Patricia Barry, daytime-television and film actress, dies at 93
Reporting from New York — Patricia Barry, a mainstay of daytime television who appeared on “Days of Our Lives,†“Guiding Light†and “All My Children,†has died. She was 93.
Barry died at her home in Los Angeles on Tuesday, a publicist for the actress said Wednesday. The Iowa-born Barry amassed more than 100 appearances in TV, film and theater.
After winning a Rita Hayworth look-alike contest, she was contracted by Warner Bros. She made a mark in TV movies such as 1959’s “The Wicked Scheme of Jebel Deeks,†with Alec Guinness, and alongside Sid Caesar and Ronald Reagan in 1961’s “The Devil You Say.â€
Other credits included 1949’s “Riders of the Whistling Pines†with Gene Autry; 1964’s “Send Me No Flowers†with Doris Day and Rock Hudson; and the 1962 New York Yankees film “Safe at Home!â€
But Barry may have been best known for long-running stints on daytime soap operas. Among other roles, she played Addie Horton Williams from 1971 to 1974 on “Days of Our Lives.â€
Barry is survived by her two daughters, Miranda Barry and Stephanie Barry Agnew, and two grandchildren. She was married to TV producer Philip Barry, who died in 1998.
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