Emmy winner Barbara Hale, who played Perry Masonâs secretary, has died at 94
Barbara Hale, best known for her Emmy Award-winning role as Perry Masonâs loyal secretary Della Street on the long-running 1950s and â60s TV series starring Raymond Burr, has died. She was 94.
Hale died Thursday, according to her son, actor William Katt, who posted the news on his Facebook page. Kattâs agent, Jacqueline Sander, said Hale died at home, at peace with her family and friends.
âWeâve all been so lucky to have her for so long. She was gracious and kind and silly and always fun to be with âŚ,â Katt wrote on Facebook. âWeâre all a little lost without her but we have extraordinary stories and memories to take with us for the rest of our lives.â
Based on characters in author Erle Stanley Gardnerâs popular mystery series, the hourlong âPerry Mason,â about a crime-solving defense attorney, ran for nine seasons on CBS, from 1957 to 1966.
Hale viewed the devoted Della as âa woman who knew what everybody was thinking.â
âShe was informed and very observant of everything that went on,â Hale said of the character in a 1993 interview with the Chicago Tribune. âThat was my challenge as an actress â to be a necessary part of the office without being too aggressive.
âDella was quietly overpowering: She knew when to speak and when to keep her mouth closed.â
Hale was a former RKO and Columbia Pictures contract player with a string of movies and TV dramatic anthology series appearances behind her when producer Gail Patrick Jackson offered her the role of Della.
The onetime Chicago fashion model, who was married to actor Bill Williams (TVâs Kit Carson) and had young children at home, wasnât interested in working full time on a weekly TV series. But at Jacksonâs urging, she agreed to read the pilot script.
âI called back after reading it and said: âGood luck, dear,â â Hale recalled in a 1993 interview with the Los Angeles Times, saying she didnât think an actor could sustain Masonâs lengthy courtroom monologues on a weekly basis.
But when Jackson told her that Gardner had chosen Burr to play Mason, Hale said she thought they had an actor who could pull it off.
âHeâs so professional and so fine and looks great for the part. Well, I think heâs just a marvelous choice,â Hale recalled telling Jackson. âShe said, âNow, Barbara. You must do it.â â
After discussing the offer with her husband and obtaining a promise from Jackson that CBS was only going to shoot 18 episodes, Hale agreed to play the part. The series she thought would never go beyond 18 episodes earned her the Emmy Award in 1959 and another Emmy nomination in 1961.
She learned early on that her portrayal of Della also had made an impression at home.
âWhen [my son] Billy was in the first grade, we went to school for the first parent meeting, and on his desk were little projects heâd made â pictures of Daddy and Mommy and his sister and his animals,â she recalled in the 1993 Chicago Tribune interview.
âAnd underneath my picture ⌠heâd written in inch-high block letters, âThis is my mom. I love her. She is a secretary.â â
Billy went on to become actor William Katt, which also was his fatherâs real name.
After âPerry Masonâ went off the air in 1966, Hale served as a commercial spokeswoman for the Amana Corp., played Dean Martinâs wife in the movie âAirportâ and made TV guest appearances.
In 1985, Burr and Hale reprised their old roles in a reunion movie on NBC, âPerry Mason Returns.â A major ratings success, it led to 25 more Perry Mason TV movies until Burrâs death in 1993.
Haleâs son Katt played the part of investigator Paul Drake Jr., the son of the character originally played by William Hopper, in a number of the popular TV movies. Hale previously had played the mother of Kattâs character in the 1978 movie âBig Wednesdayâ and in an episode of his early â80s TV series âThe Greatest American Hero.â
She was born April 18, 1922, in DeKalb, Ill., and grew up in Rockford, Ill. After graduating from high school, where she was voted May Queen, she studied at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts.
Her plans to become a commercial illustrator and portraitist changed after she was spotted on a Chicago street corner by the owner of a modeling agency.
She worked a year and a half as a fashion model in Chicago before RKO saw photos of her and signed her to a contract.
She went on to play leads in films such as âWest of the Pecosâ (with Robert Mitchum), âJolson Sings Againâ (with Larry Parks), âLorna Dooneâ (with Richard Greene), âThe Jackpotâ (with James Stewart) and âA Lion Is in the Streetsâ (with James Cagney).
While at RKO, Hale met and married her husband, with whom she starred in âThe Clay Pigeonâ and âA Likely Story.â He died in 1992.
Hale is survived by her three children, six grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.
McLellan is a former Times staff writer.
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