Hubbry Logo
search
logo
550

Suzanne Somers

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

Suzanne Marie Somers (née Mahoney; October 16, 1946 – October 15, 2023) was an American actress, author, and businesswoman. She played the television roles of Chrissy Snow on Three's Company (1977–1981) and Carol Foster Lambert on Step by Step (1991–1998).

Key Information

Somers wrote more than 25 books, including two autobiographies, four diet books, and a book of poetry. She was also well known for advertising the ThighMaster, an exercise device. While 14 of her books were best sellers and most were focused on health and well-being, doctors criticized her promotion of bioidentical hormone replacement therapy and alternative cancer treatments.[1]

Early life

[edit]

Suzanne Marie Mahoney was born in San Bruno, California, on October 16, 1946[2][3] as the third[4] of four children in a working-class Irish-American Catholic family.[5] Her mother, Marion Elizabeth (née Turner), was a medical secretary, and her father, Francis "Frank" Mahoney, loaded cases of beer onto boxcars,[6] and was a laborer and gardener.[7] Her father was an alcoholic and was abusive, and Somers often worried that he would kill her.[7][8][9]

Somers first attended Mercy High School in Burlingame, California, but had trouble with her schoolwork because of dyslexia and her father's all-night rages, and she would often fall asleep in class.[10][11] At school, she performed the lead role in a production of H.M.S. Pinafore[12] She was expelled at age 14 for writing sexually suggestive notes to a boy that were never sent.[10][7]

At age 17, Suzanne's father ripped off her prom dress and told her that she was "nothing," and she responded by hitting him in the head with a tennis racket.[8]

In 1964, Somers graduated from Capuchino High School in San Bruno, where she won the "Best Doll Award" for her role in the senior musical Guys and Dolls and helped organize her class's senior ball.[13] She then attended San Francisco College for Women (Lone Mountain College),[14] a college run by the Catholic Society of the Sacred Heart order, but withdrew in 1965 when she learned that she was pregnant. She married her child's father, Bruce Somers, days later at age 19.[7][9] Her situation led to low self-esteem. She was arrested for check fraud and her car was impounded.[8][15]

Career

[edit]

Early career

[edit]
"I made my living by making chocolate desserts and selling them to restaurants in Sausalito, California, and by making children’s dresses and selling them on consignment to little children’s stores."[12]

Somers began acting in small roles during the late 1960s and early 1970s.

Somers modelled for Grimme Modeling Agency in San Francisco.[16][17][18][19]

After divorcing in 1968, Somers worked as a prize model, on Anniversary Game, a game show, based at KGO-TV in San Francisco, hosted by Alan Hamel and produced by Circle Seven Productions.[8][20]

From 1971 to 1973, Somers was a panelist on the Alan Hamel-hosted Mantrap,[21] a weekday daytime panel show, from BCTV in Vancouver for CTV Television Network stations in Canada, and syndicated in the United States.[22]

In 1973, Somers appeared in bit parts in movies, such as the "Blonde in the white Thunderbird" in American Graffiti' and an uncredited role as a "pool girl" in Magnum Force.[23]

In 1974, Somers appeared in an episode of the American version of the sitcom Lotsa Luck, based on the British sitcom On the Buses, as the femme fatale. It led to her first appearance,[24] 21 February 1974, on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, promoting her book of poetry.[25] In 2009, Kristen Wiig gave a reading of excerpts from Suzanne Somers' book of poetry Touch Me, for Celebrity Autobiography (KUSH).[26][27] Later that year, Somers made an appearance in The Rockford Files and did an audition to guest host AM San Francisco on KGO-TV alongside Jim Lange.[28]

Somers also had a guest-starring role on The Six Million Dollar Man in the 1977 episode "Cheshire Project".[29] She played a passenger on the first episode of The Love Boat[30] and made a guest appearance in a 1976 episode of One Day at a Time.[31]

Three's Company

[edit]

After actresses Suzanne Zenor and Susan Lanier did not impress producers during the first two pilot episodes of the ABC sitcom Three's Company, based on the British sitcom Man About the House, Somers was suggested by ABC president Fred Silverman, who had seen her in her initial appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. Silverman hired her the day before the taping of the third and final pilot commenced.[32] Somers portrayed Christmas "Chrissy" Snow, who exemplified many blonde stereotypes and was employed as an office secretary. At first, Somers made $3,500 per week from the show.[33]

The series co-starred John Ritter and Joyce DeWitt in a comedy about two single women living with a single man who pretended to be gay in order to bypass the landlord's policy of prohibiting single men sharing an apartment with single women. The program was an instant success in the Nielsen ratings, eventually spawning a short-lived spin-off series, The Ropers, loosely based on the British sitcom George and Mildred, starring Norman Fell and Audra Lindley.[34]

When Three's Company began its fifth season in late 1980, Somers demanded a salary increase "from $30,000 an episode to $150,000 an episode, equal to what Ritter was making and comparable to the salaries of other male sitcom stars at the time"[35] as well as 10% of the show's profits.[36] DeWitt and Somers were paid the same, less than Ritter, but DeWitt also had a "favored nations" clause in her contract, which guaranteed she received equal terms to other cast members.[37] Somers' request was influenced by her second husband and manager, Alan Hamel.[38]

"The night before we went in to renegotiate, I got a call from a friend who had connections high up at ABC, and he said, 'They’re going to hang a nun in the marketplace, and the nun is Suzanne,' The network was willing to do this because, earlier that year, the women on Laverne & Shirley had gotten what they asked for, and they wanted to put a stop to it. They’d destroy the chemistry on Company to make a point." — Alan Hamel, 2015[35]

ABC was willing to offer only a $5,000 per episode raise.[33] Somers then refused to appear in the second and fourth episodes of the season, citing excuses such as a broken rib. She finished the remaining season on her contract; however, her role was reduced to just 60 seconds per episode, with her character appearing in only the episode's closing tag in which Chrissy calls the trio's apartment from her parents' home. After ABC fired her from the program and terminated her contract, Somers sued the network for $2 million, saying her credibility in show business had been damaged. The lawsuit was settled by an arbitrator who decided Somers was owed only $30,000, due to a single missed episode for which she had not been paid. Future rulings also favored the network and producers. Somers said she was fired for asking to be paid as much as popular male television stars.[36][37][39]

