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Sue Ane Langdon (born March 8, 1936) is a retired American actress.
She began her performing career singing at Radio City Music Hall and acting in stage productions. In the mid-1960s she acted at Manhattan's Schubert Theatre in The Apple Tree musical, which starred a young Alan Alda. In 1976, she was in the musical Hello Dolly at The Little Theatre on the Square in Illinois.
Langdon was featured in many comedies as well as an occasional dramatic performance. She appeared in a pair of Elvis Presley movies, Roustabout and Frankie and Johnny. Her starring role as the wife in the CBS... MORE
Sue Ane Langdon (born March 8, 1936) is a retired American actress.
She began her performing career singing at Radio City Music Hall and acting in stage productions. In the mid-1960s she acted at Manhattan's Schubert Theatre in The Apple Tree musical, which starred a young Alan Alda. In 1976, she was in the musical Hello Dolly at The Little Theatre on the Square in Illinois.
Langdon was featured in many comedies as well as an occasional dramatic performance. She appeared in a pair of Elvis Presley movies, Roustabout and Frankie and Johnny. Her starring role as the wife in the CBS television series Arnie won her a Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress - Television.
Her film debut came in 1961's The Great Impostor, which starred Tony Curtis. Langdon went on to have leading roles in films such as The Rounders (1965) with Henry Fonda and Glenn Ford (which included a memorable scene involving her exposed buttocks), A Guide for the Married Man (1967) with Walter Matthau A Man Called Dagger and The Cheyenne Social Club with Fonda and James Stewart. She also appeared with Sean Connery in a short but memorable scene in 1966's A Fine Madness which led to her posing nude for Playboy LESS
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