Jeanne Cooper, 'Young and the Restless' matriarch, dead at 84
Jeanne Cooper, right, appears as Katherine Chancellor alongside Julianna McCarthy as Liz Foster on "The Young and the Restless" in 1973. Cooper, who played the character of Mrs. Chancellor for nearly 40 years, died on May 8 at age 84.
Jeanne Cooper, who played Katherine Chancellor, the
"Dame of Genoa City," on "The Young and the Restless," has
died. She was 84.
Her death was confirmed by her son, actor Corbin Bernsen, on
his Twitter account.
"Mom passed this morning," Bernsen posted.
"She was in peace and without fear."
Cooper had been suffering from an undisclosed illness. The
cause of death was not given.
Cooper was already a well-established TV actress when she
took the role of Chancellor in 1973. "The Young and the Restless" was
struggling in the ratings and its creator, William J. Bell, wanted to spice
things up.
"Jeanne was the matriarch of the show in every sense of
the word," said Lauralee Bell, Christine/Cricket on "The Young and
the Restless" and William Bell's daughter.
"When you did work you were proud of, you'd hope for
approval or a 'good job' from Jeanne as a child would from a parent. When things
got too tense, she'd break the tension with her amazing wit. She would teach
the younger actors without ever talking down to them. In fact, she would raise
them up," said Bell. "She always had my back and my parents (and our
whole family) always had hers."
Kate Linder, another member of "The Young and the
Restless" cast, said Cooper was her "mentor and an amazing actress
and friend." Linder, Esther Valentine on the show, said, "When Jeanne
welcomed you into her life, you knew it and it was a fantastic feeling. This is
truly the end of an era, not just for fans of 'The Young and the Restless' but
for all of the people she touched throughout her long and distinguished career
and life."
Cooper's character was colorful from the beginning: a drunk
conducting a series of affairs with younger men, as well as one with the best
friend of her husband, the wealthy Gary Reynolds.
The character was an immediate hit and Cooper -- who had
signed a three-year contract -- stayed on.
Cooper was instrumental in another storyline 10 years later.
In the early '80s the actress decided to undergo a face lift, so the show's
producers had Chancellor get a face lift as well -- it was performed on-screen.
Chancellor was also part of a famed soap opera feud, in her
case with Jill Abbott Fenmore (played since 1987 by Jess Walton). At one point
the two believed they were mother and daughter; at another, the relationship
warmed when Chancellor had a breast cancer scare. The two later became rivals
again.
And Chancellor also found herself victim of many classic
soap opera twists: conniving suitors, long-lost relatives, multiple marriages
and memory lapses.
Cooper enjoyed all the twists and turns. "I never
wanted to be a movie star," she said in an interview, according to
Entertainment Weekly. "I always wanted to be an actress, one of the best.
And I am."
Cooper also appeared in episodes of "Perry Mason,"
"The Man from U.N.C.L.E." and "The Twilight Zone."
Cooper married television producer Harry Bernsen Jr. in
1954. The pair divorced in 1977. Cooper is survived by three children, all
actors: Corbin, Collin and Caren.
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