Laurie Bartram

Laurie Lee Bartram (May 16, 1958  May 25, 2007)[1] was an American actress and ballet dancer best known for her role as "Brenda" in the 1980 landmark slasher film Friday the 13th.

Laurie Lee Bartram
Born
Laurie Lee Bartram

(1958-05-16)May 16, 1958
St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.
DiedMay 25, 2007(2007-05-25) (aged 49)
Other namesLaurie Brighton
Occupation
  • Actress
  • ballet dancer
Years active1973–2007
Spouse(s)Gregory McCauley (?–2007)
Children5

Career

She was an actress and ballet dancer. She danced from an early age, eventually dancing at the St. Louis Muny Opera in performances with the Stuttgart Ballet and the Bolshoi Ballet, among many other performances in and around St. Louis. She is perhaps best known for her role as the camp counselor Brenda Jones in the original film Friday the 13th,[2] a performance where she was praised as one of the more "likeable" characters in the film. She also appeared in the soap opera Another World as recurring character Karen Campbell, and in two episodes of the 1972 TV series Emergency!, although she was credited as "Laurie Brighton". Finally, she also had an uncredited appearance in the 1974 horror film The House of Seven Corpses as Debbie.

After Friday the 13th, Bartram directed and choreographed local theater productions, made costumes for numerous productions and did voice work for local businesses including WSET in Lynchburg, Virginia. She also did numerous local commercials and billboards.

Personal life

After leaving the entertainment industry in the early 1980s, Bartram became a born again Christian and decided to pursue an education. She attended Liberty Baptist College (now Liberty University), where she met her future husband, Gregory McCauley. The couple had five children,[3] named Lauren, Scott, Jordan, Francis, and Isabelle, all of whom were home-schooled. Bartram resided in Tacoma, Washington, and later in Lynchburg, Virginia, where she lived at the time of her death.[1]

Death

Bartram died from pancreatic cancer on May 25, 2007, nine days after her forty-ninth birthday. The documentary His Name Was Jason: 30 Years of Friday the 13th was dedicated to her memory, as well as several other deceased cast and crew members.

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1973Emergency!Karen / Jill2 episodes
1974 The House of Seven CorpsesDebbieUncredited
1978–1979 Another WorldKaren CampbellTelevision series
1980 Friday the 13thBrenda Jones
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gollark: - gpg is isomorphic to cryoapioform - it is already too late, as I just interfaced this with a JS engine and some HTML layouting stuff and am accessing my email through this; for now, I am using an SSH tunnel, but this is uncool, so security *is* required - additionally, normalizing protection of exactly which content you visit from eavesdroppers is good- it doesn't even have a Content-Length field- but I need to store arbitrarily large indices into metagollarious ultraspace
gollark: Where?
gollark: - lack of TLS, while ALL is to be utterly secured- no extensibility- what if I want to send 1025 bytes
gollark: I don't like this.

References

  1. Lentz, Harris M. III (2008). Obituaries in the Performing Arts, 2007: Film, Television, Radio, Theatre, Dance, Music, Cartoons and Pop Culture. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-786-45191-3.
  2. "Where are they now? Laurie Bartram", www.fridaythe13thfilms.com, archived from the original on December 12, 2004, retrieved May 31, 2011
  3. Taylor, Jeremy (October 28, 2014). "See the Cast of 'Friday the 13th' Then and Now". The FW. Retrieved October 21, 2016.
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