Pamela Kosh was born on October 1, 1928[a] in Crayford in Kent to Alfred and Rose Kosh, the youngest of six children.[2] At an early age she aspired to attend the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts (RADA), but her family decided it would be more practical to send her to Bexleyheath School to learn secretarial skills.[2] She hated working as a secretary but it would lead her to jobs associated with scripts, publishing, and the theater.[2]
Career
Model, stage actress, director
Starting an amateur career as an actress, she joined both the Austral Players and the Erith Playhouse, eventually landing a job with ITV Television.[2] She was active in several repertory theatre groups in England as an actress and director.[4]
She immigrated to the United States in 1960, with ITV getting her a job in New York.[2] She later worked as both a stage actress and magazine model, appearing in many national magazines.[4] She worked in theatrical companies in Boston, Miami, and Los Angeles.[4]
She became a naturalized American citizen in 1968; in that same year, she married stage actor Walter "Walt" Gilmore, whom she'd met in 1967 while she and he were performing in a play together in a local theatre situated in Southern California.[2]
She was the director of a 1968 production of The Curious Savage at the Burbank Little Theatre. She was the first woman to direct a major production at the theater in its 16-year history[5] and was lauded for her "keen respect for the play's delicate virtues".[6]
Between 1973 and 1981, she and her husband both established and managed the now defunct Golden Mall Playhouse, which during its tenure was located in Burbank, California.[4][2][1] She was active at the theater, directing the 1974 production of Wait Until Dark.[7] She played the role of Dolly Dibble/Lady Macbeth in their 1977 production of John Patrick's Macbeth Did It[8] and the role of Edith Lambert in their 1979 production of Never Too Late.[9] In 1979, she starred with Hilary Miller in James Prideaux's Lemonade at the Theatre Exchange in North Hollywood.[10][11] The Golden Mall Playhouse ended in 1981 after the city used eminent domain to condemn and demolish it to make way for a Holiday Inn.[12]
Later television career
From 1985 to 2017, she became a prolific character actress on television and in films, often portraying socialites, matriarchs, school-teachers, and neighbors, and everything from charladies to two queens of England, Queen Elizabeth and Queen Victoria.[2]
She had a recurring role as Lavinia Peach on Days of Our Lives, appearing in almost fifty episodes over six years (from 1986 to 1992).[13][14][15]
Kosh was falsely reported to have died on October 21, 2020, due to confusion with another woman of the same name who lived in Tucson, Arizona.[b] She actually died at age 93 on May 4, 2022.[1][2]
Notes
^ abSome sources indicate a birth date of March 13, 1930, though her obituary states the 1928 date.
^This was later proven false and retracted, though some sources may still list that date.[25]