Lauren Tewes

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Lauren Tewes
Tewes in The Love Boat, 1977
Born
Cynthia Lauren Tewes

(1953-10-26) October 26, 1953 (age 70)
EducationPioneer High School
Alma materRio Hondo College
University of California, Riverside (unfinished)
Pacific Conservatory Theatre
OccupationActress
Years active1973–present
Known forJulie McCoy on The Love Boat
Spouses
John Wassel
(m. 1977; div. 1982)
Paolo Nonnis
(m. 1985; div. 1995)
Robert Nadir
(m. 1996; died 2002)
Tewes with fellow Love Boat cast members

Cynthia Lauren Tewes[1] (/ˈtwz/,[2] born October 26, 1953[3]) is an American actress. She played Julie McCoy on the television anthology series The Love Boat, which originally aired on ABC from 1977 to 1986.

Early years[edit]

Tewes was born in Trafford, Pennsylvania,[4][5] of German extraction,[2] and one of four children born to Joanne (née Woods) and Joseph Tewes,[4][5] a wood pattern maker.[2] Regarding the proper pronunciation of her last name, Tewes later explained, "[It] was originally pronounced 'Tavis.' But when my grandfather arrived in Ellis Island from Germany, the immigration official carelessly said his name was "Tweeze," and it hung on ever since.'"[2]

The family moved to Whittier, California when Tewes was eight.[4] She attended Ada S. Nelson Elementary School[6] and Pioneer High School, where she studied drama, winning Best Actress award for three years.[7] Tewes enrolled on an Associate of Arts degree at Rio Hondo College, deciding to major in theatre arts. At college, she won "The Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Theatre", a one-year scholarship which enabled her to transfer to the University of California, Riverside, as a sophomore.[8]

In 1973, when her scholarship expired, Tewes withdrew from college and joined the Pacific Conservatory Theatre in Santa Maria, California, as an apprentice, making her stage debut in Arsenic and Old Lace and The Most Happy Fella before becoming a member of the Birdcage Theatre Company at Knott's Berry Farm, an amusement complex outside Los Angeles.[9]

Career[edit]

Tewes' first break came in mid-1974 when she starred in a Lipton Ice Tea commercial, allowing her to join the Screen Actors Guild and register with an agent with the prospect to work on film projects.[4]

Tewes was soon cast in roles on the prime time TV series Charlie's Angels ("Angels in Chains"), Vega$ (My Darling Daughter), and Family ("Mirror, Mirror on the Wall...") as Jill Redfield, a disenchanted Pasadena debutante. However, it was her role in Starsky & Hutch ("Starsky and Hutch Are Guilty") as Sharon Freemont, an assistant district attorney, which brought her to the attention of Aaron Spelling.[10]

Tewes was cast for the role of cruise director Julie McCoy on The Love Boat, selected from more than 100 actresses who auditioned.[11] She starred in the third and final pilot of the show, cast the day before production began on the RMS Queen Mary in Long Beach.[12] Tewes recalls the pilot episode:

"I had to borrow money to get a new tire, because my ’62 Volkswagen Bug was not going to get to San Pedro…. That first day, standing there in the little outfit, and I had to say, ”Hi, welcome aboard, I’m Julie McCoy, your cruise director” a gazillion times. But I kept screwing it up and saying, ”Hi, welcome aboard, I’m Julie MacLeod…” because I was talking to Gavin MacLeod and I was so excited."[13]

In parallel, Tewes appeared in 1979 TV film Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders alongside Jane Seymour and made her film debut in the 1981 film Eyes of a Stranger, which co-starred a young Jennifer Jason Leigh.

In 1984, after seven seasons on The Love Boat, Tewes was replaced after a highly public battle with cocaine addiction, which she eventually overcame.[14] She did reprise her role as a guest in a 1985 episode,[15] and in the television films in the 1986–87 season.

