Jo de Winter explained

Jo de Winter
Other Names:Juanita Adamina, Jo Adamina (married name)
Birth Name:Juanita Maria-Johana Daussat
Birth Date:5 March 1921
Birth Place:Sacramento, California
Occupation:Actress
Children:2

Juanita Adamina (born Juanita Maria-Johana Daussat; March 5, 1921 – January 17, 2016), known professionally as Jo de Winter, was an American actress most notable for her role in the short-lived television series Gloria.[1]

Early life and education

De Winter studied at the Dominican Convent school in San Rafael.[2] Her first acting experience came at age 4, when she played an injured shepherd in a Christmas pageant at the school. She attended the College of the Pacific.[3] She also took acting classes with Ben Bard.[4]

Career

Stage

De Winter appeared on Broadway as Mrs. Norman in Children of a Lesser God,[5] and in Europe onstage in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest as Nurse Ratched, a role that she originated in the play's production in San Francisco.[6] She was praised for offering "intellectual humor... with a straight face" when she appeared in Wendy Wasserstein's Isn't it Romantic in Los Angeles in 1984.[7]

Film and television

David O. Selznick scouted Juanita Daussat when she was in a college play; she was one of the many actresses who auditioned for the role of Scarlett O'Hara in Gone with the Wind.[8] While her husband was stationed in Rome, she helped to translate English-language films for Italian audiences, and provided vocal acting for some film dubbing; she also appeared in two films made in Italy, The Pirates of Capri and The Dark Road. She later appeared in the films Dirty Harry[9] and .

For three years, De Winter had a recurring role as an executive secretary in The Name of the Game. She was in the regular cast of the sitcom Gloria, a short-lived spin-off of All in the Family. Otherwise, she acted in mostly single-episode appearances on television between 1965 and 2002, including The Alfred Hitchcock Hour, The Brady Bunch, Soap, St. Elsewhere, Newhart, Murder She Wrote, Frasier, The Munsters Today, The John Larroquette Show, and the Gene Roddenberry pilot, Planet Earth.[10]

Radio

In 1989, de Winter played Marie Antoinette in a six-hour radio drama, Bastille, produced by the University of Chicago on WFMT in Chicago, Illinois.[11] She also played Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton in a production of Hamilton & Burr, with the California Artists Radio Theatre.[12]

Personal life

Juanita Daussat married Robert Eggers Adamina in December 1941, the morning before the attack on Pearl Harbor. Her husband was an officer in the United States Air Force. He was a prisoner of war in Germany during World War II;[13] he later served as chief of protocol in Washington, D.C., and as a member of the NATO planning staff. They had one son, Robert Jr., and one daughter, Robyn. As a military wife, she was involved in embassy and officers' wives activities, and gave presentations to women's groups. They lived in Pennsylvania, Washington, D.C., San Francisco, and in Italy, before they moved to Port Hueneme in 1965,[14] after Col. Adamina retired from the Air Force.[15] Their son and his wife were killed in an automobile accident in 1974.[16] [17]

De Winter died in January 2016,[18] at the age of 94.[19]

Filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1971Dirty Harry Miss Willis
1972Pete 'n' Tillie Party Guest Uncredited
1984 Mrs. Bennett
1988Bird Mildred Berg
1994There Goes My Baby Miss Shine
2016Monday Nights at Seven Nana (final film role)

Notes and References

  1. News: Kleiner. Dick. 1983-04-10. Horse Helps Jo deWinter on her Way to Acting Career. 141. Longview News-Journal. 2021-07-11.
  2. News: August 2, 1934. Visit at Carmel. 8. Oakland Tribune. July 10, 2021. California Digital Newspaper Collection.
  3. News: 1959-04-29. Wife of Roman Military Aide to be TCW Club Speaker. 27. Daily Independent Journal. 2021-07-11. Newspapers.com.
  4. News: 1960-02-09. Actress Speaker for Drama Group. 14. Daily Independent Journal. 2021-07-11. Newspapers.com.
  5. Web site: Jo De Winter. Playbill Vault. 14 May 2016.
  6. News: Campbell. Genie. 'Cuckoo' star never bored when acting. The Wheeling Herald. February 16, 1973. Illinois, Wheeling. 13. Newspapers.com. May 14, 2016.
  7. News: Hanson. Eugene Kenneth. November 10, 1984. Comedy Sparks 'Isn't It Romantic'. Desert Sun. July 10, 2021. California Digital Newspaper Collection.
  8. News: Samuelsen. Rube. 1941-12-21. Sports Volleys. 21. The Pasadena Post. 2021-07-11. Newspapers.com.
  9. Book: Zmijewsky, Boris. The films of Clint Eastwood. 1993. New York, N.Y. : Carol Pub. Group. Internet Archive. 978-0-8065-1415-4. 133. Internet Archive.
  10. News: Crosby. Joan. 1974-04-19. It's a Woman' World and Men are 'Dinks!'. 31. The World. 2021-07-11. Newspapers.com.
  11. News: Terry. Clifford. Revolutionary radio. 14 May 2016. Chicago Tribune. July 9, 1989. Illinois, Chicago. Page 8, Section 13.
  12. Web site: Hamilton and Burr. 2021-07-11. California Artists Radio Theatre. en.
  13. News: 1943-05-29. Yolo Army Pilot is Nazi Captive. 14. The Sacramento Bee. 2021-07-10. Newspapers.com.
  14. News: 1965-05-21. Hueneme Bay Fashion Show Set Next Week. 14. Ventura County Star-Free Press. 2021-07-11. Newspapers.com.
  15. News: 1965-04-25. Hueneme Bay Community 'Right' for Ex-Air Force Colonel, and Family. 74. Valley News. 2021-07-11. Newspapers.com.
  16. News: Hilton. Pat. DeWinter wants it all. 14 May 2016. The Spokesman-Review. Tribune Company Syndicate. June 19, 1983. 11.
  17. News: 1974-12-03. Obituary for Robert Adamina. 18. San Antonio Express. 2021-07-10.
  18. News: Juanita Adamina Obituary (1921-2016). 27. Los Angeles Times. 2021-07-25.
  19. Book: Leszczak, Bob. Single Season Sitcoms of the 1980s: A Complete Guide. McFarland. May 17, 2016. 56. 978-0786499588. Google Books.