Betty White obituary: Beloved comic actor whose career spanned seven decades

The actor best known for The Golden Girls had an enduring and decorated TV career

Betty White visits the Los Angeles Zoo, April 2011. Photograph: Kevin Scanlon/The New York Times
Betty White visits the Los Angeles Zoo, April 2011. Photograph: Kevin Scanlon/The New York Times

Born: January 17th, 1922
Died: December 31st, 2022

Although she will be best remembered for playing the naive Rose Nylund in the hit comedy The Golden Girls (1985-92), Betty White, who has died aged 99 – three weeks short of her 100th birthday – was for seven decades one of the best-loved performers on US television. A consummate professional, she won eight Emmy awards, the first and last separated by more than 60 years. She was also a pioneer – in the 1950s one of the first women producing television, and, 30 years later, the first female game show host, dubbed a "femcee".

All four lead actors on The Golden Girls won best actress Emmys, but White's came first, in 1986. This may be because she played against type; Rose was the opposite of her role on the Mary Tyler Moore Show, as Sue Ann Nivens (1973-77), who hid her conniving nature beneath a sugary surface, while performing as the Happy Homemaker at the TV station where Mary worked.

From 1983 to 1986 White and Rue McClanahan played together in Mama’s Family, a spin-off from the Carol Burnett Show; when they left to join The Golden Girls, McClanahan was cast as Rose, with White set to play the man-chasing Blanche. The director Jay Sandrich suggested the two should swap parts, and the chemistry was immediately successful.

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In 1962 she made her feature film debut in Advise and Consent, but it would be 36 years before White returned to the big screen

Betty moved with her parents, Horace White, an engineer, and Tess (nee Cachikis), to Los Angeles during the Depression, and graduated in 1939 from Beverly Hills high school; her colleagues in school theatre included the future film star Rhonda Fleming. She performed on an experimental Los Angeles television channel that year, but made her formal acting debut at the Bliss Hayden Little Theatre.

During the second World War she served in the Women’s Voluntary Services, making her movie debut in Time to Kill (1945), a short produced to inform servicemen about military educational programmes.

After parts in radio shows she got her own local programme, the first of four Betty White shows in which she would star. In 1947 she married the agent Lane Allen; they divorced in 1949.

Feature debut

White soon turned to game shows and late-night talk, particularly as a frequent guest on Jack Paar’s show, a forerunner of The Tonight Show, and a regular on Password, with whose host, Allen Ludden, she had acted in summer stock. White and Ludden were married from 1961 until his death in 1981.

In 1962 she made her feature film debut, playing a senator in Advise and Consent, but although she turned in a solid performance, it would be 36 years before White returned to the big screen. In the meantime, her friendship with Password’s creator, Bob Stewart, and its producers, Mark Goodson and Bill Todman, kept her busy on their other shows, such as What’s My Line?, To Tell the Truth, and Password’s many successors.

Betty White in Beverly Hills, 2009. Photograph: Amy Dickerson/The New York Times
Betty White in Beverly Hills, 2009. Photograph: Amy Dickerson/The New York Times

Her career was reborn in 1973 when she debuted as Sue Ann in the Mary Tyler Moore Show’s third season, hired because she and Ludden were friendly with the show’s producer Grant Tinker, who saw that the script called for Sue Ann to be played by “an icky-sweet Betty White type”. She won Emmys as best supporting actress in 1975 and 1976.

When the show ended in 1977, she began her fourth Betty White show. She acted in a number of TV movies before, in 1983 , becoming the first woman to host a game show with Just Men!, in which a panel of men helped women win cars. She picked up a daytime Emmy, her fourth overall.

She had a recurring role on The Love Boat before making her mark again in Mama’s Family, which led to The Golden Girls, which revolved around four older women living together in Miami. She was the last surviving member of the four.

Animal lover

When Bea Arthur left The Golden Girls in 1992, the other three leads continued in The Golden Palace for two seasons. White showed no signs of slowing down, as indicated by the title of her second book, Here I Go Again: My Life In Television (1995). She took a part in the Marie Osmond series Maybe This Time (1995-96) and was busier than ever as a guest, winning her sixth Emmy as best guest-star on The John LaRoquette Show (1996).

In 2010, after a Facebook campaign, she became the oldest person to host Saturday Night Live, quipping that at her age she contacted old friends with a ouija board

In 1999 she began two series of playing mother to a single father (Alfred Molina) in Ladies Man. She appeared as Catherine Piper in David E Kelley’s series The Practice and its spin-off, Boston Legal, and in 2006 made her soap opera debut on The Bold and the Beautiful, as the mother of the show’s matriarch. She proved so popular her role was extended for three seasons, until 2009. She began another TV sitcom, Hot in Cleveland, in 2010, at the age of 88, and it ran for five series.

Meanwhile she returned to the big screen in Dennis the Menace Strikes Again (1998). Among the films that followed, her best roles were in Lake Placid (1999) and The Proposal (2009).

In 2010, after a Facebook campaign, she became the oldest person to host Saturday Night Live, quipping that at her age she contacted old friends not with Facebook but with a ouija board. She won a Primetime Emmy for this appearance and in 2015 an Emmy lifetime achievement award.

Outside the entertainment industry, she was active in animal charities and the Los Angeles Zoo – Betty and Friends: My Life at the Zoo, was published in 2011. She told the Chicago Sun-Times that, as well as for her acting, “I also want to be remembered as a lady who helped the animals.” – Guardian