Joyce DeWitt
Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox person Joyce DeWitt (born April 23, 1949) is an American actress best known for playing Janet Wood on the ABC sitcom Three's Company from 1977 to 1984.
Early life
Joyce DeWitt was born on April 23, 1949, in Wheeling, West Virginia, and grew up in Speedway, Indiana, a suburb of Indianapolis. She is the second of four children born to Norma (née Branch) DeWitt (1926–2013) and Paul DeWitt (1925–2016).<ref name=Beaver>Template:Cite web</ref> She is of Italian descent from her mother, while her father was of Swedish and Dutch descent.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web DeWeitt states that she is Italian at the 48:08 mark.</ref> DeWitt began appearing on stage at the age of 13. She competed in speech and debate through the Indiana High School Forensic Association. She graduated from Speedway Senior High School, and once worked at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway ticket office.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
She earned her bachelor's degree in theater from Ball State University. Subsequently, while she was performing in summer stock, the director convinced her to enroll in UCLA's Department of Theater MFA program,<ref name=SitcomsOnline>Template:Cite web</ref> where she was awarded the Master of Fine Arts Fellowship as well as the Clifton Webb Scholarship.<ref name=BroadwayWorld>Template:Cite web</ref> She graduated in 1974.<ref name=Beaver/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Career
While attending UCLA, she worked as a secretary until her television debut on an episode of Baretta.<ref name=Beaver/> Contrary to rumors that she was mentored by actor Abe Vigoda, Dewitt has said that the two never met.<ref name=Star>Template:Cite news</ref>
DeWitt is best known for her role as Janet Wood during the 1977–1984 run of the sitcom Three's Company, a job she obtained after being cast in the show's second pilot.<ref name=SitcomsOnline/> She also played Janet in a 1979 episode of the spinoff series The Ropers. DeWitt would also make several appearances on TV game shows, including Tattletales, which also featured her then-boyfriend, actor Ray Buktenica, as well as Pyramid. In 1978, she also appeared with her Three's Company co-stars (Ritter, Norman Fell, Audra Lindley, and Richard Kline) on a special celebrity edition of Family Feud (hosted by Richard Dawson) where they competed against the cast of the TV shows Soap and The Love Boat. In 2004, she appeared as a celebrity panelist on one of the last episodes of the syndicated version of Hollywood Squares (hosted by Tom Bergeron).
After Three's Company ended in 1984, DeWitt appeared in an episode of Finder of Lost Loves in 1984, after which she quit acting for several years. She resumed acting with a part in a production of Noises Off at Michigan's Cherry County Playhouse in June 1991.<ref name=Beaver/> She later appeared in the 1995 TV comedy film Spring Fling! A character based on her, voiced by another actress, appeared in a 1997 episode of Pinky and the Brain. She made an appearance in an episode of Cybill, and had a cameo on the penultimate episode of Living Single.<ref name=SitcomsOnline/> Her 2000s works includes TV shows such as Hope Island, The Nick at Nite Holiday Special and Call of the Wild.
DeWitt co-produced and hosted the 2003 NBC-TV television film Behind the Camera: The Unauthorized Story of Three's Company. In the film, DeWitt is portrayed by Melanie Paxson.
In 2008, she appeared in the indie film Failing Better Now. In 2009, DeWitt starred in a stage production of Married Alive in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In June 2011, DeWitt succeeded Eve Plumb in the title role of the play Miss Abigail's Guide to Dating, Mating & Marriage at the Downstairs Cabaret Theatre in New York City's Times Square.<ref name=SitcomsOnline/><ref name=BroadwayWorld/> That same year, she appeared in a Canadian stage production of Dinner with Friends at Theatre Aquarius in Hamilton, Ontario.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
In 2012, DeWitt appeared in two separate stage productions of Love Letters starring opposite Tab Hunter and Tony Dow, respectively.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In August 2012, she starred with her niece, Katharine DeWitt, in a production of Remember Me at the Alhambra Dinner Theatre in Jacksonville, Florida.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Also in 2012, DeWitt appeared on Suzanne Somers' talk show, Suzanne Somers: Breaking Through, during which she and Somers reminisced about their time on Three's Company together. Somers apologized for the conflict that arose between them, and they exchanged anecdotes about the last time they each spoke to their late co-star John Ritter.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> DeWitt's appearance on Somers' program marked the first time the two actresses had seen or spoken to each other since having a major falling out 31 years earlier, involving a salary dispute.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
In 2014, DeWitt became a panelist on a local version of the classic game show Hollywood Squares (in turn she was also a panelist on the actual show itself back in the day) called The West Virginia Squares<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>West Virginia Squares</ref><ref>West Virginia Squares</ref>hosted by "The Master of The Hollywood Squares" himself Peter Marshall as part of an event called FestivALL at The Clay Center at the WV Music Hall of Fame. The other local celebrities were: Autumn Blair, Billy Edd Wheeler, Bil Lepp, Charlie McCoy, Charlisse Hailsop, Danny Jones, Donnie Davidson, Larry Groce, Landau Eugene Murphy Jr., Michael Cerveris and Steve Bishop. It aired on WVPB on April 11 and April 25 and on The West Virginia Channel on April 12 and April 15 for two episodes. Additionally, Marshall, like DeWitt, was also a native of West Virginia.
