Pamela Blair, an Emmy-nominated actress from "All My Children" and Broadway star in "A Chorus Line," has died. She was 73.
The actress' death follows a "long battle" with an illness, her representative Dani Green told USA TODAY.
Blair was a success on both Broadway and later television. She made her major stage debut in 1968 in the production of "Promises, Promises."
She went on to star in "Sugar and Seesaw," "Of Mice and Men," "King of Hearts," "The Nerd," "A Few Good Men" and more.
Blair's most well-known role on Broadway was as Valerie "Val" Clarke in "A Chorus Line." Her character was "loosely based on her own life, and she was a part of the musical from the very first workshop," the show's composer Marvin Hamlisch's social media account said in a tribute Monday.
Susan Lucciurges women 'to act when you feel those symptoms,' talks iconic Erica Kane
"Our thoughts are with her loved ones and fans," Hamlisch added.
Blair also made a mark in television, making guest appearances in "Ryan's Hope," "Loving" "The Cosby Show," "Another World," "Sabrina the Teenage Witch" and "All My Children."
Her brief run on "All My Children" earned her a Daytime Emmy nomination in 1987.
2024-12-24 19:57391 view
2024-12-24 19:40745 view
2024-12-24 19:21744 view
2024-12-24 19:141041 view
2024-12-24 18:562743 view
2024-12-24 18:451969 view
AI-assisted summaryTesla has issued its sixth recall of the year for the Cybertruck due to a faulty
Stella Banderas has the sweetest love story—now and then. The only child of Melanie Griffith and Ant
From surreal to sexual.The antics featured in The Surreal Life: Villa of Secrets are getting a littl