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Remembering ‘Dallas’ Star Roseanna Christiansen & More Stars We’ve Lost in 2022

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Remembering ‘Dallas’ Star Roseanna Christiansen & More Stars We’ve Lost in 2022



It’s a new year and already 2022 is making way for some fond farewells as we say goodbye to some of TV’s biggest stars. And though they may be gone, audiences can still enjoy their work on television and in some cases on film. Here, we’re celebrating and remembering them for years to come.To get more news about 免费观看一级特黄欧美大片, you can visit our official website.

Best Known For: Christiansen was best known for playing Teresa, the maid, on Dallas for nine seasons. She also played a maid on The Jeffersons in three episodes (pictured above with Marla Gibbs). Her other TV credits include guest spots on Matlock, CBS Summer Playhouse, and A Year in the Life and the TV movies Temporary Insanity and This Is Kate Bennett….

Best Known For: The actor was best known for playing Wally Cleaver in the beloved ’50s and ’60s television series Leave It to Beaver. He also starred in the ’60s series Never Too Young as well as Mr. Novak, Lassie, and The New Leave It to Beaver. His other TV credits include roles on Emergency!, Mod Squad, Knight Rider, Quincy M.E., The Love Boat, Murder, She Wrote, Diagnosis Murder, and Suspense.

Best Known For: Up-and-coming stand-up comedian Jak Knight has died. A cause of death wasn’t cited in his family’s statement announcing his passing. Knight is best known for his roles in Peacock’s Bust Down, HBO’s Pause with Sam Jay, and Netflix’s Big Mouth on which he voiced the character DeVon. Along with performing, Knight wrote for several shows including the aforementioned series and Black-ish, Immoral Compass, and Lucas Bros Moving Co.

Shields was a longtime pundit providing witty analysis of American politics across TV and print/digital news. He was a staple of PBS NewsHour and co-hosted CNN‘s Capital Gang, which ended in 2005, and he made appearances on shows like Meet the Press.

Shields became a Washington Post columnist in 1979 and started with PBS on The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour during the 1988 presidential election. He gave sharp political insight through six presidential administrations, as well as commentary on countless policy debates from Washington. He retired in 2020.

Shields died of kidney failure at his home in Chevy Chase, Maryland, on Saturday, June 18, NewsHour spokesman Nick Massella told NPR. NewsHour anchor Judy Woodruff reacted to Shields’ death on Twitter.

“I am heartbroken to share this..the @NewsHour’s beloved long-time Friday night analyst Mark Shields, who for decades wowed us with his encyclopedic knowledge of American politics, his sense of humor and mainly his big heart, has passed away at 85, with his wife Anne at his side,” she wrote.
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