Monday, May 18, 2026

Caitlin O’Heaney obit

Caitlin O’Heaney, Actress in ‘He Knows You’re Alone’ and ‘Tales of the Gold Monkey,’ Dies at 73

The Milwaukee native also worked with Katharine Hepburn on Broadway, starred in a Norman Lear sitcom and played Snow White in ‘The Charmings.’

 She was not on the list.


Caitlin O’Heaney, who starred as the stalked bride to be in the cult slasher film He Knows You’re Alone and as a lounge singer and spy in the Donald P. Bellisario-created adventure series Tales of the Gold Monkey, has died. She was 73.

O’Heaney died May 18 in Westchester County in New York, her friend Peter Davis told The Hollywood Reporter. They recently worked together on the short film Faith and Forgiveness. No cause of death was revealed.

Trained at Julliard under John Houseman and Michael Kahn, O’Heaney also worked with Katharine Hepburn on Broadway, played a 1930s Hollywood actress for Woody Allen in A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy (1982) and starred as Snow White on the first season of the 1987-88 ABC sitcom The Charmings.

The green-eyed, auburn-haired O’Heaney portrayed Amy Jensen, a woman menaced by a bride-obsessed killer, in He Knows You’re Alone (1980), an independent film picked up by MGM. Director Armand Mastroianni said he looked at more than 4,000 photos and interviewed more than 100 actresses before selecting her for the part.

And on the 1982-83 series Tales of the Gold Monkey, set in in 1938 in the South Pacific, she portrayed the American spy Sarah Stickney White, the love interest of fighter pilot Jake Cutter (Stephen Collins).

The youngest of three daughters, Kathleen Helen Heaney was born on Aug. 16, 1952, in Milwaukee and raised in the suburb of Whitefish Bay. Her mother, Ruth, was a physical ed teacher, and her great-great-great grandfather was Jacob Best, owner of a brewery that would produce Pabst Blue Ribbon.

She joined the North Shore Children’s Theatre at age 11, played clarinet in the band at Whitefish Bay High School and after graduation in 1970 won a scholarship to Julliard at age 17. Her classmates in the school’s third-ever drama class included Christopher Reeve, Robin Williams, Christine Baranski and William Hurt.

When she was 21, she modeled for Salvador Dalí in the grand ballroom and a penthouse room at the St. Regis in New York, she noted in an interview in the late 1970s. The project never went forward, she was told, because Dalí’s wife was jealous of her.

She reunited with Reeve in 1976 when she made it to Broadway to serve as the understudy to Wanda Bimson’s ingénue character in A Matter of Gravity, starring Hepburn as an eccentric Englishwoman who hires a servant who can fly. (O’Heaney wound up doing a great impersonation of Hepburn.)

After starring in plays for the ACT Contemporary Theatre in Seattle and turns at the Public Theater and Playwrights Horizon in New York, she was cast as a tap dancer in the 1978 ABC comedy Apple Pie. Despite being created by Norman Lear and starring Rue McClanahan and Dabney Coleman, the Depression-era show aired just two episodes before being canceled.

She decided to remain in Los Angeles and in 1979 starred in her first slasher film, Savage Weekend, after which she adopted the stage name Caitlin O’Heaney for He Knows You’re Alone. (Tom Hanks made his big-screen debut in the Staten Island-shot movie, playing a jogger in line for a ride at a country fair.)

“I met Caitlin during the film’s casting sessions and was immediately taken by the fact that she reminded me both in looks and in spirit of Vivien Leigh,” Mastroianni wrote. “I reminded her several times of that during the making of the film, much to her amusement.”

She said she spent hours auditioning alongside Richard Dreyfuss for Steven Spielberg at the Sherry-Netherland hotel in New York for a role in Close Encounters of the Third Kind, but “there was just no way I’d look 28 with four kids. So the part went to Teri Garr,” she explained.

And at the advice of her agent, she turned down a dialogue-free role as a nude Christ-like figure that would have opened Ken Russell’s Altered States (1980), a move she said she regretted.

In 1980, she starred as the actress Olive Lashbrooke in a revival of John van Druten’s The Voice of the Turtle.

“Miss O’Heaney is a wonder,” critic Jennifer Dunning wrote in The New York Times. “With a well-practiced movie star drawl, big eyes that snap like exclamation points and impeccable timing, she roars through the play like a tornado, playing just at the edge of fatal broadness, yet never losing the edge of sadness that lies under Olive’s bitchy humor.”

On The Charmings, Snow White and husband Prince Charming (Christopher Rich) awaken from a thousand-year spell and try to adapt to life in present-day Burbank, with the princess working in a department store. O’Heaney was replaced by Carol Huston for the second season, which lasted 15 episodes before being canceled.

She also appeared on episodes of AfterMASH, Spenser for Hire, Silver Spoons, St. Elsewhere, Murder, She Wrote, Beauty and the Beast, L.A. Law and Matlock and in films including Wolfen (1981) and the Spielberg-produced Three O’Clock High (1987).

The always interesting O’Heaney served as an assistant cook in 1990 aboard a Greenpeace vessel in the North Sea and from her home in Los Angeles in the late ’90s created a perfume called Caitlin, billed as a “medieval” scent with overtones of apple, gardenia and sandalwood. She also sang with Pete Seeger, taught acting and loved animals.