After Three's Company

[edit]

During the 1980s and 1990s, Somers was a spokesperson for Polaris Vac-Sweep automated pool cleaner.[40][41][42][43][44]

In 1983, through her Hamel/Somers Productions, she signed a deal with Columbia Pictures Television.[45]

Somers and her Three's Company co-star, John Ritter, reconciled their friendship after 20 years of not speaking to each other, shortly before Ritter's death in 2003.[46]

Somers appeared in two Playboy cover-feature nude pictorials, in 1980 and 1984. Her first set of nude photos was taken by Stan Malinowski in February 1970 when Somers was a struggling model and actress and did a test photoshoot for the magazine. She was accepted as a Playmate candidate in 1971, but declined to pose nude before the actual shoot. During an appearance on The Tonight Show in 1980, she denied ever posing nude, except for a High Society topless photo. This prompted Playboy to publish photos from the 1970 Malinowski shoot, without her permission.[47] Somers' original motivation for posing nude was to be able to pay medical bills related to injuries her son Bruce Jr. suffered in a car accident. By the time the photos were published, her son was 14 and Somers feared seeing his mother posing nude would be difficult for him. Somers sued Playboy and settled for $50,000, which was donated to charity, with at least $10,000 of it going to Easterseals.[48] The second nude pictorial by Richard Fegley appeared in December 1984 in an attempt by Somers to regain her diminished popularity after the Three's Company debacle in 1981. Despite her anger and the earlier lawsuit, Playboy approached her earlier that year to pose nude a second time. Initially she was angered again, but eventually agreed after discussing it with her family. She felt she would have a better chance to control the quality of the photos the second time, and having such control was an important condition that Somers attached to posing. Despite Somers' earlier belief that her son would not want to see his mother nude, her then 18-year-old son did view the second pictorial.[49]

In the 1980s, Somers lived in Las Vegas and was an entertainer, headlining at the MGM Grand for two years until the theater burned down and then at the Las Vegas Hilton for another 2+12 years.[50] In 1986 the Las Vegas critics voted her Female Entertainer of the Year.[51]

Suzanne Somers on the USS Ranger in 1981

In the early 1980s, Somers performed for U.S. servicemen overseas.[52][53][54]

From 1987 to 1989, Somers starred in the sitcom She's the Sheriff, which ran in first-run syndication. Somers portrayed a widow with two young children who decided to fill the shoes of her late husband, a sheriff of a Nevada town. The show ran for two seasons.[55]

In 1990, Somers returned to network television, appearing in numerous guest roles and made-for-TV movies.[56]

Later career

[edit]

In September 1991, Somers returned to series television in the sitcom Step By Step (with Patrick Duffy), which became a success on ABC's youth-orientated TGIF lineup.[57]

In the early 1990s, Somers was the spokeswoman in a series of infomercials for the Thighmaster, a piece of exercise equipment which exercises the hip adductors and is squeezed between one's thighs above the knees. In 2014, Somers was inducted into the Infomercial Hall of Fame.[58]

In 1991 a two-hour biographical film of Somers, starring the actress herself, entitled Keeping Secrets, based on her first autobiography of the same title, was broadcast on ABC. The movie chronicled Somers' troubled family life and upbringing, along with her subsequent rise to fame.[57]

In 1994, Somers launched a daytime talk show titled Suzanne Somers, which lasted one season.[57]

Step By Step continued on ABC until the end of its sixth season in 1997, when the series moved to CBS for what turned out to be its final season.[57]

From 1997 to 1999, Somers co-hosted the revised Candid Camera show, when CBS revived it with Peter Funt.[59]

In the 2000s, Somers appeared on the Home Shopping Network for more than 25 hours per month, selling household items, clothing and jewelry that she designed.[7]

Somers receiving patriotic civilian service award for past USO tour performances after performing The Blonde in the Thunderbird for members of the U.S. military and their families

In January 2004, The Blonde in the Thunderbird premiered at the Spreckels Theatre in San Diego, later playing at the Princess of Wales Theatre in Toronto, 16–26 June 2004.[60] In the summer of 2005, Somers made her Broadway theatre debut in a one-woman show, The Blonde in the Thunderbird, a collection of stories about her life and career, based on her books,[61] Keeping Secrets and After the Fall, by Somers.[62] The show was supposed to run from 8 July until 3 September 2005,[63] but was cancelled in less than a week after poor reviews[64] and disappointing ticket sales.[55] She blamed the harsh reviews: The New York Times referred to it as "...a drab and embarrassing display of emotional exhibitionism masquerading as entertainment."[65] The Associated Press referred to it as "an extended therapy session crossed with a tacky Las Vegas revue – minus the other showgirls".[66] She compared her treatment by critics with the treatment of soldiers in the Iraq War, prompting even more criticism.[67]

In 2012, Somers began an online video talk show, Suzanne Somers Breaking Through, at CafeMom.[68] Three of the episodes featured a reunion and reconciliation with former Three's Company co-star Joyce DeWitt;[69] the two had not seen nor spoken to each other in 31 years. Somers and Dewitt briefly discussed John Ritter and how glad they were they both had spoken with him shortly before his sudden death.[35]

In the fall of 2012, The Suzanne Show, hosted by Somers, aired for a 13-episode season on the Lifetime Network. Somers welcomed various guests covering a wide range of topics relating to health and fitness.[35]

On February 24, 2015, Somers was announced as one of the stars participating on the 20th season of Dancing with the Stars. Her partner was professional dancer Tony Dovolani.[70] Somers and Dovolani were eliminated in the fifth week of competition and finished in 9th place.[71]

In May and June 2015, Somers starred in "Suzanne Sizzles" at the Westgate Las Vegas.[50]

Medical views

[edit]

Somers supported bioidentical hormone replacement therapy. Her book Ageless[72] includes interviews with 16 practitioners of bioidentical hormone therapy but focuses on one specific approach, the Wiley protocol. A group of seven doctors, all of whom practice bioidentical hormone therapy to address women's health issues, issued a public letter to Somers and her publisher, Crown Publishing Group, stating that the protocol is scientifically unproven and dangerous and citing Wiley's lack of medical and clinical qualifications. Somers appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show and was praised by Winfrey for her views, but negative press coverage followed.[73][74]

Somers at The Heart Truth's Red Dress Collection Fashion Show (2011). Behind Somers are Giuliana Rancic, Julie Bowen, and Garcelle Beauvais.

