Gretchen Hoyt Corbett (born August 13, 1945[a][4]) is an American actress and theater director. She is primarily known for her roles in television, particularly as attorney Beth Davenport on the NBC series The Rockford Files, but has also had a prolific career as a stage actress on Broadway as well as in regional theater.
She made her feature film debut in the comedy Out of It (1969), followed by a supporting role in the cult horror film Let's Scare Jessica to Death (1971). In 1972, Corbett signed a contract with Universal Studios, and appeared in numerous television films and series for the studio, while simultaneously working in summer stock theater on the East Coast. Between 1974 and 1978, she starred as the idealistic attorney Beth Davenport on the NBC series The Rockford Files, opposite James Garner. Corbett subsequently starred in the horror film Jaws of Satan (1981), and the drama Million Dollar Infield (1982), directed by Hal Cooper.
For the majority of the 1980s, Corbett appeared in guest-starring roles on numerous television series, including Cheers (1983) and Magnum, P.I. (1981–1983), and starred in the short-lived Otherworld (1985). In 1988, she starred in the original workshop stage production of The Heidi Chronicles for the Seattle Repertory Theatre. She later had minor parts in the films Without Evidence (1995) and A Change of Heart (1998). Since the 2000s, Corbett has served as the artistic director of the Portland-based Haven Project, a theater project serving underprivileged children, and appeared in numerous stage productions at the Portland Center Stage as well as the city's Third Rail Repertory. She returned to television with a recurring character on the IFC series Portlandia in 2013, and had a guest-starring role on the Hulu series Shrill in 2019.
1945–1965: Early life
Gretchen Hoyt Corbett was born August 13, 1945. Corbett's year of birth is variously given as 1947[1][2][3] and 1945.[4] in Portland, Oregon[b] to Henry Ladd Corbett, Jr. and Katherine Minahen (née Coney) "Kay" Corbett. She is a great-great-granddaughter of Oregon pioneer, businessman, and Senator Henry Winslow Corbett,[8] and granddaughter of Henry Ladd Corbett, a Portland civic leader, businessman, and politician. The community of Corbett, Oregon is named for her great-great-grandfather.[9] Through her paternal ancestry, she is of English descent, with ancestors originating from Essex, Norfolk, and Suffolk.[10] Corbett has two brothers and one sister.[6]
Corbett's father, tired of the city, relocated the family to rural Camp Sherman, Oregon,[11] where she spent her early life.[7] "I rode my horse to school every day, four miles each way," she recalled in a 1985 interview. "I hated it then, but, in retrospect, it was a marvelous life and a great way to grow up."[7] The family eventually returned to Portland in her later childhood, where her mother worked as an administrator at the University of Portland.[6] At age seven, Corbett was inspired to become an actress after attending the Oregon Shakespeare Festival.[5]
One of Corbett's first television roles was on ABC's short-lived police detective show, N.Y.P.D., in 1968; in the episode, "The Case of the Shady Lady", Corbett played a dancer who tries to make her husband's suicide into a murder for the insurance money.[18] Corbett made her feature film debut in the comedy Out of It (1969), co-starring with Jon Voight.[19] She then appeared in the cult horror film Let's Scare Jessica to Death (1971).[20] Meanwhile, between 1970 and 1971, Corbett starred as Jeanne d'Arc in a New York production of The Survival of St. Joan.[15] She also appeared in The Government Inspector with David Dukes and John Glover at The Phoenix Theatre.
In 1974, Corbett joined the cast of NBC's The Rockford Files where she played Beth Davenport,[24] the beleaguered lawyer and sometimes lover of series lead Jim Rockford, a private investigator portrayed by James Garner. She appears in 33 episodes (including one uncredited voice-over).[citation needed] During Christmas 1974, Corbett survived a house fire at her residence in Hollywood, California, which destroyed nearly all of her belongings and left her with minor injuries.[25][26][27] After completing the first season of The Rockford Files, Corbett starred in a televised production of the play Knuckle (1975), part of PBS's Hollywood Television Theater, as well as guest-starring on the series Hawaii Five-O and McMillan & Wife.[23] On September 13, 1975 she appeared in the television series Emergency! as flight stewardess Sue Hickman who started a relationship with Gage after an in flight emergency brought the two together. She also appeared in Marcus Welby, M.D., playing the stepmother of a young boy molested by his teacher.[28]
Corbett left The Rockford Files at the end of the fourth season over a dispute between the show's producers and Universal, who owned Corbett's contract as a contract player.
Corbett reprised her role of Beth Davenport in the Rockford Files television films of the 1990s, including Friends and Foul Play, If the Frame Fits... (both 1996) and If It Bleeds... It Leads (1999).[2]
In the 2000s, Corbett served as Artistic Director of the Haven Project, a theatre project for underprivileged children in Portland, Oregon, a replication of New York's 52nd St. Project.
^ abCorbett's year of birth is variously given as 1947[1][2][3] and 1945.
^ abSome sources state Corbett was born in Camp Sherman, Oregon,[5] though a 1985 article notes her birthplace as Portland;[6] another article published the same year notes that Corbett spent her early life in Camp Sherman, but was not born there.[7]
Phillips, Mark; Garcia, Frank (1996). Science Fiction Television Series: Episode Guides, Histories, and Casts and Credits for 62 Prime Time Shows, 1959 Through 1989. Vol. 2. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. ISBN978-0-786-40041-6.