She was not on the list.
M'El Dowd Eudes, 79, Tarrytown, died 09-26-2012. She was born Mary Ellen Dowd.
She was a stage, musical theatre and film actress, and
singer, whose career spanned half a century. Beginning in Shakespeare roles and
films in the 1950s, Dowd continued to perform on stage, film and television
into the 21st century. A frequent performer on Broadway in the 1960s, Dowd
originated the role of Morgan le Fay in the musical Camelot.
Dowd was born in Chicago, Illinois, the daughter of John J.
Dowd and Catherine (née O'Conner) Dowd. She moved to Boone, Iowa, with her
family in 1945 and attended junior high school and high school there, where she
acquired the nickname "Mel", which an agent later turned into M'el.
After high school, she studied at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago before moving
to New York City.
In 1962, she married Henri G. Eudes, a native of France and
restaurateur by vocation. The couple had one son, Richard
Dowd made her professional debut Off-Broadway in the 1950s
and soon appeared on Broadway, most notably originating the role of Morgan le
Fay in the long-running musical Camelot. Other Broadway appearances included
Back to Methuselah (1958), Everything in the Garden (1967–68), Tiger at the
Gates (1968), Dear World (1969), Not Now, Darling (1970) and Ambassador (1972),
among others.[2] She also played in regional theatre and in more Off-Broadway
roles, winning acclaim as Katherine of Aragon in The Royal Gambit.
From 1956 (in The Wrong Man with Henry Fonda) to 2005, she
appeared in films, TV movies and guest spots on TV episodes, including Man on
Fire with Bing Crosby in 1957, the 1986 film F/X as Joyce Lehman, and in the
1977 TV movie The Prince of Homburg, starring Frank Langella.[citation needed]
Dowd also helped her husband in the restaurant business and
continued to act until at least 2005, when she appeared in a guest role on the
TV show Law & Order. The New York Daily News wrote in 2001 that she played
Mme. Armfeldt in A Little Night Music "deliciously". In Goodspeed
Musicals' 2003 production of Me and My Girl, according to Variety, "Dowd
... is the cement that holds this production together.
Selected stage roles
Macbeth – Lady Macbeth (1955; Off-Broadway, Jan Hus Theatre,
NYC)
A Midsummer Night's Dream – Titania, (1956; Jan Hus Theatre,
NYC)
Romeo and Juliet – Lady Capulet (1956; Jan Hus Theatre, NYC)
Julius Caesar – Portia (1957; Jan Hus Theatre, NYC)
Back to Methuselah – Lilith (1958; Ambassador Theatre and
national tour)
Sweet Bird of Youth – Understudy for Princess Kosmonopolis
(1959–60; Martin Beck Theatre)[3]
Camelot – Morgan Le Fey (1960–63)
A Case of Libel – Anita Corcoran (1963–64; Longacre Theatre)
The Right Honourable Gentleman – Mrs. Emilia Pattison
(1965–66; Billy Rose Theatre, nominated for the Tony Award for Best Play)
The Sound of Music – Elsa Schraeder (1967; City Center
Theatre)
Heartbreak House – Hesione Hushabye (1967; Arena Stage,
Washington, DC)
Everything in the Garden – Louise (1967–68; Plymouth
Theatre)
Tiger at the Gates – Andromache (1968; Vivian Beaumont
Theater)
Dear World – Countess Aurelia (1969; Mark Hellinger Theatre)
Not Now, Darling – Maude Bodley (1970; Brooks Atkinson
Theatre)
Ambassador – Amelia Newsome (1972; Lunt-Fontanne Theatre)
The Night of the Iguana – Frau Fahrenkopf (1985; Morris
Mechanic Theatre, Baltimore, MD)
A Little Night Music – Madame Armfeldt (2001; Goodspeed
Musicals)[8]
Me and My Girl - Maria, Duchess of Dene (2003; Goodspeed
Musicals)
Film and TV roles
The Wrong Man – Miss O'Connor (Warner Bros., 1956)
The Adventures of Jim Bowie – Nun in "The Bounty
Hunter" (1957)
This Could Be the Night - Mrs. Flint (MGM, 1957)
Man on Fire – Rita (MGM, 1957)
Flipper – Amy Field in "City Boy" (1964)
The Best of Everything – Kate Farrow (1970)
The 300 Year Weekend – Carole (Cinerama, 1971)
The Adams Chronicles (1975 mini-series)
The Prince of Homburg (1977)
F/X (1986) – Joyce Lehman
Murder, She Wrote - Sister Margaret-Mary in "Old Habits
Die Hard" (1987)
See You in the Morning (1989) – Real Estate Lady
Third Watch "Black and Blue" (2004)
Law & Order – Mrs. Haiduk in "License to Kill"
(2005)
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