Linda Gary


Linda Gary was an American film, television and voice actress.

Career

Live-action appearances

Gary worked as a voice-over artist in animation and also appeared in two live-action films, 1977's Joyride To Nowhere with husband Charles Howerton and 1980's Cruising with Al Pacino. She lent her voice in such movies as Wolfen and Switch.

Radio

Linda played Dr. Maura Cassidy on Lee Hansen's "Alien Worlds".

Voice over work

Early career

She got her start dubbing Italian films into English while living in Rome with her husband Howerton before returning to the States in 1974.
Gary started going to voice acting classes taught by Daws Butler. She later claimed, "When I got my first voice over job, I just sent Daws the check... He believed in me, and I really have him to thank for my career."

Hanna-Barbera

Linda voiced different characters on several Hanna-Barbera television series; Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo, The Smurfs as Dame Barbara in one episode, Top Cat and the Beverly Hills Cats as Mrs. Vandergelt, The Pirates of Dark Water, where she did additional voices and as Doctor Abby Sinian. She voiced Queen Morbidia & Nekara in The 13 Ghosts of Scooby-Doo.

''ABC Weekend Specials''

The ABC Weekend Special was a Saturday morning TV series that aired from 1977 to 1997. It featured stories in both the live-action and animated realms. Linda's voice could be heard on Scruffy, The Puppy Saves the Circus, The Amazing Bunjee Venture, The Return of the Bunjee, The Velveteen Rabbit and The Magic Flute.

Disney

During the 1980s, Gary did several guest voice-over appearances in such Disney television series as Darkwing Duck, DuckTales, TaleSpin, The Little Mermaid series and Bonkers. She voiced a gazelle and a hippo on the Lion King read-along cassette story, . She also voiced Maleficent and the Opening narrator in 'Fantasmic'. She voiced Muffy Vanderschmere in TaleSpin.

Read-Alongs

She narrated Disney read-along stories in 1977; Three Little Pigs, Cinderella, Alice in Wonderland, and It's a Small World. She also narrated a quartet of the Rainbow Brite read-along stories.

Sunbow/Marvel Productions

Gary voiced several additional characters on the 1984 Transformers animated series. She also voiced Raven, a Cobra Night Raven pilot in the episode; "In The Presence of Mine Enemies".

Marvel Productions

Gary voiced Colleen in an episode of the short-lived 1981 Spider-Man with Ted Schwartz as Peter Parker/Spider-Man, and voiced Aunt May in the first season of the 1994-1998 Spider-Man with Christopher Daniel Barnes as Peter Parker/Spider-Man. She was later replaced by Julie Bennett.

Filmation

Her voice acting was mostly for the Filmation studio. She voiced characters in several of Filmation's TV series such as The Kid Super Power Hour with Shazam!, BlackStar, and as the title character in Web Woman.
Linda voiced Jane on an episode of Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle.
Gary also did voice work on He-Man and the Masters of the Universe and '. She was reunited with fellow voice over actors Alan Oppenheimer and George DiCenzo from BlackStar. She provided many of the female voices on He-Man such as Teela, Evil-Lyn, the Sorceress of Castle Grayskull and Queen Marlena as well as several from ' like Madame Razz, Glimmer, Shadow Weaver, Scorpia and Entrapta.
She voiced several films for Filmation such as ', Pinocchio and the Emperor of the Night, ' and Happily Ever After as Critterina and Marina.

Universal Cartoon Studios

Gary voiced the role of Grandma Longneck in ', ' and . She was later replaced by Miriam Flynn.

Video games

In video games, she provided voices in several adventure games such as ' as the Oracle, Red Chess Queen, Mother Ghost and Queen Allaria, Thayer's Quest as Lady In The Woodlands and ' as Grandma Knight/Tetelo.

Personal life

Linda Gary Dewoskin was born in California on November 4, 1944. She married actor Charles Howerton on December 21, 1967 and had two daughters, Alexis and Dana. Gary was also stepmother to Howerton's daughter from his previous marriage, Lynn Howerton. She and Charles found acting work in Rome, Italy in the 1970s where they learned Italian and wound up working in films and commercials as well as doing English language dubbing in Italy, Spain and Germany.

Death

She died on October 5, 1995 from brain cancer. Archival recordings of Gary’s voice work continues to be used today in many animated features.

Filmography

Voice acting

Animation

Video games

Live-action