Nancy Kovack
Nancy Kovack is a Michigan native born and raised in Flint. She graduated from college aged 19 with eight titles and began her professional career as a TV actress when she was just 15 years old. She began her professional acting journey in New York as one of Jackie Gleason's "Glea Girl" as well as later, with greater recognition, The Dave Garroway show (1953), Today (1952) and Beat the Clock(1950). Kovack became a member of Columbia after a stage appearance. Later, she racked up an impressive array of credits on television shows that span episodic time which included an Emmy award for a 1969 appearance on Mannix (1967). The wife of world-renowned maestro Zubin Mehta of New York Philharmonic fame, Kovack publicly alleges that she was recently bamboozled (to an amount around $150,000) in the name of Susan McDougal, a central actor within the Whitewater scandal. She has appeared on five occasions in the scene comedy Bewitched (1964) Three of those appearances were as Darrin Stephens' ex-catty partner Sheila Summers. Her father worked as a General Motors executive. Zubin Mehta, her husband is a resident of Los Angeles. Her school was attended by and she graduated from The University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan (1954). Best remembered by the public because of her appearance in Second season's episode of Star Trek A Private Little War (1968) in the role of the hot native woman of the indigenous tribe Nona.



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