Katey Sagal
Catherine Louise Sagal is an American actress and singer-songwriter. She is known for playing Peggy Bundy on Married... with Children, Leela on Futurama, and Cate Hennessy on 8 Simple Rules. In the third role, Sagal worked with John Ritter until his death, leading to Sagal's taking over as the series lead for the remainder of the show's run. She is also widely known for her role as Gemma Teller Morrow on the FX series Sons of Anarchy, for which she won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Television Series Drama in 2011.
Early life
Sagal was born on January 19, 1954 in Los Angeles, California to a show business family with five children. Her mother, Sara Zwilling, was a singer, producer, and television writer who died of heart disease in 1975; Sagal’s father, Boris Sagal, was a Russian-Jewish immigrant who worked as a director. In 1977, Sagal’s father married dancer/actress Marge Champion, just a few years before his accidental death on the set of the miniseries World War III in 1981.. Three of Sagal's four siblings are actors: her younger twin sisters, Jean and Liz Sagal and brother Joey Sagal; her other brother David Sagal is an attorney married to actress McNally Sagal. Sagal and her siblings grew up in Brentwood, Los Angeles.Her godfather is prominent sitcom producer and writer Norman Lear. In 2016 both Katey and Norman acknowledged that she was not only his goddaughter, but that he also introduced her parents to each other.
Sagal has described herself as "culturally Jewish" but with no "formal religious experience."
Musical career
Sagal started her career in show business as a singer and songwriter. In 1973, she worked as a backing vocalist for various singers, including Bob Dylan, Etta James, and Tanya Tucker. In 1976, while a member of The Group with No Name, she contributed to the album Moon over Brooklyn. She was a member of Bette Midler's backup group The Harlettes in 1978, and again from 1982–83. She performed backing vocals on the self-titled Gene Simmons solo album, the Molly Hatchet album Take No Prisoners, and on Olivia Newton-John's 1985 single "Soul Kiss." She performed the song "It's the Time for Love" that appears in the movie Silent Rage featuring Chuck Norris. Sagal also provided the vocals for "Loose Cannons," the theme song for the 1990 movie of the same name featuring Gene Hackman and Dan Aykroyd.On April 19, 1994, Sagal released her first solo album, Well.... On June 1, 2004, she released her second album, Room. She has also contributed to the Sons of Anarchy soundtrack.
Acting career
One role was as a receptionist in the detective Columbo installment "Candidate for Crime," which was directed by her father. Sagal's first major role was as a newspaper columnist in the series Mary starring Mary Tyler Moore. This led to her being cast as Peggy Bundy on the sitcom Married... with Children ; she portrayed the lower-class, sex-starved, lazy and free-spending wife of shoe salesman Al Bundy. The series ran for 11 years. Sagal brought her own red bouffant wig to audition for the role, and with the producers' approval, the look transitioned into the show.After the end of Married... with Children, several more television films followed; Sagal also guest starred on the children's cartoon Recess as the voice of Spinelli's mother. In 1998, Matt Groening chose her to provide the character voice of the purple-haired mutant spaceship captain, Leela, in his science-fiction animated comedy Futurama. The show developed a cult following, but was cancelled after four seasons. However, syndication on Adult Swim and Comedy Central increased the show's popularity and led Comedy Central to commission a season of Futurama direct-to-DVD films, which the network later retransmitted as a 16-episode fifth season. She reprised her role as Leela in these films, and in the sixth season that began airing June 24, 2010. The series ended in 2013.
Sagal guest-starred as Edna Hyde, Steven Hyde's mother, in three episodes of That '70s Show. She starred in the short-lived NBC sitcom Tucker in 2000.
Sagal was cast as the wife of John Ritter in the sitcom 8 Simple Rules for Dating My Teenage Daughter in 2002. Ritter had completed only three episodes of the second season before his death, and the show was cancelled in 2005 after its third season.
In 2005 and 2006, Sagal made two appearances on Lost as Helen Norwood. In 2007, she had a role in the season finale of The Winner as Glen Abbot's former teacher, with whom Glen has his first sexual experience.
From 2008 to 2014, Sagal starred as Gemma Teller Morrow on the TV show Sons of Anarchy, whose creator, Kurt Sutter, she had married in 2004, four years before the series premiered. In January 2009, Sagal reunited with David Faustino for an episode of Faustino's show Star-ving. In 2010, she appeared twice more on Lost. In 2009, she starred in the film House Broken with Danny DeVito. In 2010, she returned to the stage in Randy Newman's musical Harps & Angels.
