Monday, February 6, 2012
Sue Dwiggins Worsley dies at 97
Sue Dwiggins Worsley, a author, production coordinator and production secretary, died at her home in Studio City, Calif., on 12 ,. 31. She was 97. Inside the 19 fifties, she broke to the fledgling television market by writing scripts for "The Gene Autry Show." Later she labored inside the production offices of Gene Autry Prods. and, inside the sixties, for Four Star Television and last century Fox.While keeping focused around the Warner Bros. output of "Deliverance" in Georgia in 1971, she met and married her third husband, production manager Wallace Worsley Junior., and subsequently grew to become part of him being created offices for location shooting on films including "Coal Miner's Daughter," "Whose Existence Can It Be Anyway?," "ET: The Extra-Terrestrial" and " 'night, Mother," as well as on the Vital miniseries for NBC "Shogun." She was production coordinator on "ET."Extended active in industry politics, Sue Dwiggins Worsley was one of the backers of union representation for production organizers, who grew to become part of IATSE as Production Office Organizers in 1978. Worsley was produced Miriam Gretchen Sues in La. Her father Simmons Albert Sues will be a cameraman on quiet series "The Potential Risks of Helen," among many other early "flickers." Her mother Muriel Sues (nee McCoy) will be a appear editor at MGM. She was married in 1938 to Don Dwiggins, a newspaper and book author, too as with 1952 to William Bradford, a cameraman at Republic Pictures. Both close ties brought to divorce.She outdated in the market in 1991 upon the dying of husband Wallace Worsley Junior. She's managed to get having a boy together with a daughter seven grandchildren and diverse great-grandchildren.Donations may be made to the Lily La Cava Scholarship Fund, IATSE Local 871, 11519 Chandler Blvd., North Hollywood, CA 91601. Phone: 818-509-7871 Contact Variety Staff at news@variety.com
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