Joan Van Ark life and biography

Joan Van Ark picture, image, poster

Joan Van Ark biography

Date of birth : 1943-06-16
Date of death : -
Birthplace : New York, New York, USA
Nationality : American
Category : Arts and Entertainment
Last modified : 2010-06-08
Credited as : Actress in Dallas series, Young and the Restless act,

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Joan Van Ark (born June 16, 1943) is an American actress, most notable for her role as Valene Ewing, which she originated on the CBS hit series Dallas and continued for thirteen seasons on its long-running spin-off, Knots Landing. Van Ark has also received a Theatre World Award and been nominated for a Tony Award for her stage work.


Tall, leggy and blonde, Joan Van Ark is best recalled as the long-suffering Valene Ewing on "Knots Landing" (CBS, 1981-93), but is also a successful stage actress and her velvet voice has made her one of the most prolific voice-over performers for TV and radio commercials and animated projects.

Van Ark attended the Yale School of Drama, reportedly as one of the youngest students ever. After graduating, she appeared with the prestigious Guthrie Theatre in Minneapolis. Her big break came when she was tapped to replace Elizabeth Ashley as the idealistic, free-spirited female lead of Neil Simon's "Barefoot in the Park" on Broadway and on tour. In 1971, Van Ark earned a Tony nomination for Best Featured Actress in a Play for her work in "The School for Wives". Following that success, she moved to L.A., but periodically returned East to appear on stage. Van Ark worked summers at the Williamstown Theatre Festival and in 1995 replaced Marian Seldes in Edward Albee's Pulitzer Prize-winning "Three Tall Women". She co-starred with her daughter Vanessa Marshall in the 1997 L.A. production "Star Dust".

Van Ark began to travel West in the late 1960s and established a toe-hold on the small screen. In 1968, she appeared in episodes of "The Guns of Will Sonnet", "The Mod Squad" and "Gunsmoke." She had her first regular series work as a sexy nurse on the first season of the ABC sitcom "Temperatures Rising". On the short-lived CBS sitcom "We've Got Each Other" (1977-78), she was hilarious as a self-involved model. Throughout the 70s, Van Ark made numerous guest appearances in key roles on series: In a 1975 episode of "Rhoda" she played the first wife of Rhoda's husband while in a 1977 episode of "Kojak" she was the first woman cop in the squad room. TV-movies like "The Judge and Jake Wyler" (NBC, 1972) and miniseries like the syndicated "Testimony of Two Men" (1977) also provided work.

Cast in 1978 as the fragile Valene Ewing, the wife of black sheep Gary, on the CBS primetime serial "Dallas", Van Ark found what was to become her signature role. Val and Gary were originally to be the anchors of the spin-off series, "Knots Landing". Over the long run of the show, the focus changed, but the characters remained integral to the plot. Van Ark was given the opportunity to work with her idol, Julie Harris, who played her mother, and a rising actor, Alec Baldwin, was cast as her brother. As with several of the regulars, she was also given the opportunity to direct episodes. Because of her strong voice--she could have been a news anchor--and presence, Van Ark found herself acting as host for CBS specials like the Tournament of Roses Parade and both the Miss USA and Miss Universe pageants.

Of course, the inevitable TV-movie roles came as well. Van Ark was the wife of test pilot Barry Bostwick in "Red Flag: The Ultimate Game" (CBS, 1981), played famed 40s Hollywood madam Brenda Allen in "Shakedown on the Sunset Strip" (CBS, 1988), portrayed a power-made PTA president in "Menu for Murder" (CBS, 1980) and was Stephen Dorff's adopted mother from whom he flees to find his real mother in "Always Remember I Love You" (CBS, 1990). In 1993, Van Ark was executive producer of "In the Shadows, Someone's Watching" (NBC), and in 1994, played a wife and mother who becomes a fanatical cult member in "Moment of Truth: A Mother's Deception" (NBC). She directed "Boys Will be Boys", a 1994 "ABC Afterschool Special" about a girl who finds her reputation besmirched by innuendo and scribblings on the lavatory wall. She reprised her most famous role in "Knots Landing: Back to the Cul-De-Sac" in 1997.

Additionally, Van Ark leant her unique vocal talents to a number of TV commercials (for perfume, automobiles, etc.) and numerous animated projects She was the voice of the comely Roxanne in the 1975 ABC version of "Cyrano" and a lead voice in "Batman and the Super Seven" in 1980. More recently, she was a seductive insect in the CBS animated series "Santo Bugito" (1995-96).

In May 1997, she reprised her role of Valene Ewing in the CBS mini-series, Knots Landing: Back to the Cul-de-sac, while in December 2005, Van Ark appeared in the non-fiction reunion Knots Landing: Together Again in which she reminisced with the other cast members of the long running CBS television show. In addition, she originated the role of Gloria Fisher/Abbott on CBS television's The Young and the Restless from 2004 - 2005, then decided to leave the role and was replaced by Judith Chapman. She was also featured in an episode of Bonanza "Sweet Annie Laurie"

Van Ark also appeared off-Broadway opposite John Rubenstein in Love Letters. More recently, she co-starred in the New York production of Edward Albee's Pulitzer Prize winning play Three Tall Women. Her Los Angeles theater credits include Cyrano de Bergerac - playing Roxanne opposite Richard Chamberlain's Cyrano - Ring Around the Moon with Michael York and Glynis Johns, Chemin de Fer, Heartbreak House, and As You Like It, for which she won a Los Angeles Drama Critics Award. She also appeared as Lady Macbeth in the Grove Shakespeare Festival's production of Macbeth.

Van Ark has also starred in the Williamstown Theater Festival productions of The Night of the Iguana, The Legend of Oedipus, and the festival's 40th anniversary production of Stephen Sondheim's A Little Night Music.

Van Ark has played a variety of guest roles in her career, including an episode of M*A*S*H where she played a nurse, and Rhoda playing Rhoda's husband's ex-wife. In 1978, she also appeared in an episode of Wonder Woman with Ted Shackleford who would later become her onscreen husband Gary Ewing on both Dallas and Knots Landing. She was also the voice of Spider-Woman in the short-lived 1979 animated series of the same name.

In 2001, Van Ark was featured in an episode of the Howard Stern-produced show Son of the Beach as Ima Cummings, the mother of show regular BJ Cummings (played by Jaime Bergman). The episode aired in April of that year.

In 2008, Van Ark was reunited with her Knots Landing co-star Donna Mills in an episode of the FX drama series Nip/Tuck. In an independent film, she portrayed a tough but sympathetic network executive in Channels (2008 film).

She also appeared at the TV Land awards in April 2009 where Knots Landing was being honoured on its 30 year anniversary. Other Knots Landing actors that appeared with her include Kevin Dobson, Lisa Hartman Black, Michele Lee, Constance McCashin, Donna Mills, Don Murray, Michelle Phillips, and Ted Shackelford, along with Dallas and Knots Landing creator David Jacobs.

Joan Van Ark has been married to husband John Marshall, a former reporter with KNBC-TV, since February 1, 1966. They have one child, voice actress/performer Vanessa Marshall (born October 19, 1969).

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