In 2013, Sagal had a cameo on Glee as Nancy Abrams, Artie Abrams' mother. She co-starred in Pitch Perfect 2, released in 2015, as the mother of Hailee Steinfeld's character. She next appeared in the biography drama film Bleed for This, as the mother of Vinny Pazienza.
On September 9, 2014, Sagal received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame; most of the Married... with Children cast - including Ed O'Neill, Christina Applegate, and David Faustino - were present to celebrate the actor's recognition.
On September 20, 2016, Sagal appeared on The Big Bang Theory as Susan, the mother of Penny. She had previously played the mother of Cuoco's character on 8 Simple Rules.
Sagal was also a series regular on the CBS sitcom Superior Donuts from 2017 to 2018.
She appeared on Shameless as Frank's latest, crazy lover.
Most recently she has appeared in a recurring role as Dan Conner's love interest, Louise, in The Conners and a cameo appearance in the Netflix series Dead to Me in season 2, episodes 9 and 10. as Judy Hale's estranged, emotionally abusive, incarcerated mother Eleanor Hale.
In 2020, Sagal will play in the lead role of Annie "Rebel" Bello in the ABC drama pilot Rebel, which was written by Krista Vernoff.
Activism
In June 2016, the Human Rights Campaign released a video in tribute to the victims of the 2016 Orlando nightclub shooting; in the video, Sagal and others told the stories of the people killed there.Personal life
Sagal was married to musician Freddie Beckmeier, from 1978 to 1981 and drummer Jack White, from 1993 to 2000. She married writer-producer, Kurt Sutter, in a private ceremony on October 2, 2004, at their home in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Los Feliz. They have a daughter, Esmé Louise, born in 2007 through a surrogate mother.In 1991, while working on Married... with Children, Sagal learned that she was pregnant. This was unexpected, so the pregnancy was written into the storyline of the show. In October 1991, however, she had to have an emergency caesarean section in her seventh month of pregnancy, ending in the stillbirth of a daughter. The pregnancy on the show was then treated as a "dream sequence," which was mentioned only briefly at the end of the episode "Al Bundy, Shoe Dick." Sagal and White eventually had two children — a daughter, Sarah Grace, in 1994, and a son, Jackson James, in 1996. The writers of Married... with Children deliberately did not write Sagal's two later pregnancies into the show due to the earlier stillbirth, opting instead to write off her absences in a subplot in which Peg is traveling the world to reunite her parents. In scenes where Peg was shown, Sagal had her midsection obscured, such as in a taxi or at a craps table in Las Vegas and was often seen or heard talking to family members over the phone.
One aftereffect of Sagal's having lost her stillborn daughter was that it inspired her to write the lyrics for " Can't Hurry the Harvest." She recorded this song on her second album, Well..., which was released in April 1994.
She was the subject of an episode of the television genealogy series Who Do You Think You Are? in 2016.
Filmography
Film
Television
Discography
Albums
Awards and nominations
Year | Award | Category | Film or series | Result |
1989 | American Comedy Awards | Funniest Female Performer in a TV Series | Married... with Children | rowspan=6 |
1991 | Golden Globe Award | Best Actress – Television Series Musical or Comedy | Married... with Children | - |
1992 | Golden Globe Award | Best Actress – Television Series Musical or Comedy | Married... with Children | - |
1993 | Golden Globe Award | Best Actress – Television Series Musical or Comedy | Married... with Children | - |
1993 | American Comedy Awards | Funniest Female Performer in a TV Series | Married... with Children | - |
1994 | Golden Globe Award | Best Actress – Television Series Musical or Comedy | Married... with Children | - |
2005 | Prism Awards | Performance in a Comedy Series | 8 Simple Rules for Dating My Teenage Daughter | rowspan=2 |
2009 | TV Land Awards | Innovation Award | Married... with Children | - |
2010 | Television Critics Association Awards | Individual Achievement in Drama | Sons of Anarchy | rowspan=2 |
2010 | Satellite Awards | Best Actress – Television Series Drama | Sons of Anarchy | - |
2011 | Golden Globe Award | Best Actress – Television Series Drama | Sons of Anarchy | |
2011 | Prism Awards | Best Actress – Television Series Drama | Sons of Anarchy | rowspan=4 |
2011 | Critics' Choice Television Award | Best Actress in a Drama Series | Sons of Anarchy | - |
2011 | Satellite Awards | Best Actress – Television Series Drama | Sons of Anarchy | - |
2012 | Critics' Choice Television Award | Best Actress in Drama Series | Sons of Anarchy | - |
2013 | Prism Awards | Female Performance in a Drama Series Multi-Episode Storyline | Sons of Anarchy | |
2014 | Hollywood Walk of Fame | Star on the Walk of Fame |