Deidre Hall Movies
Some actors and actresses remain forever associated with one memorable role that outshines all others; that is particularly true of beautiful and glamorous
Deidre Hall, better known as Dr. Marlena Evans on the NBC daytime soap opera
Days of Our Lives -- a part that
Hall held for years.
A native of Milwaukee, WI,
Hall was born in the autumn of 1947 as an identical twin, and raised by her parents (a postal worker father and a high-school secretary mother) in Lake Worth, FL. She experienced her first brush with fame by vying for -- and winning -- the title of Junior Orange Bowl Queen at age 12, and subsequently attended a local junior college before moving to Los Angeles and kick-starting a modeling and acting career.
Hall made her first several dramatic appearances as a television guest star, on episodes of such programs as
Adam-12 and
The Streets of San Francisco, then landed the lead role of ElectraWoman on the Saturday-morning children's program
ElectraWoman and DynaGirl.
It was
Days, however, that brought
Hall her broadest recognition; producers enlisted her to play Evans in 1976, and she remained with the program until 1987, when she temporarily withdrew from the part to focus all of her attentions on a much different prime-time role: Jesse Witherspoon, a widow raising several children with the assist of her lovable and slightly cantankerous father-in-law (
Wilford Brimley), on the Sunday-night family-oriented drama
Our House. That series lasted two seasons, and in the years that followed,
Hall focused her energies solely on prime-time work, in telemovies such as
Take My Daughters, Please (1988) and
Perry Mason: The Case of the All-Star Assassin (1989). By 1991, however,
Hall opted to re-join
Days of Our Lives with a much-publicized return of Dr. Marlena Evans, and remained with the iconic series over the ensuing decades.
Off-camera,
Hall made headlines as the mother of two children born to a surrogate, experiences dramatized for viewers when she played herself in the ABC made-for-television feature
Never Say Never: The Deidre Hall Story (1995).
Hall received numerous laurels over the years for her acting work, including Soap Opera Digest awards and multiple Emmy nominations. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi