Ann Jillian

Actress

Birthday January 29, 1950

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.

Age 74 years old

Nationality United States

#21105 Most Popular

1950

Ann Jillian (born Ann Jura Nauseda; January 29, 1950) is a retired American actress and singer whose career began as a child actress in 1960.

Jillian was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1950 to Lithuanian immigrant parents Juozas and Margarita Nauseda (later George and Margaret Nauseda) and speaks Lithuanian fluently.

Jillian was raised as a devout Roman Catholic.

1960

She began her career as a child actress in 1960 when she played Little Bo Peep in the Disney film Babes in Toyland.

She had several television appearances in the 1960s and 1970s, becoming a regular on the 1960s sitcom Hazel (1965-66 season) and appearing in the 1963 Twilight Zone episode "Mute" (where she was given screen credit as "Ann Jilliann") as the mute telepath Ilse Nielson.

1962

Jillian appeared as Dainty June in the Rosalind Russell-Natalie Wood movie version of Gypsy (1962).

1970

In the late 1970s, she toured in musical comedies, including Sammy Cahn's Words and Music.

1978

Jillian married Andy Murcia, a Chicago police sergeant, on March 27, 1978, and shortly thereafter Murcia retired to manage his wife's career.

Murcia later partnered with Joyce Selznick in management of Ann Jillian until Joyce died of breast cancer shortly after.

1979

After appearing with Mickey Rooney in the play Goodnight Ladies in Chicago, the producers cast Ann Jillian to appear in the original company of Sugar Babies on Broadway with Rooney and Ann Miller in 1979.

She also starred in I Love My Wife at the Drury Lane Theatre in Chicago.

Jillian appeared in more than 25 films, mostly for television.

1980

She is best known for her role as the sultry Cassie Cranston on the 1980s sitcom It's a Living.

Though she had nearly two decades' worth of film and television credits already, she first came to national prominence in the 1980s' series It's a Living, a sitcom that elevated Jillian to sex symbol status in 1980.

She was the last to be signed onto this series and received last place billing.

The sitcom aired for two seasons on ABC before being cancelled due to low ratings and was sold into syndication for the burgeoning cable television market.

1982

(The show became a surprise success in syndication.) Toward the end of her time on the series for the ABC run, she portrayed Mae West in a 1982 made-for-television film.

Jillian was nominated for a lead actress Emmy and Golden Globe for her performance.

1983

In 1983, Jillian was honored by the Young Artist Foundation with its Former Child Star "Lifetime Achievement" Award, recognizing her achievements within the entertainment industry as a child actress.

In 1983, she appeared in the John Hughes movie Mr. Mom with Michael Keaton and Teri Garr.

The same year, she appeared in the miniseries Malibu, starring Kim Novak, Eva Marie Saint and James Coburn.

That fall she starred in her own sitcom, Jennifer Slept Here, a variation on The Ghost & Mrs. Muir, with Jillian as the apparition in question.

1984

Jennifer Slept Here ended in 1984, enabling her to take a role in the miniseries Ellis Island.

Dunaway and Vereen were nominated for Golden Globe Awards, and Jillian and Burton were nominated for Emmy Awards.

Bob Hope selected her to appear in six of his television specials, including two, entertaining U.S. troops stationed in Beirut (1984) and Saudi Arabia (1991).

She displayed her athletic abilities on three Battle of the Network Stars specials and a Circus of the Stars special, and appeared in the charity extravaganza Night of 100 Stars.

1985

In 1985, she played The Red Queen to Carol Channing's White Queen in an all-star television musical adaptation of Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland.

The same year, the producers of It's a Living made the relatively unheard-of decision to resume production of the series, by then three years off the air, for first-run syndication, and Jillian was contractually obligated to return to the series.

Before resuming production on It's a Living in 1985, Jillian (then 35) made headlines when she was diagnosed with breast cancer, and she became a vocal advocate for cancer research and prevention.

1986

She guest starred in television specials for Don Rickles (1986) and David Copperfield (1987) and was on the dais at The Dean Martin Celebrity Roast for Mr. T (1984).

1989

She later starred on the namesake series Ann Jillian, which aired 13 episodes on NBC during the 1989–90 season.

1990

She continued to act, with ten TV movie roles throughout the 1990s, although her television and film credits became sporadic since the late 1990s, as she decided to devote herself to raising her son and to promoting breast cancer issues.

Today, she mostly works as a motivational speaker and also performs as a singer in corporate and symphony "pops" circles, conducted by Judith Morse.

She is an occasional guest columnist for the website TheColumnists.com.

She resides with her family in the Greater Los Angeles area.

1992

Jillian gave birth to her only child, a son, Andrew Joseph Murcia, in 1992.

1994

In 1994, she played the mother of an unborn child with a heart defect in Heart of a Child.

2015

On September 12, 2015, Jillian was inducted into the National Lithuanian American Hall of Fame.

2020

Jillian moved on to voice roles, for Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! and Sealab 2020 in the early 1970s, but — told she was too old to play youthful roles of the day and too young to play a leading lady — there was no more work for her in Hollywood.

She took a department store job and studied psychology, but heeded the advice of casting director Hoyt Bowers and Walt Disney, who had told her, "Whatever you do, keep working at your craft".