Tewes was cast in a 1985 CBS sitcom pilot Anything for Love. The pilot aired as a special that summer, but was not picked up as a series. She went on to star in classic 1980s TV series My Two Dads, The New Mike Hammer, Murder, She Wrote, T. J. Hooker and Hunter.

In 1994, Tewes moved to Seattle and focused on regional theatre acting and directing across the country. In Seattle, she performed with the Tacoma Actors Guild and the Seattle Repertory Theatre.[16] As well as doing voice-overs for commercials, Tewes continued her TV career and appeared in a 1998 episode of Love Boat: The Next Wave, a two-season revival of the original series. In 2000–01, she had a recurring role as a police detective on The Fugitive.

Tewes plays Maxine Murdoch in the Imagination Theatre comedy-mystery radio series Murder and the Murdochs, which debuted in 2020. She has also played roles in episodes of other radio series on Imagination Theatre.[17]

Culinary school[edit]

Tewes attended culinary school to become a cheese specialist and works as a sous-chef for a catering company in Seattle when not acting.[18]

Personal life[edit]

Tewes has been married three times, first to John Wassel, a TV commercials director, then to Paolo Nonnis, an Italian drummer, and finally stage actor Robert Nadir. In 1987, she suffered the loss of her one-month-old daughter, born prematurely.[19]

Filmography[edit]

Film[edit]

Year Title Role Notes
1981 Eyes of a Stranger Jane Harris Slasher film
1993 Magic Kid Mom aka The Little Ninja Dragon (United Kingdom)
1995 The Doom Generation TV Anchorwoman independent black comedy thriller film
1997 Nowhere Julie The Newscaster black comedy drama film

Television[edit]

Year Title Role Notes
1976 Police Story Kathy Episode: "Trash Detail, Front and Center"
1977 Family Jill Redfield Episode: "Mirror, Mirror on the Wall..."
ABC Weekend Special Sharon Episode: "The Haunted Trailer"
Starsky & Hutch Sharon Freemont Episode: "Starsky and Hutch Are Guilty"
1977-1987 The Love Boat Cruise Director Julie McCoy 199 episodes
1978 Vega$ Cindy Smalley Episode: "Yes, My Darling Daughter"
1979 Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders Jessie Mathews Television film
1976-1979 Charlie's Angels Christine Hunter, Julie McCoy 2 episodes
1978-1984 Fantasy Island Jane Howell / Bebe DeForrest 2 episodes
1985 The New Mike Hammer Chastity Episode: "Firestorm"
Finder of Lost Loves Dorothy Keating Episode: "Surrogates"
T.J. Hooker Cynthia Randolph Episode: "Lag Time"
Anything for Love Dot Bailey Television film
Murder, She Wrote Betty Jordan Episode: "A Lady in the Lake"
1986 Hunter Sheila Burke Episode: "True Confessions"
1984-1986 Hotel Paula Todd, Ellen Pierson 2 episodes
1987 Sky Commanders Red McCullough Voice, 2 episodes
1988 My Two Dads Karen Kupkus Episode: "Friends of the Family"
1990 The China Lake Murders Kitty Television film
Camp Cucamonga Mrs. Scott Television film
1991 Who's the Boss Lavonne Episode: "This Sold House"
1992-1993 Dark Justice 2 episodes
1994 Weird Science Ms. Tankey Episode: "One Size Fits All"
Attack of the 5 Ft. 2 In. Women Hostess Television film
1996 It Came from Outer Space II Carolee Minter Television film
1997 Martin Julie McCoy Episode: "Goin' Overboard"
1998 Love Boat: The Next Wave Julie McCoy Episode: "Reunion"
2001 The Fugitive Linda Westershulte 4 episodes
2017 Twin Peaks Neighbor Episode: "There's Fire Where You Are Going"

Awards and nominations[edit]

Year Association Category Production Result
1982 39th Golden Globe Awards Best Supporting Actress in a Series, Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television The Love Boat as Julie McCooy Nominated

References[edit]

