Nancy Kovack
A native of Flint, Michigan, Nancy Kovack was studying at the University of Michigan at 15 as a radio announcer at 16, and a college graduate when she was 19 and the holder of eight beauty titles by 20. Her professional acting career started on TV on New York, first as one of Jackie Gleason's "Glea Girls" and then, more prominently, in The Dave Garroway Show (1953), Today (1952) as well as Beat the Clock (1950). Kovack joined Columbia following a stage performance. The actress later amassed an impressive collection of credits on television shows that span episodic time and won an Emmy for a 1969 appearance in Mannix (1967). The wife of the world-renowned composer Zubin Mehta of New York Philharmonic fame, Kovack publicly alleges that she was recently swindled (to an amount around $150,000) by Susan McDougal, a central person within the Whitewater scandal. Sheila Summers, Darrin Stevens her ex-girlfriend Sheila Summers appeared in five episodes of 1964's situation comedy Bewitched. Her father was an executive at General Motors executive. Zubin Mehta, her husband is a resident of Los Angeles. In 1954, she earned her graduation from the University of Michigan Ann Arbor in Michigan. Popular for his role as the seductive Indigenous Medicine Woman Nona as seen in Star Trek 2nd season's episode A Private Little War, 1968.



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