In April 2000, Somers was diagnosed with breast cancer. She underwent a lumpectomy and radiation but declined chemotherapy. In November 2008, Somers announced that she had been diagnosed with inoperable cancer by six doctors, but she learned a week later that she was misdiagnosed. During this time, she interviewed doctors about cancer treatments and these interviews became the basis of her 2009 book Knockout about alternative treatments to chemotherapy.[75][76] In the book, Somers promoted alternative cancer treatments, for which she was criticized by the American Cancer Society, and alternative medical providers such as Stanislaw Burzynski, who has been disciplined by the Texas Medical Board for misleading cancer patients.[1][73]

In regard to the water-fluoridation controversy, Somers called fluoride a "toxic waste by-product of the aluminum manufacturers."[77]

In January 2013, Somers suggested that Adam Lanza may have been driven to commit the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting because of the level of toxins in his diet and his exposure to household cleaners.[78]

Personal life

[edit]

Somers married Bruce Somers on April 14, 1965,[79] and they had a son in November 1965.[80][81]

In 1968, after divorcing, Somers moved into an apartment in Sausalito,[10] and got work as a prize model on The Anniversary Game, a game show hosted by Alan Hamel. Although he was already married, they began dating; she had an affair with him that led to an abortion.[8] In 1971, her six-year-old son, Bruce Somers, Jr., was struck by a car. The resulting trauma led her to seek therapy for both herself and her son.[8] On November 19, 1977, Somers and Hamel married,[79][82] and bought a 25-acre estate in Palm Springs, California.[83][84] In 2021, they sold it for $8.5 million.[85]

In January 2007, a wildfire in Southern California destroyed Somers' home in Malibu, parts of Los Angeles metropolitan area.[86]

Somers described her political views as "very personal", and she identified as an independent voter.[87] In 2013, she criticized Barack Obama saying his administration was "the most divisive of all the administrations that I've ever experienced in my life, and it's become divisive that if you are not part of the group you probably should keep your thought to yourself."[87] In 2018, she expressed support for Donald Trump.[88]

Somers' three granddaughters include Camelia Somers.[89]

Health problems and death

[edit]
Gravesite of Suzanne Somers at Desert Memorial Park in Cathedral City, California on Friday, November 29, 2024

Somers had hyperplasia in her 20s and skin cancer in her 30s.[36]

In April 2000, Somers was diagnosed with breast cancer and underwent a lumpectomy to remove the cancer, followed by radiation therapy.[75]

In 2018, it was reported that she underwent an experimental stem-cell therapy to regrow the breast she lost to cancer.[90]

Somers died at her home in Palm Springs, California, on October 15, 2023, one day before her 77th birthday.[7] Her death was attributed to breast cancer, which had returned earlier in the year.[9][91] Her funeral was held three days later, with her interment at Desert Memorial Park.[92]

Filmography

[edit]

Television

[edit]
The handprints of Suzanne Somers in front of The Great Movie Ride at Walt Disney World's Disney's Hollywood Studios theme park
Suzanne Somers three-way poncho on display at Walgreens, an As seen on TV product endorsed by Somers[93]

Film

[edit]

Published works

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Suzanne Marie Somers (October 16, 1946 – October 15, 2023) was an American actress, author, singer, businesswoman, and health spokesperson, best known for her role as the bubbly Chrissy Snow on the ABC sitcom Three's Company from 1977 to 1981.[1][2] Born in San Bruno, California, to Francis and Marion Mahoney, she rose to fame portraying the ditzy blonde roommate in the comedy series, which capitalized on her comedic timing and physical comedy.[2] Her tenure on the show ended amid a high-profile contract dispute over equal pay with male co-star John Ritter, leading to her dismissal and reduced appearances in subsequent seasons.[3] Beyond acting, Somers built a multifaceted career as an entrepreneur and wellness advocate, promoting products like the ThighMaster exercise device and authoring over a dozen books on health, nutrition, and anti-aging.[4][5] Titles such as Ageless: The Naked Truth About Bioidentical Hormones and Knockout: Interviews with Doctors Who Are Curing Cancer championed alternative therapies, including bioidentical hormone replacement and integrative cancer approaches, often challenging conventional medical consensus.[5][6] She underwent treatment for breast cancer diagnosed in 2001, achieving remission but facing recurrence in 2023, ultimately succumbing to the disease with metastasis to the brain after a 23-year battle.[7][8] Somers' public persona blended entertainment with personal empowerment, earning her People's Choice Awards for favorite actress in new series (1977, 1991) and recognition as Las Vegas Entertainer of the Year in 1986, while her wellness empire drew both followers and critics for prioritizing anecdotal evidence and non-standard protocols over established clinical standards.[9][10]

Early Life

Childhood and Family Background

Suzanne Marie Mahoney, later known as Suzanne Somers, was born on October 16, 1946, in San Bruno, California, as the third of four children in a working-class Irish-American Catholic family.[2][11] Her father, Francis "Frank" Mahoney, worked as a laborer loading cases of beer onto boxcars at a brewery, reflecting the modest socioeconomic circumstances of the household.[2] Her mother, Marion Elizabeth Mahoney (née Turner), served as a medical secretary, offering a measure of routine stability amid family challenges.[11][12] The Mahoney home was characterized by significant dysfunction, primarily stemming from Frank Mahoney's alcoholism and patterns of verbal and physical abuse toward family members.[13][2] Somers later recounted growing up in perpetual fear of harm or even death at her father's hands during his drunken episodes, which instilled early lessons in vigilance and emotional guardedness.[13] This volatile environment contrasted with her mother's gentler influence, though it permeated the siblings' experiences, with Somers' brothers and sister eventually developing their own alcohol dependencies, while she sought paths to independence.[14][15] In reflections on her upbringing, Somers attributed the family's turbulence to intergenerational patterns of addiction and unresolved trauma, viewing it as a catalyst for her determination to break free and build resilience through personal agency rather than perpetuating the cycle.[15][16]

