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Second Acts: The Late Bloomer

By AOL Jobs Contributor , Posted Feb 19th 2009 @ 5:22PM

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By Kathryn Joosten

Kathryn Joosten

Some people in Hollywood think of me as a model for dramatic midlife transitions: suburban housewife to Emmy-winning actress. But I never plotted out a master plan for following my dreams. My career arc seemed perfectly normal to me as it evolved over time. Each phase just seemed to grow naturally out of the one before.

I started out as a nurse. As a teenager growing up in Chicago in the 1950s, I worked part time at a local hospital, where I spent my off hours hanging around the pediatrics unit with a friendly nurse. She inspired me to go into the profession. After graduating from high school and completing a training program, I landed a job at the Psychiatric Institute at Michael Reese Hospital. I was there nine years, eventually rising to head nurse of the largest psychiatric unit. Then I married one of the staff psychiatrists and gave up nursing for a new life as a housewife in suburban Lake Forest.

In Depth: Kathryn Joosten

Ten years later, he got the mistress and I got the children. As a divorcee with two young boys and not enough child support, I had to go back to work. But I couldn't go back to nursing after so many years away from it. My skills were no longer current. So I got a job with a "Welcome Wagon"-type company that advertised local businesses to new residents. To supplement that, I hung wallpaper for people who were redecorating their homes, and served as a location manager for photographers and industrial filmmakers doing shoots in the Chicago area.

All this kept me very busy, which is one reason I signed my boys up for the children's program at the Lake Forest community theater. (It was the cheapest baby-sitting I could find.) Eventually I auditioned for a small part in one of the theater's productions.

As a kid in elementary school, I had loved performing onstage in school pageants. But my high school was too small to have a drama department, so I had never acted in a play. That all changed in June 1980 when the Lake Forest theater put on the musical "Gypsy." I made my theatrical debut in the role of Tessie Tura, a veteran stripper who offers career advice to Gypsy Rose Lee. "You've gotta have a gimmick," I sang, "if you wanna get applause!"

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I got applause, and I liked it. That experience led to me doing a second show in the next town over, then to another show in another town and finally to a show in a nonunion theater in Chicago. I was totally hooked. I wanted to pursue acting and see where it led me. But I was 42, with two kids and three jobs. Not the most auspicious of circumstances for a person just starting out in show business.

I thought about my mother, who had died of cancer years earlier at the age of 49. She spent her last months bitterly regretting that she had deferred so many dreams, which now would never be fulfilled. It impressed me deeply, and I had vowed that I would never let that happen to me. So I knew I had to give acting a shot.

I laid it out for my sons, who by then were 10 and 12, and asked for a year to see if I could achieve success, which I had no real definition for. I did theater while hanging paper, selling advertising and finding locations. Eventually I got an agent and landed my first professional TV job, as a pingpong ball for the Illinois lottery. I had moved from community theater to semiprofessional theater, and I wanted to go further. After my year was up, I asked the kids for an extension, and they said yes.

All I wanted at this time was to achieve some recognition in theater in Chicago. I kept making progress. A big step came when I got my Actors' Equity union card while doing a play at the Goodman Theater. But I still wasn't making a living from acting.

Then in 1992, Disney-MGM Studios held tryouts in Chicago. They needed street performers for their Hollywood theme park in Orlando, Fla. After standing in line for five hours, I auditioned and won a job as a "Streetmosphere" player. By now my boys were older and on their own, so I could accept the offer and move to Florida. I played Annie Hannigan, cleaning lady to the stars. The contract only lasted a year, but it convinced me that I could make a living acting.

After the Disney job ended, I went to bartending school in Orlando so I could support myself while doing local theater. I also worked in catering. But after two years, I realized that my acting career wasn't going anywhere in Florida. One of my sons was now living in Los Angeles, so I went out there and spent a couple of weeks sleeping on his couch while I checked out the scene. I thought, "Well, I'll come out and try it for six months."

This was incredibly naive of me. I was in my mid-50s. I had no agent, no contacts and no track record likely to impress a Hollywood casting director. Then again, what did I have to lose? Five months later, I landed my first TV job--two lines in a scene with Jaleel White, who played Steve Urkel on the sitcom Family Matters. I played a grocery clerk in the episode, which aired on March 17, 1995. That job got me an agent, and I was off to the races. After that it was one job after another.

I went back to Florida, sold my house, packed my stuff into a truck and drove it to Los Angeles, where I've lived ever since. I've made guest appearances on dozens of TV shows, including Frasier, Monk and Grey's Anatomy; I've had recurring roles on Scrubs, Dharma and Greg and Joan of Arcadia; I played Martin Sheen's secretary, Mrs. Landingham, on The West Wing; and since 2005 I've had a recurring role as Mrs. McCluskey on Desperate Housewives, for which I have won two Emmys.

