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LOS ANGELES — Jane Kean, a diverse performer who got her start in musical theater but was best known as Trixie alongside Jackie Gleason in a TV revival of The Honeymooners, has died. She was 90.
Kean, of Toluca Lake, died Tuesday at Providence St. Joseph Medical Center in Burbank, where she was taken after a fall that led to a hemorrhagic stroke, her niece, Deirdre Wolpert, said Thursday.
Kean first started working with Gleason in the 1940s, when they were both on the vaudeville circuit.
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Her big break, however, came in 1966 when Gleason moved to Miami and resurrected his hit show The Honeymooners, expanding it to an hour and adding musical numbers.
Kean, a talented singer with a belting voice, starred on the show for five years as Ed Norton’s beleaguered wife, Trixie.
She often spoke about those years and her chance to appear on such a well-known program with Gleason, Wolpert said.
“One day she picked up the phone and [Gleason] said, ‘Are you doing anything right now?’ She said, ‘No.’ And he said, ‘Come on down and be Trixie,’ ” Wolpert explained. “Two weeks later, she was on the plane to Florida.”
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Born in Hartford, Conn., on April 10, 1923, Kean got into show business at an early age along with her sister, Betty Kean, with the encouragement of her mother.
She appeared in a Broadway production of Early to Bed at age 16 and was eventually moved to Los Angeles, where she appeared in some films for MGM before forming a comedy act with her sister, who is Wolpert’s mother. The all-female comedy team, a rarity at the time, played night clubs and rubbed shoulders with comedians such as Milton Berle.
The sisterly duo also performed in a comedy called Ankles Aweigh on Broadway, Wolpert said.
After jumping to TV, Kean stayed on The Honeymooners for five years before leaving to pursue other projects, including guest appearances, performing in Las Vegas and doing voice work. In 1977, she worked on the children’s movie Pete’s Dragon — behind-the-scenes work that the usually glamorous actress didn’t like because she didn’t need to wear makeup, her niece said.
Last year, Kean put on a one-woman show that was a retrospective of her life’s work and had plans to travel to London after Christmas with her niece. She also was preparing invitations for her annual Christmas party in the days before her death, Wolpert said.
“This was a really kicking 90-year-old. The number of friends that she had, the people who loved her … she had a wonderful life and a wonderful career,” she said. “She was a glamor girl, but she also had a lot of substance.”
In addition to Wolpert, Kean is survived by a stepson from her second marriage, Joseph Hecht Jr., and his family as well as Wolpert’s husband and two children.
Her sister, Betty, died in 1986. Her second husband, her manager Joe Hecht, died in 2006.
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