Janet Carroll Net Worth

Janet Carroll was an American actress born in Chicago, Illinois on December 24, 1940. She began her stage career at the Kansas City Starlight Theatre, appearing in many musicals such as "Hello Dolly", "Guys and Dolls", and "Carousel". She went on to star in numerous films and television shows, including Kinh Doanh Mao Hiem (1983), Family Business (1989), Murphy Brown (1988), and Brothers & Sisters (2006). She won the Los Angeles Drama Logue Critics Award for outstanding achievement in theatre for Ezra Pound's "Electra" and served on the Executive Board of Directors of Ginny Mancini's "Society of Singers" as VP of Development. Her ashes will be spread in the Edgebrook Lutheran Church Memorial Garden in Chicago, Illinois.
Janet Carroll is a member of Actress

Age, Biography and Wiki

Who is it? Actress
Birth Day December 24, 1940
Birth Place  Chicago, Illinois, United States
Janet Carroll age 80 YEARS OLD
Died On May 22, 2012(2012-05-22) (aged 71)\nNew York City, New York, U.S.
Birth Sign Capricorn
Cause of death Brain tumor
Occupation Actress, singer
Years active 1960s–2011
Children George Brown Tom Brown (died 1978)

💰 Net worth: $200,000

Janet Carroll, a renowned actress based in the United States, holds an estimated net worth of $200,000 as of 2024. Recognized for her exceptional talent and versatile performances, Carroll has made a significant mark in the entertainment industry. With a career spanning several decades, she has showcased her skills across various mediums, including film, television, and theater. Janet Carroll's net worth reflects her successful journey as an actress, testament to both her talent and dedication to her craft.

Some Janet Carroll images

Biography/Timeline

1960

Carroll was born Janet Carol Thiese in Chicago, the daughter of Hilda Catherine (née Patton) and George Nicholas Thiese. She received formal theatrical training and began acting professionally in the late 1960s, appearing in numerous productions in local theaters. She then became a regular at Starlight Theatre in Kansas City, Missouri, where she acted during five seasons.

1982

Since 1982, she had performed as a singer at Jazz Festivals throughout the United States and Canada, being accompanied by her seven piece format, while interpreting traditional jazz, swing, blues, and classic ballads or the Great American Songbook. She performed in Victoria and Vancouver summer festivals in British Columbia, as well as in Monterey, Los Angeles, Newport Beach, Santa Catalina Island, and New Orleans stages, along with concerts at United Service Organizations shows, the Palmer House in Chicago, the Fountaineblue in Miami Beach, the Ritz-Carlton chain, the Biltmore Hotel in Coral Gables and the San Antonio River Walk (San Antonio, Texas). At the Redding Jazz Festival, she was honored with an award for Best Vocalist. In 2004, she was the featured performer at the Porrath Foundation for Cancer Patient Advocacy Event tribute to film star Rhonda Fleming.

1983

Carroll's career spanned more than four decades and included major roles in Broadway musicals and Hollywood productions, but was perhaps most recognized for her portrayal of the oblivious mother of Joel (Tom Cruise) in the 1983 film Risky Business.

1985

Besides Risky Business, Carroll appeared in more than 20 other films over the next three decades, including Secret Admirer (1985), The Killing Time (1987), Memories of Me (1988), Family Business (1989), Talent for the Game (1991), Destiny Turns on the Radio (1995), Forces of Nature (1999), The Omega Code and Enough (2002), among others. She developed her television career with recurring roles on the series Hill Street Blues (1983, 1986 as Peggy LaRue Nelson), The Bronx Zoo (1987 as Carol Danzig), Murphy Brown (1990–96, as Doris Dial, stoic anchorman Charles Kimbrough's wife), Melrose Place (1993–97, as Marion Shaw, Kimberly's mother), and Still Standing (2002–04, as Helen Michaels).

1992

In 1992, Carroll collaborated as a singer on the album This Joint Is Jumpin' Live! – Beverly Hills Unlisted Jazz Band, a recording project led by dixieland trombonist and actor Conrad Janis. She later released her solo albums Presenting... Janet Carroll and the Hollywood Jazz Cats (1992), I Can't Give You Anything But Love (2000), I'll Be Seeing You (2000) and Lady Be Good (2010).

2004

From 2004-05, she starred on Broadway creating the role of "Aunt March" in the original musical Little Women, which is based in the 1869 novel of the same title written by American author Louisa May Alcott. She promoted brands such as Century 21, Diet Coke, Outback Steakhouse and Holiday Inn, among others, in television advertisement spots.

2011

By 2011, she was preparing the production of her fourth and fifth records titled A Tribute to the Great Ladies of Song! and Scorch Your Shorts Torch Songs!. She was diagnosed with brain cancer later that year and took a leave of absence. She underwent surgery and chemotherapy without success.

2012

Carroll died on May 22, 2012, from brain cancer at her home in Manhattan, aged 71. She was predeceased by one of her sons, Tom Brown. She was survived by another son, George Brown.

2019

Carroll then performed in Kansas City and Chicago, assuming significant roles in such musicals as Carousel, Guys and Dolls, Gypsy, Hello, Dolly!, Mame, South Pacific and The Pajama Game, before moving to California, where she continued her stage work, winning a Drama-Logue Award for her performance as Klytemnestra in Ezra Pound’s Elektra.