Nancy Kovack
Nancy Kovack is a Michigan native who was born in Flint. She was a 19-year-old college graduate who graduated with 8 titles, and began her career as an tv actress when she was just 15 years old. Kovack began her acting journey in New York as one of Jackie Gleason's "Glea Girl" then, following that with increasing prominence, The Dave Garroway show (1953), Today (1952) and Beat the Clock(1950). Kovack's Hollywood journey began with a stage role. She was signed on to Columbia when she had completed the production. Later, she racked up an impressive number of television credits for episodic shows which included an Emmy award for a 1969 guest shot in Mannix (1967). Kovack is the famous spouse of Zubin Mehta from the New York Philharmonic. She has claimed that she was swindled (to about 150 000 dollars) in the name of Susan McDougal who was a key character in Whitewater. In five appearances on the situation comedy Bewitched (1964), three of them portrayed Darrin Stephens' ex-catty love interest Sheila Summers. Her father worked as an executive for General Motors. Her home is at Los Angeles with her husband Zubin Mehta. In 1954 she graduated from University of Michigan Ann Arbor in Michigan. Many people remember her as the an attractive Native American medicine woman Nona as seen in Star Trek: Second Season Episode A Private Little War (1998).



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