Education and Early Challenges

Somers was diagnosed with dyslexia during her youth, which contributed to academic difficulties and poor performance in school.[17][18] She attended Mercy High School, an all-girls Catholic institution in San Bruno, California, but was expelled in her junior year after nuns discovered sexually suggestive notes she had written to a boyfriend.[19] Despite these struggles, Somers showed aptitude in the arts, participating actively in her high school's theater program and securing the lead role of Adelaide in a production of Guys and Dolls.[2][20] At age 19, Somers married Bruce Somers on April 14, 1965, shortly before giving birth to their son, Bruce Jr., in November of that year.[21] The marriage ended in divorce in 1968, leaving her as a single mother facing severe financial hardships, including an inability to afford child support from her ex-husband and instances of writing bad checks to cover basic expenses.[22][23] With no formal education beyond high school and lacking professional training in the performing arts, she supported herself and her son through modeling gigs in San Francisco, relying on self-taught skills that highlighted her innate creative talents.[2][24] These early obstacles underscored her non-traditional trajectory, shaped by personal resilience rather than structured academic or vocational preparation.

Acting Career

Pre-Fame Roles and Breakthrough

Suzanne Somers entered the entertainment industry in the late 1960s, initially working as a prize model on the syndicated game show The Anniversary Game.[25] She supplemented this with modeling gigs and pursued acting opportunities, facing the typical rejections common to aspiring performers while taking on minor roles to build experience. Her early film appearances were uncredited bit parts, including a small role as a woman in the 1968 Steve McQueen thriller Bullitt.[26] She continued with similar non-speaking extras in films like Daddy's Gone A-Hunting (1969) and Fools (1970), alongside a credited appearance as the "blonde in the white Thunderbird" in American Graffiti (1973).[27] These sparse credits reflected her persistence in Hollywood amid limited breakthroughs during the early 1970s. Somers' defining opportunity came in 1977 when she auditioned for Three's Company, a sitcom adaptation of the British series Man About the House. At age 30, she secured the role of Christmas "Chrissy" Snow, a bubbly florist characterized by naive charm and physical comedy, after producers noted her screen test's emphasis on an effervescent, ditzy persona that fit the show's lighthearted tone.[28] The series premiered on ABC on March 15, 1977, quickly achieving top ratings and propelling Somers to stardom as a 1970s television sex symbol, with her appeal stemming from exaggerated innocence combined with comedic timing that resonated with audiences.[29]

Three's Company Era and Salary Dispute

Suzanne Somers portrayed Chrissy Snow, the bubbly and naive blonde roommate, on the ABC sitcom Three's Company from its premiere on March 15, 1977, through the end of the fourth season in 1980.[3] Her character contributed significantly to the show's success, which averaged over 20 million viewers per episode during its peak years, with Somers' performance earning her recognition as one of television's rising stars.[30] By 1980, as her initial four-year contract neared expiration, Somers sought renegotiation for salary parity with male lead John Ritter, who earned $150,000 per episode compared to her $30,000.[3] [31] Her husband, Alan Hamel, handled negotiations, demanding not only the $150,000 figure but also top billing after Ritter, a private dressing room, and a chauffeured limousine—requests producers viewed as excessive and disruptive to the ensemble dynamic.[32] ABC executives, led by producer Mickey Ross, rejected the terms, citing Somers' demands as tantamount to seeking star status over the established lead, and fired her in early 1981.[33] For the fifth season, Somers appeared only in pre-filmed opening shots from the waist up, without dialogue, before her character was written out via a trip to Hawaii.[34] The dispute escalated into a public controversy, with Somers framing her stance as a challenge to entrenched gender pay gaps in Hollywood, where female leads often received fractions of male counterparts' compensation despite comparable audience draw.[35] She filed a breach-of-contract lawsuit against ABC, seeking $2 million in damages for lost earnings and opportunities, but ultimately settled for a smaller sum after years of litigation.[33] The fallout resulted in an informal industry blacklist, barring her from major network roles for nearly four years, as producers wary of similar conflicts avoided hiring her.[30] Subsequent revelations of pervasive pay inequities, including in other high-profile cases, lent retrospective credence to Somers' position, highlighting systemic undervaluation of female talent in 1980s television.[31]

Post-Three's Company Acting Projects

Following her departure from Three's Company in 1981 amid a salary dispute, Somers encountered significant industry resistance, with producers and networks reportedly blackballing her for demanding pay equity comparable to male co-star John Ritter, limiting major acting opportunities for several years.[3][30] She described the fallout as a de facto exile, forcing her to pivot temporarily from scripted roles while rebuilding visibility through smaller projects.[36] Somers staged a television comeback with the syndicated sitcom She's the Sheriff, airing from September 19, 1987, to April 1, 1989, across two seasons and 44 episodes, where she portrayed Hildy Granger, a widowed mother appointed as sheriff in a Nevada town.[37] The series, produced by Lorimar-Telepictures, featured her in a lead comedic role emphasizing family dynamics and law enforcement mishaps, marking her return to primetime after the dispute's repercussions.[38] In 1991, Somers achieved greater stability with Step by Step, a family sitcom that ran for seven seasons until 1998 on ABC and CBS, totaling 160 episodes, in which she played Carol Foster Lambert, a divorced salon owner who marries widower Frank Lambert (Patrick Duffy) and blends their families in Port Washington, Wisconsin.[39] The show drew on her established persona as a relatable, bubbly matriarch, sustaining her acting career through consistent ensemble work despite earlier Hollywood ostracism.[40] Somers appeared in supporting or cameo capacities in films, including a role in John Waters' satirical black comedy Serial Mom (1994), where she played a television personality alongside Kathleen Turner; the production wrapped with Somers gifting her co-star a ThighMaster, reflecting her entrepreneurial overlap but within an acting context.[41] Such sporadic film work underscored persistent challenges in securing lead dramatic roles post-backlash, with her strengths channeled into lighter, persona-driven fare. Later, Somers ventured into reality television, competing as a contestant on season 1 of Dancing with the Stars in 2005, where she performed ballroom routines before elimination, leveraging her public image for competitive exposure rather than scripted narrative depth.[42] This shift highlighted an adaptation to formats emphasizing personality over traditional acting, extending her on-screen presence amid fewer sitcom revivals.