  1. ^ McLeod, Gavin (2013). This is Your Captain Speaking : My Fantastic Voyage Through Hollywood, Faith & Life. Nashville, Tennessee : W Publishing Group. p. 136. "Anyway, the first time I laid eyes on Lauren Tewes — whom we all called Cindy (she was born Cynthia Lauren Tewes, and only used Lauren professionally) — I understood exactly what Aaron and the network had been looking so long and hard to find." ISBN 978-0-8499-4762-9.
  2. ^ a b c d Larding, Bob (June 4, 1978). "'Loveboat's' Loveable Lauren". New York Daily News. Leisure, p. 10. p. 77. Retrieved January 6, 2024. "'No, I never thought of changing it,' she says. 'Once people hear it, they never mispronounce it again. The name, which is German, was originally pronounced "Tavis." But when my grandfather arrived in Ellis Island from Germany, the immigration official carelessly said his name was "Tweeze," and it hung on ever since.'"
  3. ^ "Today in History: Today's Birthdays". Dubuque Telegraph-Herald. October 26, 2023. p. A3. ProQuest 2882094150. Hillary Rodham Clinton is 76. Musician Bootsy Collins is 72. Actor James Pickens Jr. is 71. Rock musician David Was is 71. Rock musician Keith Strickland (The B-52s) is 70. Actor Lauren Tewes is 70. Actor D.W. Moffett is 69. Actor-singer Rita Wilson is 67. Actor Patrick Breen is 63. Actor Dylan McDermott is 62.. See also:
    • "Today in History: Today's Birthdays". Asheville Citizen-Times. October 26, 2019. p. 45. ProQuest 2327939480. Hillary Rodham Clinton is 72. Rock musician Keith Strickland (the B-52's) is 66. Actress Lauren Tewes is 66. Actress-singer Rita Wilson is 56.
  4. ^ a b c d "Lauren Tewes". Olathe News. December 31, 1977. p. 9. Retrieved January 6, 2024.
  5. ^ a b O'Donnell, Monica M. (1984). Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television. Gale. p. 493. ISBN 0-8103-2064-9 – via Internet Archive.
  6. ^ "Lauren Tewes". Cumberland Evening Times. 24 March 1978.
  7. ^ Dangaard, Colin (23 March 1982). "Lauren Tewes Cooking up a Storm". Kingston Gleaner: 4.
  8. ^ "Lauren Tewes -- Hollywood Success". The Morning News. Jun 24, 1979.
  9. ^ Peterson, Bettelou (Aug 19, 1979). "She Won't Rock The "Love Boat" - ABC's Hit Series Serenely Sails On". Detroit Free Press.
  10. ^ "Will The Real "Julie" Please Stand Up?". Cruise Travel; September/October 1980.
  11. ^ UPI (March 12, 1985). "Cocaine Abuse Threw Tewes' Performance Overboard". St. Petersburg Times. Retrieved 2009-01-08.
  12. ^ "Lauren Tewes To Cruise For Two More Years". Spartanburg Herald-Journal. AP. February 19, 1982.
  13. ^ Snierson, Dan (7 October 2007). "'Love Boat': Cast and crew tell all". Entertainment.
  14. ^ "Cocaine Abuse Threw Tewes' Performance Overboard". St. Petersburg Times. 12 March 1985. Retrieved 1 April 2019.
  15. ^ "Lauren Tewes Takes Cruise For Old Time's Sake". Los Angeles Times. November 26, 1985. Retrieved 2009-01-08.
  16. ^ Talerico, Teresa (31 May 1998). "Tewes sets a new course". Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
  17. ^ "Cynthia Lauren Tewes – Imagination Theatre". Imagination Theatre. Aural Vision LLC. 2020. Retrieved March 30, 2020.
  18. ^ Brown, Emma (25 June 2015). "The Love Boat Tribute". Illawarra Mercury. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  19. ^ "Sailing a Different Course". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. February 24, 1998. p. 17. Retrieved January 8, 2009.

External links[edit]