Margaret Gwenver

Margaret Gwenver (also known by her married name, Margaret G. Sedwick) was an American stage and television actress.

Born as Margaret Guenveur on October 10, 1926 in Wilmington, Delaware,[1] she was best known for her role as Dr. Sedgwick on the long-running daytime soap opera, Guiding Light.[2] Gwenver appeared in the supporting role, as a recurring character, on the long-running show from 1979 until 2009. In between appearances, she also played the role of Yancy Ralston's widow Blanche on One Life to Live on and off from 1981 to 1983.

She began her career at the Margaret Webster Shakespeare Company in New York City in the 1940s.[2] She and her husband, John Sedwick, founded the Tanglewood Theater.[2]

Death

Margaret Gwenver died on October 18, 2010 in New York City, aged 84. She was survived by five children and eight grandchildren. She was predeceased by her husband.[2]

gollark: Don't activate Windows. Windows bad.
gollark: Yes. I have no idea why you are showing people this.
gollark: > haskell is the only language that enforces separation between computation and effectsReally? Don't PureScript and probably other derivatives/similar languages do that?
gollark: I'm thinking it could include actual formatting, Unicode, headers, that sort of thing. As well as possibly decent autogen scripts allowing each sentence to be given its own header saying "Section 1, Clause 8" or something, and maybe even JS to dynamically edit the text a bit as you scroll.
gollark: The current potatOS privacy policy viewer thing is literally just `edit`, and mostly quite bad, so I was thinking it might be a good idea to have it open in the browser instead.

References

  1. Date of birth per Social Security Death Index (SSDI) search under name GWENVER, MARGARET
  2. "Margaret G. Sedwick". New York Times. 2010-10-24. Retrieved 2010-11-04.



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.