Survivors include her sisters, Maureen and Coleen; nephews Robert, Patrick, Kevin, Ryan, Michael and Eric; grandnephews Bradley, Nicholas and Dayton; and grandnieces Myla, Kayla, Vanessa and Naomi. A celebration of life is being planned.

In 2017, O’Heaney told BuzzFeed News that she was punched by Val Kilmer during an audition for the part of Jim Morrison’s girlfriend Pamela Courson in Oliver Stone’s The Doors (1991). The role eventually went to Meg Ryan.

 

“When I got to the room and Val Kilmer picked me up and shaked me, throwing me down to the floor, Stone just stood there the whole time laughing,” she recalled. She said the director walked her to the door and told her, “That got kind of wild.”

 

O’Heaney said she signed a nondisclosure agreement and received $24,500 in a settlement but chose to speak out in the wake of allegations of sexual and physical harassment made against Harvey Weinstein.

 

“Women have come together, saying, ‘We’re not going to be fucked by you,’” O’Heaney. “I finally have the confidence to speak about this. It’s too long that I’ve sat on this story.”

 

Actress

Night of the Wolf (2014)

Night of the Wolf

6.0

Emma

2014

 

Kevin Kline in The Emperor's Club (2002)

The Emperor's Club

6.9

Mrs. Woodbridge

2002

 

Raven (1992)

Raven

7.4

TV Series

Erin Stuckey

1993

1 episode

 

Mariel Hemingway and Peter Onorati in Civil Wars (1991)

Civil Wars

7.1

TV Series

Carol Bloch

1992

1 episode

 

Over My Dead Body (1990)

Over My Dead Body

7.3

TV Series

Lila Chalmers

1990

1 episode

 

Andy Griffith in Matlock (1986)

Matlock

7.2

TV Series

Mrs. Estes

1990

1 episode

 

Alien Nation (1989)

Alien Nation

6.9

TV Series

Jenny Moffat

1989

1 episode

 

Badlands 2005 (1988)

Badlands 2005

5.6

TV Movie

Sarah Gwynne

1988

 

L.A. Law (1986)

L.A. Law

7.1

TV Series

Kiki Sennheiser

1987

1 episode

 

Linda Hamilton and Ron Perlman in Beauty and the Beast (1987)

Beauty and the Beast

7.0

TV Series

Briget O'Donnell

1987

1 episode

 

Angela Lansbury in Murder, She Wrote (1984)

Murder, She Wrote

7.3

TV Series

Tara Sillman

1987

1 episode

 

Casey Siemaszko in Three O'Clock High (1987)

Three O'Clock High

7.1

Miss Farmer

1987

 

Dori Brenner, Brandon Call, Paul Eiding, Garette Ratliff Henson, Cork Hubbert, Caitlin O'Heaney, Judy Parfitt, Christopher Rich, and Paul Winfield in The Charmings (1987)

The Charmings

6.9

TV Series

Snow White Charming

1987

6 episodes

 

Denzel Washington, Ed Begley Jr., David Morse, Howie Mandel, Cynthia Sikes Yorkin, Ellen Bry, William Daniels, and Ed Flanders in St. Elsewhere (1982)

St. Elsewhere

8.0

TV Series

Debbie Hoffman

1987

1 episode

 

Erin Gray, Ricky Schroder, Joel Higgins, and Franklyn Seales in Silver Spoons (1982)

Silver Spoons

6.2

TV Series

Jackie

1986

1 episode

 

Convicted (1986)

Convicted

6.3

TV Movie

Carla Larkin

1986

 

Spenser: For Hire (1985)

Spenser: For Hire

7.3

TV Series

Laura Louise Johnson

1986

1 episode

 

William Christopher, Jamie Farr, and Harry Morgan in AfterMASH (1983)

AfterMASH

5.7

TV Series

Laura

1984

1 episode

 

Tales of the Gold Monkey (1982)

Tales of the Gold Monkey

8.0

TV Series

Sarah Stickney White

1982–1983

22 episodes

 

Woody Allen and Mia Farrow in A Midsummer Night's Sex Comedy (1982)

A Midsummer Night's Sex Comedy

6.6

Dolores Farrar (uncredited)

1982

 

Wolfen (1981)

Wolfen

6.3

ESS Operator

1981

 

Caitlin O'Heaney in He Knows You're Alone (1980)

He Knows You're Alone

5.1

Amy Jensen

1980

 

Savage Weekend (1979)

Savage Weekend

4.5

Shirley Sales (as Kathleen Heaney)

1979

 

The Seeding of Sarah Burns (1979)

The Seeding of Sarah Burns

5.1

TV Movie

Linda

1979

 

Apple Pie (1978)

Apple Pie

5.4

TV Series

Anna Marie Hollyhock

1978

7 episodes

 

Soundtrack

Tales of the Gold Monkey (1982)

Tales of the Gold Monkey

8.0

TV Series

performer: "Am I Blue?"performer: "The Lady is a Tramp"

1982

2 episodes

 

Archive Footage

Going to Pieces: The Rise and Fall of the Slasher Film (2006)

Going to Pieces: The Rise and Fall of the Slasher Film

7.2

Self (archive footage)

2006


No comments:

Post a Comment