Nancy Kovack
Native to Flint, Michigan, Nancy Kovack was an undergraduate at the University of Michigan at 15 as a radio announcer at 16, a college grad at the age of 19 and the owner of eight beauty titles by twenty. Then, in New York she began her acting career in the form of one of Jackie Gleason's "glea girls" and more prominently on The Dave Garroway (1953), Today (1952) and Beat the Clock (1951). Kovack's Hollywood acting career began by playing a part on stage. Kovack signed on for Columbia after completing the project. The years following Kovack was able to accumulate a huge list of TV credits. The actress was also selected for one Emmy in 1969 for a performance in Mannix. The wife of the world-renowned composer Zubin Mehta of New York Philharmonic fame, Kovack publicly alleges that she was recently swindled (to an amount in the amount of $200,000) by Susan McDougal, a central character involved in the Whitewater scandal. The actress has been featured five times on the comedy show Bewitched (1964) Three of those appearances were as Darrin Stephens' catty former partner Sheila Summers. Her father was a General Motors executive. She lives with her husband Zubin Mehta in Los Angeles, California. She graduated in 1954 from Ann Arbor University of Michigan. Famous for her role as the seductive native medicine woman Nona as seen in Star Trek 2nd season's episode A Private Little War, 1968.
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