Bonnie Franklin, Steadfast Mom on ‘One Day at a Time,’ Dies at 69
By DOUGLAS MARTIN
Bonnie Franklin, whose portrayal of a pert but determined Ann Romano on the television show “One Day at a Time”
in the 1970s and ’80s spun laughter out of the tribulations of a
divorced woman juggling parenting, career, love life and feminist
convictions, died on Friday at her home in Los Angeles. She was 69.
The cause was complications of pancreatic cancer, family members said. They had announced the diagnosis in September.
Ms. Franklin also acted on the stage and in movies and for years sang
and danced in a nightclub act. But she was most widely known in the role
of Ann Romano, one of the first independent women to be portrayed on TV
wrestling with issues like sexual harassment, rape and menopause. Ms.
Franklin — green-eyed, red-haired, button-nosed and 5-foot-3 — brought a
buoyant comic touch to the part.
Some saw the show as helping feminism enter the mainstream.
“I know it’s just a television show, and I don’t think that I am
changing the way the world is structured,” Ms. Franklin told The
Washington Post in 1980, but she allowed that “sometimes we strike
chords that do make people think a bit.”
“One Day at a Time” ran from December 1975 to May 1984, and its ratings
ranked in the top 20 in eight of those seasons and in the top 10 in
four. Ms. Franklin was nominated for an Emmy Award and twice for a Golden Globe.
The show’s topicality fell squarely in the tradition of its developer, Norman Lear,
who had gained renown for introducing political and social commentary
to situation comedy with “All in the Family” and other shows. Its
co-creator was Whitney Blake, a former sitcom star who, as a single
mother, had reared the future actress Meredith Baxter.
Like Archie and Edith Bunker in “All in the Family,” Ann and her daughters, Julie and Barbara Cooper (Mackenzie Phillips and Valerie Bertinelli), used comedy in the service of grappling with serious and thorny real-world matters.
As a divorced mother who had reverted to her maiden name and relocated
to Indianapolis, Ann fought her deadbeat ex-husband for child support,
for example. Or she dealt with a daughter deciding whether to remain a
virgin.
Some story lines continued for up to four weeks, as when Julie, to Ann’s
consternation, dated a man more than twice her age. In one plot twist
Ann’s fiancé is killed by a drunken driver. Later she marries her
son-in-law’s divorced father.
Comic relief came from the frequent visits of the building superintendent, Dwayne Schneider (Pat Harrington).
But Ms. Franklin was said to have pushed the producers toward greater
realism, urging them to take on issues like teenage pregnancy and avoid
letting the show lapse into comic shtick.
In her 2009 memoir, “High on Arrival,” Ms. Phillips, who had come to the
show after gaining notice in the 1973 George Lucas film “American
Graffiti,” said that Ms. Franklin did not want “One Day at a Time” to be
“sitcom fluff.”
“She wanted it to deal honestly with the struggles and truths of raising
two teenagers as a single mother," Ms. Phillips wrote.
By the time the show ended in 1984, Ann’s daughters had grown and
married; Ann herself had remarried and become a grandmother.
In interviews. Ms. Franklin said she had refused to do anything that
might diminish her character’s integrity. In particular, she said, it
was important for Ann not to rely on a man to make decisions. But each
year she found herself fighting the same fights.
“And I’m not working with insensitive men,” she told The Boston Globe in
1981. “But the men who produce and write the show still don’t believe
me when I present them with the women’s point of view.
“After seven years,” she continued, “I just want to say, ‘C’mon guys,
I’m an intelligent person, why don’t you just trust me?’ I’m so tired of
fighting. But you can’t give up.”
Bonnie Gail Franklin was born in Santa Monica, Calif., on Jan. 6, 1944,
one of five children. Her father was an investment banker while her
mother pushed her children toward the performing arts. The family later
moved to Beverly Hills, where Ms. Franklin graduated from Beverly Hills
High School.
An excellent tap dancer by 9, she performed on “The Colgate Comedy Hour”
in 1953. The next year, she played Susan Cratchit on “A Christmas
Carol” on the CBS variety show “Shower of Stars.” In 1956 she had
uncredited roles in Alfred Hitchcock’s “Wrong Man” and the comedy “The
Kettles in the Ozarks.” She turned down an offer to be a Mouseketeer on
Disney’s “Mickey Mouse Club” television show.
After attending Smith College in Massachusetts, Ms. Franklin transferred
to the University of California, Los Angeles, where she graduated with a
major in English in 1966. Her marriage to Ronald Sossi, a playwright,
ended in divorce in 1970.
She had her breakthrough as a performer the same year, when she was
nominated for a Tony for her 10-minute song-and-dance performance on
Broadway as a chorus gypsy in “Applause,” which starred Lauren Bacall.
Ms. Franklin also acted in episodes of other television shows as well as
in regional theater and movies, mainly ones made for television,
notably playing Margaret Sanger, the women’s rights and birth-control
advocate, in “Portrait of a Rebel: The Remarkable Mrs. Sanger,”
a 1980 movie on CBS. On the Sanger set, she met the movie’s executive
producer, Marvin Minoff. They were married for 29 years before his death
in 2009.
Ms. Franklin is survived by her mother, Claire Franklin, and her stepchildren Jed and Julie Minoff.
Twenty-four years after her Sanger portrayal, Ms. Franklin spoke to
hundreds of thousands of women at an abortion rights march in
Washington.
Here's a link to the Yahoo obit.
ReplyDeletehttp://tv.yahoo.com/news/bonnie-franklin--star-of--one-day-at-a-time---dead-at-69-181746025.html
Here's a set. I will put grades on whether or not they were worth looking at.
ReplyDelete(C) LA Times obit - not much in the content, but a few local comments: http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/tv/showtracker/la-et-cm-bonnie-franklin-dies-at-69-20130301,0,6152971.story
(C+) There is an LA Times 1 minute video recap, with a short recent interview clip. Mentions husband Marvin's passing: http://www.latimes.com/videogallery/74632928/Bonnie-Franklin-1944-2013
(B) ABC News career recap (video 2:43), mostly focused on One Day's impact and the TV Land awards. Includes a short professional bio, Valerie and Mack's Twitters:
version 1 - http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/video/bonnie-franklin-dead-final-interview-trailblazing-tv-mom-18647231. Version 2 - http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/video/bonnie-franklin-dead-final-interview-trailblazing-tv-mom-18647231
(C-) LA Times: Her TV daughters react. Mentions more survivors than most stories. (http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/gossip/la-et-mg-bonnie-franklin-dies-bonnie-franklin-dead-20130301,0,2333264.story)
(C) People Magazine, more about Ann Romano than anything else. http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20678862,00.html