Tanya Roberts was born Victoria Leigh Blum in 1949 (although long given as 1955)[1][2][3] in Manhattan,[4] New York City, to Oscar Blum and his wife Dorothy (née Smith).[5] Oscar Maximilian Blum was born in New York City.[6][7] Oscar's father, Theodor Blum,[8] did pioneering work in local anesthesia and the use of x-rays in dental care.[9] Theodor was born in Vienna, Austria and immigrated to New York in 1904.[6] Oscar earned a bachelor's degree from Cornell University in 1934 and was a first year student in the medical college there.[10] In 1940, Tanya's father was working as an assistant manager for a music publishing house in New York City.[11] He married in 1945 in Weymouth, England, to Dorothy Leigh Smith from Oldham, England.[12][13] At age 22 Dorothy arrived in New York City in April 1945.[14] In 1948, Dorothy returned to New York from a trip to England with Tanya's two-year-old sister, Barbara.[15] Tanya's father was of Jewish descent and her mother was of English or Irish descent.[16][17][1] It has also been reported that her father was of Irish descent and her mother was Jewish.[18] She had one older sister, Barbara.[19] The 1950 U.S. Census shows that, as of April 1950, the Blum family lived in the hamlet of Hewlett in Hempstead, NY and that Oscar Blum was a sales executive for a pen manufacturer.[2] The Blum family were living in Scarsdale, New York in July 1950, purchasing the property in March 1951, and selling it January 1958.[20][21][22][23] Later in the same month in 1958 Tanya's parents obtained a mortgage to buy a property in neighboring Greenburgh, New York and later sold it in July 1961.[24][25]
After meeting psychology student Barry Roberts while waiting in line for a movie, Victoria Blum proposed to him in a subway station and they were soon married in 1973.[26][27] While Barry pursued a career as a screenwriter, she began to study at the Actors Studio with Lee Strasberg and Uta Hagen under the name Tanya Roberts.[16]
In the summer of 1980, Roberts was chosen from some 2,000 candidates to replace Shelley Hack in the fifth season of the detective television series Charlie's Angels.[28][29] Roberts played Julie Rogers, a streetwise fighter who used her fists more than her gun. Producers hoped Roberts's presence would revitalize the series's declining ratings and regenerate media interest in the series. Before the season's premiere, Roberts was featured on the cover of People magazine with a headline asking if Roberts would be able to save the declining series from cancellation.[32] Despite the hype of Roberts's debut in November 1980, the series continued to draw dismal ratings and was canceled in June 1981.[33]
1982–1984: B-movies
Roberts played Kiri, a slave rescued by protagonist Dar (Marc Singer) in the adventure fantasy film The Beastmaster (1982),[28][16] which became a cult film.[18][29][30][31] She was featured in a nude pictorial in Playboy to help promote the film,[5] appearing on the cover of the October 1982 issue.[16] In 1983, Roberts filmed the Italian-made adventure fantasy film Hearts and Armour[34] (also known as Paladini-storia d'armi e d'amori and Paladins — The Story of Love and Arms), based on the medieval novel Orlando Furioso.
She portrayed Velda, the secretary to private detective Mike Hammer, in the television film Murder Me, Murder You (1983),[28][35] based on crime novelist Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer private detective series. The two-part pilot spawned the syndicated television series Mickey Spillane's Mike Hammer.[35] She declined to continue the role in the Mike Hammer series to work on her next project, the 1984 fantasy film Sheena: Queen of the Jungle, in which she played the main character.[28][29][31][18][30][16] The film was a box-office failure, and garnered her a nomination for "Worst Actress" at the Razzie Awards.[36] Writing in The New Yorker, film critic Pauline Kael described Roberts as "[having] a staring, comic-book opaqueness" and "a walking, talking icon".[5]
In 1998, Roberts took the role of Midge Pinciotti on the television sitcom That '70s Show.[29][31][30] In her obituary in The Guardian, Ryan Gilbey praises "[h]er knowing performance" in this role, "slow on the uptake but growing dissatisfied with her life as a housewife".[5] She left the series after the 3rd season in 2001, because her husband had become terminally ill,[5] returning for a few special guest appearances in the 6th and 7th seasons in 2004.
Personal life
Roberts was married to Barry Roberts from 1974 until his death in 2006.[40] They had no children.[41] Roberts lived in Hollywood Hills, California.[41] Some time after his death, she became the partner of Lance O'Brien.[5] Her sister, Barbara Chase, was married to Timothy Leary.[28]
Roberts wrote the foreword to the book The Q Guide to Charlie's Angels (2008).[42] She was described by her publicist as an animal rights activist.[43] During the COVID-19 pandemic, she maintained an active social media presence by hosting video chats on Facebook and Zoom.[44]
Death
While hiking on December 23, 2020, Roberts developed lower intestinal pain and difficulty breathing. She returned home to rest. Early the next morning, she fell out of bed and found she could not get up.[45] She was taken to Cedars-Sinai Hospital, where it was determined she had developed a urinary tract infection that had advanced to sepsis.[46] Her body's immune response to the infection resulted in multi-organ failure.[46] She had to be placed on a ventilator to help her breathe.[31] Her boyfriend, Lance O'Brien, was not allowed to see her due to restrictions imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic.[47] Her condition deteriorated, and on January 3, 2021, she was taken off life support.[45] O'Brien was finally then allowed to visit her.[48] Her death was prematurely reported early on January 4, though she died that evening.[48][28] In a handwritten will, Roberts left her estate to O'Brien.[49]
Roberts' death was announced prematurely by her publicist.[50][51][52]
^U.S. Social Security Administration. "Record for Oscar Blum, August 1971". FamilySearch. U.S. Social Security Administration. Retrieved February 17, 2021.
^Reich, William T. (1963). Theordor Blum. D.D.S., M.D. New York: The New York Institute of Clinical Oral Pathology. p. 1. Retrieved February 19, 2021.
^Reich, William T. (1963). Theodor Blum, D.D.S., M.D. New York: New York Institute of Clinical Oral Pathology. p. 8. Retrieved February 19, 2021.
^Collins, Max Allan (May 4, 2012). Mickey Spillane on Screen: A Complete Study of the Television and Film Adaptations. McFarland & Company. p. 184. ISBN978-0786465781.
^Reilly, Sue (February 9, 1981). "Is the Jiggle Up?". People. Archived from the original on July 11, 2020. Retrieved July 29, 2015.
^Terrace, Vincent (2019). Encyclopedia of Television Pilots: 2,470 Films Broadcast 1937-2019 (Second ed.). Jefferson: McFarland & Company, Incorporated Publishers. p. 133. ISBN978-1-4766-3810-2. OCLC1138670436.