Trish Van Devere - Biography

Trish Van Devere is an American actress best-known for her comedic turn in Carl Reiner's 1970 cult classic, Where's Poppa? (1970), in support of George Segal and Ruth Gordon, and for being the wife and widow and frequent co-star of legendary actor, George C. Scott. Born Patricia Louise Dressel on March 9, 1943 in Tenafly, New Jersey, she first made her mark, professionally, on the soap opera, On ne vit qu'une fois (1968). She met Scott when they co-starred (along with his then-wife Colleen Dewhurst) in the neo-noir, Les complices de la dernière chance (1971). Scott eventually shed Dewhurst (for the second time) and married Van Devere. She co-starred with him in Mike Nichols' 1973 thriller, Le jour du dauphin (1973), which was not a success, and The Savage Is Loose (1974), (1974), a flop, directed by Scott, that was barely released. During the rest of the decade, they co-starred in the TV movie, Beauty and the Beast (1976) (1976), Folie-Folie (1978) (1978), and L'enfant du diable (1980) (1980), a period that coincided with the decline of Scott's stardom and critical reputation. After 1980, when the two appeared on Broadway in a calamitous flop, she continued to appear in less prestigious movies and on TV until 1994.

Van Devere became a stage actress under the tutelage of Scott. She made her Broadway debut in 1975 in a revival of Eugene O'Neill's "All God's Chillun Got Wings", directed by her husband. She also co-starred with him on the Great White Way in "Sly Fox", a retelling of Ben Jonson's "Volpone", that was a great hit. In 1980, they co-starred for the final time on Broadway in the mystery-romance, "Tricks of the Trade", which closed on opening night.