Business and Entrepreneurial Ventures

Infomercial Success and Product Innovations

Following her departure from Three's Company, Suzanne Somers pivoted to direct-response television marketing in the early 1990s, investing in and promoting the ThighMaster, a compact leg-toning device invented by physical therapist Bonnie Brooks and launched commercially in 1990.[43] Somers starred in the product's infomercials starting in 1991, demonstrating its use with the memorable instruction to "put it between your knees and squeeze," which underscored the tool's straightforward isometric exercise for thigh firming without gym equipment or complex routines.[44][45] This approach capitalized on the emerging infomercial format, allowing extended demonstrations and testimonials that built consumer trust through perceived genuineness rather than brief celebrity spots.[46] The ThighMaster generated over $300 million in lifetime sales, with Somers reporting that 10 million units sold rapidly upon release, establishing her financial independence from acting residuals.[47][48] Success stemmed from Somers' hands-on involvement in production, rejecting conventional studio limitations to feature real-user results and her own routine integration, which resonated amid rising home fitness trends in the post-aerobics era.[49] Her entrepreneurial control enabled iterative improvements, such as rebranding from the less appealing "V-Toner" to emphasize targeted thigh benefits, driving repeat purchases via bundled accessories like resistance bands.[49] Somers extended this model to additional gadgets, including the FaceMaster, a microcurrent facial toning device she endorsed through instructional videos and direct sales, promoting muscle stimulation for non-surgical lifting.[50] These innovations prioritized user autonomy, offering affordable, at-home alternatives to professional treatments and reinforcing her shift toward consumer-driven product ecosystems over passive endorsements. In recognition of these efforts, Somers was inducted into the Direct Response Hall of Fame in 2014.[43]

Fitness Empire Expansion

Somers extended her fitness initiatives beyond initial infomercial products into a series of home workout videos during the 1990s, such as the ThighMaster Toning System exercise program, which featured 12 targeted routines for upper and lower body strengthening using compact resistance equipment.[51] These videos marketed straightforward, equipment-supported exercises designed for everyday consumers, enabling at-home toning without gym access or complex machinery, and aligned with her emphasis on replicable routines yielding measurable body contouring.[52] The approach capitalized on the era's growing interest in personal fitness, with over 10 million ThighMaster devices sold through such multimedia channels.[53] Complementing these visual guides, Somers linked her video content to broader lifestyle frameworks outlined in her fitness-oriented publications starting in the 1980s, advocating consistent physical activity paired with balanced eating patterns to foster enduring habits rather than restrictive, short-lived regimens.[54] This integration positioned her brand as a holistic system, where videos provided demonstrable techniques while printed materials reinforced maintenance strategies, appealing to audiences seeking reliable, non-faddish progress in weight management and vitality.[55] The expansion propelled her entrepreneurial output to substantial financial scale, with ThighMaster-related sales surpassing $300 million in revenue, forming the cornerstone of a diversified wellness portfolio that defied post-acting career marginalization in entertainment circles.[47] By leveraging direct-to-consumer marketing and iterative product lines, Somers achieved a reported net worth of $100 million at her death in 2023, exemplifying independent business acumen amid industry blacklisting following her 1980s television disputes.[56][57] This self-directed buildup underscored the viability of her fitness model's practical efficacy, as evidenced by sustained consumer adoption over decades.[58]

Authorship

Self-Help and Fitness Publications

Suzanne Somers began her authorship career with Touch Me: The Poems of Suzanne Somers, published in 1973, a collection of poetry exploring themes of physical and emotional intimacy through the motif of touch.[59] The work draws from personal experiences to advocate for authentic sensory connection as essential to human vitality, presenting sensuality as a foundational aspect of self-awareness rather than mere physicality.[60] In 1988, Somers released Keeping Secrets, an autobiography that integrates self-help guidance on overcoming the intergenerational effects of familial alcoholism.[61] The book details her childhood exposure to an alcoholic father and its influence on relationships, offering practical insights derived from her recovery process, including strategies for breaking cycles of dysfunction and fostering emotional resilience.[62] It achieved New York Times bestseller status, reflecting public interest in experiential narratives over abstract psychological theory.[63] Somers transitioned to fitness publications with Suzanne Somers' Eat Great, Lose Weight in 1996, introducing the "Somersizing" method of food combining to optimize digestion and metabolism without caloric restriction or elimination of fats.[64] The approach posits that separating carbohydrates from proteins and fats prevents fermentation in the gut, enabling sustained weight loss through natural satiety and nutrient-dense meals, as supported by anecdotal outcomes from users reporting improved energy and body composition.[65] This regimen rejects standardized dieting paradigms, emphasizing individualized responses to food pairings based on physiological cause-and-effect.[66] Subsequent fitness works, such as Suzanne Somers' Get Skinny on Fabulous Food in 1999, expanded on these principles with over 130 recipes tailored to Somersizing levels, promoting high-fat, low-carb combinations for metabolic reprogramming while allowing indulgences like cheese and butter.[67] These publications consistently prioritize empirical self-observation—tracking personal digestion and energy—over institutional dietary guidelines, aligning with a body-autonomy framework that critiques uniform nutritional advice for ignoring biochemical variability.[68]

