Nancy Kovack

The native of Flint, Michigan, Nancy Kovack was an undergraduate at the University of Michigan at 15 she became a radio DJ when she was 16, and a college graduate at the age of 19, and the holder of eight beauty crowns at twenty. Her professional acting career began on TV in New York, first as an actress on Jackie Gleason's "Glea Girls" before, and later, much more frequently, as a guest on The Dave Garroway Show (1953), Today (1952) and Beat the Clock (1950). An acting role on stage opened Hollywood doors for Kovack, who signed to Columbia. Through the years Kovack amassed a lengthy list of TV credits. Even nominated for the Emmy in 1969 for a guest role on Mannix. The wife of world-renowned maestro Zubin Mehta of New York Philharmonic fame, Kovack publicly alleges that she was tricked (to the tune to $150,000) in the name of Susan McDougal, a central person of the Whitewater scandal. Sheila Summers, Darrin Stevens her ex-girlfriend Sheila Summers appeared in five episodes of the 1964 situation comedy Bewitched. Her father was a General Motors executive. Zubin Mehta, her husband lives with her in Los Angeles. In 1954, she graduated from the University of Michigan Ann Arbor in Michigan. Popularly remembered for her part in Episode of the second season of Star Trek, A Private Little War (1968) in the role of the hot native woman of the indigenous tribe Nona. Nancy Nancy Nancy

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