild.
[12] In March 2007, on
The Ellen DeGeneres Show
, Somers explained that she found her wedding band from her husband of 29 years while sifting through ashes of her home.
Television work
- The Anniversary Game
(1969–1970)
- Mantrap
(1971–1973)
- Lotsa Luck
(~1973)
- Sky Heist
(1975)
- It Happened at Lakewood Manor
(1977)
- Three's Company
(cast member from 1977-1981)
- Happily Ever After
(1978)
- Zuma Beach
(1978)
- Hollywood Wives
(1985) (miniseries)
- Goodbye Charlie
(1985)
- She's the Sheriff
(1987–1989)
- Rich Men, Single Women
(1990)
- Step by Step
(1991–1998)
- Keeping Secrets
(1991)
- Exclusive
(1992) (also co-executive producer)
- The Suzanne Somers Show
(1994–1995)
- Seduced by Evil
(1994)
- Devil's Food
(1996)
- Love-Struck
(1997)
- No Laughing Matter
(1998)
- Candid Camera
(co-host from 1998-2000)
- The Darklings
(1999)
- Kathy Griffin: My Life on the D-List
(2009) (Guest appearance)
Filmography
thumb
- Bullitt
(1968)
- Daddy's Gone A-Hunting
(1969)
- American Graffiti
(1973)
- Magnum Force
(1973)
- ''Ants (1977)
- Billy Jack Goes to Washington
(1977)
- Yesterday's Hero
(1979)
- Nothing Personal
(1980)
- Totally Minnie
(1987)
- Serial Mom
(1994)
- Rusty: A Dog's Tale
(1998) (voice)
- Say It Isn't So
(2001) (Cameo)
Books
References
- Ellin, Abby. Battle Over 'Juice of Youth', ''The New York Times'', October 15, 2006.
- http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F40A1FFC3F5F12728DDDAB0A94DA405B8084F1D3
- http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-22071458_ITM
- http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=KC&p_theme=kc&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p
- http://www.filmreference.com/film/59/Suzanne-Somers.html
- Kohen, Yael "We'll Show You Who's FUNNY", ''Marie Claire, March 14, 2009.
- O'Connor, John J., "TV: Suzanne Somers Plays for G.I.'s", ''The New York Times, January 3, 1983.
- Zielsdorf, Bruce E., "Armed Forces 'Salute' Suzanne Somers on Broadway", July 12, 2005. ''Army Public Affairs'' (press release)
- Ageless: The Naked Truth About Bioidentical Hormones
- http://www.nypost.com/entertainment/50464.htm
- Malibu Fire Destroys Suzanne Somers Home
- ABC News: ABC News