Health and Wellness Books

Somers's Ageless: The Naked Truth About Bioidentical Hormones (2006) advocates bioidentical hormone replacement therapy as a means to reverse aging symptoms by restoring natural hormonal levels, contrasting it with synthetic hormones that she claims disrupt bodily functions. The book draws on physician interviews to argue that environmental toxins exacerbate hormone imbalances, recommending detoxification protocols alongside hormone therapy for sustained vitality.[69][70] In The Sexy Years: Discover the Hormone Connection--The Secret to Fabulous Sex, Great Health, and Vitality, for Women and Men (2003), Somers extends hormone-focused critiques to perimenopause and andropause, positing that imbalances cause weight gain, fatigue, and reduced libido, treatable via customized bioidentical regimens rather than pharmaceuticals. She incorporates medical endorsements for individualized testing and dosing, emphasizing empirical self-observation over standardized protocols.[71][72] Knockout: Interviews with Doctors Who Are Curing Cancer--And How to Prevent Getting It in the First Place (2009) features dialogues with integrative practitioners who prioritize nutritional, supplemental, and metabolic interventions over chemotherapy, which Somers portrays as overly destructive due to side effects like immune suppression. The text compiles case reports of tumor regressions through body-strengthening methods, urging readers to question pharmaceutical-centric oncology and explore causal links between diet, inflammation, and cancer initiation.[73][74] TOX-SICK: From Toxic to Not Sick (2015) examines pervasive environmental chemicals--from mold to heavy metals--as root causes of autoimmune and degenerative diseases, advocating systemic detox via organic diets, chelation, and saunas to enable endogenous repair mechanisms. Somers references clinician anecdotes of symptom reversal post-detox, promoting vigilant personal toxin audits and supplementation to bypass overburdened conventional diagnostics.[75][76]

Health Advocacy

Promotion of Alternative Treatments

Somers articulated a health philosophy rooted in skepticism toward conventional medical institutions, particularly their reliance on interventions like chemotherapy, which she viewed as often counterproductive for prevalent cancers such as breast and lung varieties.[77] Instead, she advocated holistic strategies aimed at bolstering the body's innate defenses through bioidentical hormone replacement therapy (BHRT), nutritional supplementation, mistletoe extracts like Iscador, and stem cell applications.[78][79] In public forums, she emphasized BHRT's role in mimicking natural hormones to alleviate menopausal symptoms and counteract aging, contrasting it with synthetic alternatives she deemed inferior and drug-like.[78] Through her 2009 book Knockout: Interviews with Doctors Who Are Curing Cancer, Somers profiled physicians employing non-toxic methods to enhance immune function and vitality, such as customized supplement regimens—Somers herself incorporated around 60 daily—and hormone balancing, rather than protocols that "tear down" the body.[77] She promoted stem cell therapies for regenerative purposes, including fat-derived stem cell-enhanced lipotransfer for mitigating radiation-induced tissue damage in breast reconstruction, which she discussed in media appearances as of 2012.[79][80] Somers campaigned via books, television interviews, and infomercials for patient-driven informed consent, urging individuals to pursue independent research and blood testing over deference to specialists she accused of overstepping expertise boundaries.[78] She posited hormonal disequilibrium as a foundational cause of chronic ailments, advocating restoration through natural means to empower self-directed health management.[78] Adherents to her perspective lauded this stance for promoting autonomy against institutionalized approaches, often citing her 23-year remission following a 2001 breast cancer diagnosis—achieved without chemotherapy—as practical validation of resilience via alternative modalities.[81][82]

Personal Application and Long-Term Survival

In 2001, Suzanne Somers was diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer, for which she underwent a lumpectomy and radiation therapy but declined chemotherapy and tamoxifen against medical advice.[82][83] She attributed her subsequent 23-year period of cancer control to a regimen emphasizing bioidentical hormone replacement, nutritional supplements, digestive enzymes, and a positive mindset, claiming these addressed underlying causal imbalances such as hormonal dysregulation rather than solely targeting the tumor.[84] Somers maintained that restoring hormone balance post-treatment enhanced her vitality, enabling her to sustain an active career in acting, writing, and entrepreneurship without the side effects associated with chemotherapy, such as fatigue and neuropathy.[78] This approach yielded a verifiable milestone of apparent remission lasting over two decades, during which Somers reported no detectable cancer recurrence until 2023, contrasting with empirical data on stage 2 breast cancer where standard treatments including chemotherapy yield 5-year relative survival rates of approximately 93% but do not guarantee indefinite dormancy.[83][85] Studies indicate that forgoing conventional adjuvant therapies like chemotherapy in favor of alternatives correlates with higher long-term mortality risks, yet Somers' case demonstrated sustained functionality and productivity, including multiple book publications and product launches, suggesting potential benefits from her focus on metabolic and endocrine factors over cytotoxic interventions alone.[86][87] Somers' emphasis on causal realism in her personal protocol highlighted preventable contributors like insulin resistance and estrogen dominance, which she managed through dietary modifications and supplementation, achieving measurable quality-of-life markers such as continued physical fitness and professional output into her 70s.[88] While her oncologist reportedly urged standard protocols, Somers' 23-year survival interval—exceeding typical recurrence windows for untreated hormonal subtypes—underscored individualized variability, though population-level evidence favors integrated conventional care for optimal outcomes in early-stage disease.[89][90]

