Nancy Kovack
A native of Flint, Michigan, Nancy Kovack was studying at the University of Michigan at 15 she became a radio DJ when she was 16, a college grad at the age of 19 and the owner of eight beauty crowns at twenty. Her professional acting career started on television at New York, first as the Jackie Gleason character on "Glea Girls" as well as, later and more prominently, as a guest on The Dave Garroway Show (1953), Today (1952) and Beat the Clock (1950). Kovack was signed by Columbia following a stage performance. Through the years Kovack was able to accumulate a huge list of television credits. Kovack was nominated for the Emmy in 1969, for a guest role in Mannix. Kovack is the wife the famous and renowned maestro Zubin Mehta, of the New York Philharmonic, publicly states that Susan McDougal a key figure in Whitewater, had recently duped her (to the tune $150,000). Sheila Summers, Darrin Stevens her ex-girlfriend Sheila Summers appeared in five episodes of the 1964 action comedy Bewitched. Her father was an General Motors executive. Zubin Mehta, her husband lives with her in Los Angeles. She attended and graduated from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan (1954). Best remembered by the public for her part in Episode of the second season of Star Trek, A Private Little War (1968) in the role of the hot indigenous medicine woman Nona.



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