In Pictures: Kathryn Joosten

I didn't start out saying, "Gee, I think I'll try to win an Emmy." I just kept aiming down the path that seemed to shine before me. I've always adjusted my work life to be able to follow that path. Each step I took was a natural progression, and I always arranged that I could go back and resume my previous life if I didn't get to the next step.

I've come to realize that I cannot arrive at success. There is no "there" there. It is a continuum. I don't advise anyone to give up an assured life for a fling at a dream. Be flexible enough to envision what the future may hold, but also realistic enough to hedge your bets. Then you can follow the unknown path, one step at a time.

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Kathryn Joosten is an actress in Los Angeles.

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Sandra Scott

Good for you, Kathryn! I've loved her from the first time I saw her. I finally fulfilled my own lifelong dream of playing a juicy role in our local amateur theatre when I landed the part of Ouiser (Weezer) in Steel Magnolias last year at the age of almost 70. What do you have to lose in pursuing a dream? You can't win if you don't buy a ticket.

February 26 2009 at 9:58 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Sharon

Even though I loved just about everyone and everything about "The West Wing", she was always one of my very favorites. She made that role hers. What an inspirational story!! It just goes to show that NOBODY should EVER give up on a dream! You're never too old to achieve what you really want in life. Where else but in the good old USofA would you hear of a success story like this?!

February 26 2009 at 9:34 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Gail

Didn't Kathryn play "The Log Lady" in Northern Exposure years ago? Don't know if my memory is correct or if I'm confusing Kathryn with another actress. Anyone?

February 26 2009 at 6:03 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Claire

Loved the article, what an inspiration with sage advice for people of all ages. Kathryn didn't get embittered and ruin her boys, she turned a negative into a positive and she WORKED HARD. I love how she asked her boys for their approval for this career exploration. She treated them and their needs as secondary to her own and it all has worked out. This is one together lady who has her priorities in line. I wonder if she's in the recent activa (or other brand)yogurt, questionning the grocery manager about how much fiber is in the yogurt. She only has a line or two, but shines. Anyway, thanks for the great true-life story. Go, Kathryn!

February 26 2009 at 4:21 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
tia

This really is a wonderful story! I have always wanted to be an actress even took acting classes when i was 17 at Indianapolis,IN it was fun but shortly after i started having children and now a grandchild. This story just helped me realize that i would love to be in a play or commercial! Maybe i'll check into it, my little grandchild is a little actress herself! Thanks for a great story!

February 26 2009 at 3:04 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Gae Sohn

Atta Girl Kathryn, I too, started my life AFTER divorce, I had one daugher to raise and I too worked three jobs to make our new life together. I am now a proud Great-Grand-mother of 4 wonderful children, retired after 30 years in Law enforcement, and my daughter just retired from the Sheriff's Dept and is now working for a Police dept. that I used to work in years ago. God never closes one window, without opening another , Thank you for your story, I love you too.

February 26 2009 at 2:48 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Gretchen

Reading your story was so interesting. It shows that persitance and and strong motivation can get you what you are looking got - if luck is with you. It helps to be in the right place at the right time. "Never give up" is a motto we all should remember. Myself - I am 68(supposedly look 15 years younger) and know I am funny and could act.(Loved High School plays) My kids are grown - husband retired and I am little on the bored side. I am looking into a small Amatuer group where I live - if nothing else I am looking for something to do that I LOVE and who knows where it would lead me. Thanks again -= wonderful story. Best of luck to you always. xoxoox

February 26 2009 at 2:05 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Frances

Yahoo! So inspirin. This gives me strength and hope. I am a Mommy by Day and Comedian by night...my two young sons are my life's priority but this shows me I can have my own personal dream as well.

If anyone wants a good laugh on mommy madness check out this comedy clip:
http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=6585267

February 26 2009 at 2:05 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
calistud4fem

im so happy for her, success is the best revenge and she's living a better life without that scum she was married to.

February 26 2009 at 1:58 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
chris

I had just started a new company called www.fashionfixnj.com and we do everything from personal shopping, we have a online clothing site with great Designer clothing, also closet organization to installing closets. I am also a professional fashion stylist. I love having my own business, I have been self employed for 12 years and I truly love it. It is never too late to have your own business. I enjoy helping people get into the fashion Industry, and encourage people to have their own business.

February 26 2009 at 1:58 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
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