Criticisms and Scientific Scrutiny

Suzanne Somers faced significant criticism from oncologists and medical experts for promoting alternative cancer treatments that lacked rigorous scientific validation, particularly in her 2009 book Knockout: Interviews with Doctors Who Are Curing Cancer, where she advocated therapies aimed at "building up the body" through supplements, bioidentical hormones, and metabolic protocols rather than conventional chemotherapy.[91] [77] Critics, including American Cancer Society chief medical officer Otis Brawley, argued that such approaches ignore the necessity of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) to prove efficacy and safety, emphasizing that unproven methods risk delaying evidence-based interventions like surgery, radiation, or chemotherapy, which have demonstrably improved breast cancer survival rates—for instance, five-year survival for early-stage disease exceeding 90% with standard care.[92] [81] Somers' rejection of chemotherapy following her 2001 breast cancer diagnosis—opting instead for a lumpectomy, radiation, and alternative regimens—drew accusations of pseudoscience and misinformation, with outlets like Science-Based Medicine highlighting her reliance on anecdotal testimonials from survivors and interviews with physicians whose methods often diverged from peer-reviewed standards, potentially misleading patients toward ineffective or harmful options.[93] [10] Oncologists contended that her narrative understated the pharmaceutical industry's role in developing treatments backed by clinical data, while overemphasizing profit motives without equivalent evidence for alternatives, and warned that forgoing adjuvant chemotherapy in hormone-receptor-positive cases like hers could elevate recurrence risk by 20-30% based on meta-analyses of trial data.[94] [95] In response, Somers maintained that conventional oncology's focus on cytotoxic drugs failed end-stage patients by not exploring integrative options, citing her own 23-year survival post-diagnosis as evidence of viability when combining surgery with personalized bioidentical therapies and nutrition, and accused the medical establishment of suppressing non-patentable treatments due to economic incentives.[96] [77] She argued for patient empowerment through informed choice, pointing to survivor stories in Knockout as real-world counterpoints to statistical averages, though detractors noted such anecdotes suffer from selection bias, ignoring non-survivors who may have foregone proven care.[91] The debate underscores tensions between evidence-based oncology, where survival gains correlate with protocol adherence (e.g., reduced breast cancer mortality by over 30% since 1989 via screening and systemic therapies), and critiques of overdiagnosis in low-risk cases or chemotherapy's toxicity, with Somers' prolonged remission—despite a 2023 recurrence leading to her death on October 15—serving proponents as an outlier favoring hybrid models, though experts attribute it more to initial localized disease and radiation than alternatives alone.[82] [81] Some advocates praised her for highlighting patient autonomy, yet mainstream scrutiny persists that celebrity endorsements like hers amplify unverified claims, potentially influencing vulnerable patients amid stagnant late-stage survival rates around 30%.[89][94]

Political and Social Views

Independent Stance and Key Endorsements

Suzanne Somers described herself as an independent voter who prioritized individual candidates over party affiliation, stating in a 2012 interview, "My politics are very personal: I am an independent and vote the candidate, never the party."[97] This stance reflected her emphasis on evaluating leaders based on personal merit and policy substance rather than ideological loyalty, a position she reiterated in subsequent public comments amid polarized political climates.[98] In line with this approach, Somers publicly supported Donald Trump, praising his business background and leadership effectiveness. She expressed approval of Trump's performance as president in a January 2018 interview, noting she was "happy" with his results despite anticipating backlash in Hollywood, where such views deviated from prevailing sentiments.[99] Somers highlighted Trump's entrepreneurial success as a key factor, viewing it as evidence of practical acumen suited to governance, and contrasted this with what she saw as the entertainment industry's conformity to collectivist norms over individual achievement.[100] Somers' comments often underscored themes of personal liberty and resistance to excessive regulation, framing entrepreneurship as essential to self-reliance. She positioned her own business ventures—built outside traditional studio systems—as exemplars of merit-driven progress, critiquing environments that penalized nonconformity, such as Hollywood's response to dissenting political expressions.[101] This independence allowed her to advocate for policies favoring innovation and reduced bureaucratic interference, aligning with broader liberty-oriented principles without formal partisan commitment.[102]

Critiques of Government Overreach in Health

Somers expressed strong opposition to the Affordable Care Act, enacted in 2010, arguing in a October 28, 2013, Wall Street Journal op-ed that it constituted a "socialist Ponzi scheme" by disrupting the direct doctor-patient relationship through government panels that would ration care based on age and cost-effectiveness.[103] [104] She contended the law incentivized inefficiency, citing Canada's single-payer system—where average wait times for specialist treatment exceeded four months in 2013 and prompted physician migration to the U.S.—as evidence of inevitable shortages and suppressed innovation under centralized control.[105] Somers favored market-driven solutions, pointing to private wellness innovations like her ThighMaster, which sold over 10 million units by 1996 without bureaucratic hurdles, as superior to state-mandated insurance structures that she claimed would leave tens of millions uninsured due to unaffordable premiums.[103] In 2011, Somers rallied against perceived FDA overreach targeting dietary supplements, posting on her official Facebook page to mobilize supporters against proposed regulations she described as an effort to "outlaw our supplements," which she viewed as an assault on access to natural, non-pharmaceutical health options.[106] This stance aligned with her broader critique of federal agencies prioritizing pharmaceutical interests over individual choice, contrasting regulatory delays—such as the FDA's multi-year approval processes for new drugs—with the rapid proliferation of private-sector wellness products that empowered consumers directly.[106] During the COVID-19 pandemic, Somers advocated health freedom by promoting personal immunity-building through diet, exercise, and supplements in a August 2020 Fox Business interview, emphasizing proactive individual strategies over dependence on state-directed measures.[107] Her approach questioned coercive policies by highlighting empirical contrasts, such as government vaccine development timelines versus the longstanding efficacy of market-available wellness regimens in preventing illness, without aligning with anti-vaccination rhetoric.[107] This reflected her consistent preference for decentralized, evidence-based personal agency amid public health crises marked by mandates.