In 2018, DeWitt played Mother Superior in a stage production of Nunsense at the Hunterdon Hills Playhouse in New Jersey.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
In 2023, DeWitt made her debut appearance in the country music video ballad called "Home"<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Davisson Brothers Band - Home (Official Video) {starts at 0:07 / 5:23}</ref>by the Davisson Brothers Band where it captures the nostalgia and comfort of returning to where it all began. The song can be heard from the album "Home is Where the Heart is".
Charity work
DeWitt participated with members of the House and Senate at the Capitol Hill Forum on Hunger and Homelessness, and has hosted presentations for the Family Assistance Program of Hollywood. She hosted the International Awards Ceremony at the White House for the Presidential End Hunger Awards, and co-hosted, with Jeff Bridges, the World Food Day Gala at the Kennedy Center.<ref name=SitcomsOnline/>
Personal life
DeWitt has never married or had any children. She was in a romantic relationship with actor and director Ray Buktenica from 1973 to 1980.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
On July 4, 2009, DeWitt was arrested in El Segundo, California, and cited for DUI. She was booked at the police station, cited, and released on her own recognizance.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> On May 27, 2010, she pleaded no contest to one count misdemeanor and was placed on three years' probation and ordered to undergo a nine-month alcohol program. She was also ordered to pay a $510 fine, plus penalty assessments. In exchange for her plea, a second misdemeanor count was dismissed.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Filmography
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1975 | Baretta | Mother Earth | Episode: "Sharper Than a Serpent's Tooth" |
| 1976 | Most Wanted | Cindy | TV movie |
| 1977–1984 | Three's Company | Janet Wood | Main cast (170 episodes) |
| 1978 | With This Ring | Jilly Weston | TV movie |
| 1979 | Supertrain | Natalie Smithburne | Episode: "Pirouette" |
| 1979 | The Ropers | Janet Wood | Episode: "The Party" |
| 1979 | The Love Boat | Jackie Landers | Episode: "The Audit Couple/The Scoop/My Boyfriend's Back" |
| 1980 | The B.B. Beegle Show | Herself (guest star) | TV pilot episode |
| 1984 | Finder of Lost Loves | Lynn Powell | Episode: "Portraits" |
| 1995 | Spring Fling! | Linda Hayden | TV movie |
| 1995 | Cybill | Psychic Pals Host | Episode: "The Odd Couples" |
| 1998 | Living Single | Herself (guest star) | Episode: "To Catch a Thief" |
| 1998 | Twitch City | Herself (guest star) | Episode: "I Look Like Joyce DeWitt" |
| 2000 | Hope Island | Laetitia Barton | Episode: "A Rising Tide Takes All Boats" |
| 2003 | The Nick at Nite Holiday Special | Miss DeWitt, The Housekeeper | TV special |
| 2009 | Call of the Wild | Jolene | Feature film |
| 2010 | Failing Better Now | Irene | Feature film |
| 2011 | The Great Fight | Randi Toney | Feature film |
| 2014 | Snapshot | First Lady | Feature film |
| 2014 | My Boyfriends' Dogs | Nikki | TV movie |
| 2015 | Rock Story | Judge Carol Anne Connelly | Feature film |
| 2018 | The Savant | Detective Randi Toney | Feature film |
| 2022 | Ask Me to Dance | Nana | Feature film |
References
External links
- Pages with broken file links
- 1949 births
- 20th-century American actresses
- 21st-century American actresses
- Actors from Wheeling, West Virginia
- Actresses from Indianapolis
- Actresses from West Virginia
- American child actresses
- American film actresses
- American people of Dutch descent
- American people of Italian descent
- American people of Swedish descent
- American stage actresses
- American television actresses
- American women comedians
- Ball State University alumni
- Comedians from Indiana
- Comedians from West Virginia
- Living people
- People from Marion County, Indiana
- UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television alumni
- University of California alumni