Adept at both comedy and drama, veteran "second lead" and character actress Joyce Van Patten was born on March 9, 1934, in New York City. Prodded by a typically assertive magazine editor (stage) mother, Joyce and her equally famous older brother
Dick Van Patten displayed natural talent and began performing regularly at a very early age.
Of Dutch, English and Italian descent, Joyce was auditioning for modeling roles before reaching her first birthday, and by the age of 6 was on Broadway performing in the play "Popsy" (1941). In the same year she and brother Dick appear on radio with "Reg'lar Fellers," a summer replacement series for "The Jack Benny Program." As an adolescent, Joyce appeared in the Broadway plays "This Rock" (1943), "Tomorrow the World" (1943), "The Perfect Marriage" (1944), "The Wind Is Ninety" (1945) (also with Dickie) and "The Bees and the Flowers" (1946).
Following her relatively brief marriage (1950-1953) to Thomas King at the age of 16 which produced her son Thomas Casey King, who later turned actor and billed himself as
Casey King, Joyce moved to teen parts on such TV anthologies as "Armstrong Circle Theatre" and "Kraft Theatre." On TV she appeared a few times on brother Dick's TV series
Mama (1949) and originated the role of Janice Turner Hughes on the popular daytime soaper
As the World Turns (1956).
As she grew into a young adult, Joyce purposely dressed down and downplayed her beauty in order to play more interesting characters. Specializing in smart, calculating, cynical, earthy and brittle characters, Joyce reveled in wry comedy as well as quirky drama. Making an inauspicious film debut with an unbilled role in the urban drama
Fourteen Hours (1951) with a later small part in
The Goddess (1958) starring
Kim Stanley, Joyce remained a strong presence on TV and in the theatre. Such popular Broadway shows would include "The Desk Set" (1955), "A Hole in the Head" (1957) and "Spoon River Anthology" (1963). She also appeared with Dick elsewhere on stage with "The Male Animal" (1953), "The Tender Trap" (1955), and "Oh Men! Oh Women! (1955). In 1957, she married actor
Martin Balsam and their daughter,
Talia Balsam, also became an actress.
In addition to co-starring in the TV diner sitcom
The Good Guys (1968) co-starring
Bob Denver and
Herb Edelman and playing a neurotic assistant to a TV variety show star in
The Mary Tyler Moore Hour (1979), Joyce would grace a host of popular 60's and 70's TV shows, including "The Defenders," "Alfred Hitchcock Presents," "Ben Casey," "Dr. Kildare," " "Perry Mason," "The Danny Kaye Show," "The Andy Griffith Show," "The Outer Limits," "The Jack Benny Program," "Gunsmoke," "Mannix," "Love, American Style," "Medical Center," "The Odd Couple," "Columbo," "The Bold Ones," "Family" and "The Bob Newhart Show."
Joyce's infrequent movie roles would be some of her most interesting and quirkiest. She played naïve "square"
Peter Sellers's plain-Jane girlfriend in the "hippy" comedy
I Love You, Alice B. Toklas! (1968); played one half of a romantic couple with real brother Dick(!) in the teen dramedy
Making It (1971); portrayed one-half of a bickering couple held hostage and given marital advice by a house-breaking thief in
Bone (1972) (featuring son Casey); played an embittered woman picking up hitchhikers in
Thumb Tripping (1972); played a conniving Southern belle fiancée in the
Lucille Ball version of
Mame (1974); portrayed a bedridden trailer park trash wife in the murder mystery
The Manchu Eagle Murder Caper Mystery (1975); and a blunt Little League supervisor in the hit comedy
The Bad News Bears (1976). She also returned to Broadway as a replacement in the two-person comedy drama "Same Time, Next Year" (1975) and the short-lived "Murder at the Howard Johnsons" (1979).
Other vital theatre, both Broadway and regional, in later years included "I Oughta Be in Pictures" (1980), "The Supporting Cast" (1981), "Brighton Beach Memoirs" (1983), "Rumors" (1988), "Jake's Women" (1992), "Ring Round the Moon" (1999), "Taller Than a Dwarf" (2000), "Harvey" (2003), "The Oldest Profession" (2004), and "Rabbit Hole" (2006) and "The People in Pictures" (2011). Also, seen in TV movie versions of hit plays such as
You Can't Take It with You (1979) as Miss Wellington, and
Bus Stop (1982) as diner owner Grace, she also appeared in
Malice in Wonderland (1985),
Maid for Each Other (1992) and
Jake's Women (1996). She also was part of the cast for the first season of the comedy
Unhappily Ever After (1995). She was a standout as the overbearing mother to
Jason Beghe's quadriplegic son in the horror flick
Monkey Shines (1988).
Into the millennium, Joyce has supporting roles in the films
Marley & Me (2008),
Grown Ups (2010),
God's Pocket (2014) and
Diane (2018); and the TV programs "Oz," "The Sopranos," "NYPD Blue," "Desperate Housewives," "The Good Wife," "Boardwalk Empire" and "Cady Did."
After two rather brief marriages, Joyce married twice more -- briefly to actor
Hal Lynch and a longer one to actor
Dennis Dugan.