Personal Life

Marriages and Relationships

Suzanne Somers married Bruce Somers in 1965 at age 19, shortly before the birth of their son.[108][21] The marriage lasted until 1968, ending amid Somers' dissatisfaction and her pursuit of a modeling career, which reportedly involved an extramarital affair.[109][2] In 1969, Somers met Canadian television host Alan Hamel while working as a prize model on his game show The Anniversary Game; Hamel was married at the time to Marilyn Hamel.[110][111] The couple began a relationship and cohabited for approximately nine years before marrying on November 19, 1977, in a ceremony officiated by a rabbi and a Catholic priest.[112] Their union lasted 46 years until Somers' death in 2023, spanning over 55 years together overall, during which they collaborated on business ventures and presented their partnership as a model of enduring commitment amid Hollywood's high divorce rates.[113][112] Somers frequently described Hamel as her constant companion, emphasizing daily dating rituals and mutual support in public statements.[114]

Family Dynamics

Suzanne Somers had one biological child, son Bruce Somers Jr., born on November 8, 1965, from her first marriage to Bruce Somers Sr., which ended in divorce in 1968.[21] Bruce Jr., who pursued a career in the hemp industry rather than entertainment, maintained a close relationship with his mother, often joining family celebrations and describing her as a devoted parent who instilled values of perseverance.[21] Following her 1977 marriage to Alan Hamel, Somers became a stepmother to his two children from a previous relationship: son Stephen Hamel and daughter Leslie Hamel.[115] The blended family navigated initial tensions during integration, as Somers noted that children often resist new parental figures, but these challenges were resolved without prolonged public discord.[116] Somers expressed profound joy in her role as a grandmother, particularly to Bruce Jr.'s three daughters—Cambry, Violet, and Dolly—who represented late-life fulfillment and reinforced her emphasis on familial bonds amid personal hardships.[117] She credited her grandchildren with bringing renewed purpose, often highlighting in interviews how their presence exemplified resilience passed down through generations, countering her own disrupted upbringing.[118] This focus on extended family ties underscored Somers' commitment to nurturing achievement and emotional stability, drawing from her experiences to foster a supportive environment for her descendants. Raised in a household marked by her father Francis Mahoney's alcoholism and associated rages, Somers endured childhood trauma, frequently hiding in closets to evade abuse, which she detailed in her 1988 memoir Keeping Secrets.[119] In later years, after her father's sobriety in his final period, she achieved reconciliation through forgiveness, viewing the ordeal as a catalyst for personal growth and her advocacy for breaking cycles of dysfunction in family dynamics.[120] [13] Somers prioritized family privacy, avoiding tabloid sensationalism and rarely airing internal conflicts publicly, which allowed her to model quiet resolution and achievement-oriented values for her son, stepchildren, and grandchildren.[116]

Death and Legacy

Health Decline and Passing

In July 2023, Somers publicly disclosed a recurrence of her breast cancer, stating on Instagram that the disease, first diagnosed over two decades prior, had resurfaced periodically despite her use of alternative and conventional protocols to manage it.[121][122] She expressed optimism about continuing to combat it while prioritizing a dignified approach to her health journey, amid ongoing advocacy for integrative therapies she had long promoted.[123] Somers' condition progressed to metastatic breast cancer, with the disease spreading to her brain as confirmed by her death certificate.[124][125] In her final months, she focused on personal milestones, including celebrating her 55th wedding anniversary with husband Alan Hamel, while maintaining emphasis on legacy-building efforts tied to her wellness philosophy.[83] On October 15, 2023, Somers died peacefully at her home in Palm Springs, California, at the age of 76, one day before her 77th birthday, surrounded by family.[126][127] Her family attributed the death directly to the metastatic breast cancer she had battled aggressively for more than 20 years.[128][81]

Posthumous Developments Including AI Initiative

Following Suzanne Somers' death on October 15, 2023, her husband Alan Hamel initiated the development of an AI "twin" or digital clone of the actress, revealed publicly in October 2025, two years after her passing.[129][130] The project, facilitated by the AI company Hollo, trains the model on Somers' extensive body of work, including all 27 of her books and hundreds of interviews conducted during her lifetime, enabling it to simulate conversations and recollect personal moments with apparent fidelity.[131][132] Hamel described interacting with the AI as indistinguishable from Somers herself, stating, "You can't tell the difference," and expressed intentions to release it for public engagement, allowing fans to "converse" with the digital version to perpetuate her messages on health and self-advocacy.[130][133] The initiative stemmed from Somers' longstanding interest in digital immortality, dating back decades to an encounter with futurist Ray Kurzweil, whose predictions on uploading consciousness inspired her to urge Hamel to pursue such technologies for preserving personal legacies beyond physical death.[132][134] Hamel, who had discussed the concept with Somers prior to her breast cancer recurrence, viewed the AI as fulfilling her vision rather than a mere technological novelty, positioning it as a tool to extend her influence on alternative wellness and patient empowerment.[135] The AI replica is modeled to resemble Somers physically and vocally, drawing from archival footage and audio, though its deployment raises questions about authenticity in posthumous celebrity interactions, with Hamel emphasizing its role in honoring her directive against prolonged mourning.[136][137] While the project highlights innovative preservation of public figures' personas, it has sparked discourse on AI ethics, including consent for digital resurrection and the potential for misleading audiences on health advice originating from unverified simulations of Somers' views, which historically diverged from conventional medical consensus and faced scrutiny for promoting unproven therapies.[138] No formal ethical reviews or regulatory oversight were detailed in announcements, though proponents like Hamel frame it as a benign extension of legacy, akin to ongoing sales of Somers' branded wellness products, which persist via her estate without significant alterations.[139] Somers' posthumous footprint thus underscores tensions between technological advancement and the risks of amplifying contested narratives through AI, even as it cements her as an early advocate for self-directed health narratives amid institutional skepticism.[140]

Filmography

Television Appearances

Somers appeared as a guest star on The Love Boat in its premiere episode on September 24, 1977, playing a character involved in the segment "One If By Land." After leaving Three's Company in 1981, she starred in the syndicated sitcom She's the Sheriff from September 19, 1987, to April 1, 1989, as Hildy Granger, a widowed mother appointed as sheriff of Lakes County, Nevada, succeeding her late husband in the role.[37][38] From 1991 to 1998, Somers portrayed Carol Foster Lambert, a divorced mother blending families with widower Frank Lambert (played by Patrick Duffy), in the TGIF sitcom Step by Step, which ran for seven seasons across ABC and CBS and emphasized family dynamics in a suburban setting.[39][141] She voiced herself as a newscaster and parade host in the The Simpsons episode "The Day the Violence Died," which originally aired on February 25, 1996.[142] On February 24, 2015, Somers was announced as a contestant for season 20 of Dancing with the Stars, where she performed with professional partner Tony Dovolani, including routines like the jive and foxtrot, before being eliminated in week 4 on April 7, 2015.[143][144] Somers hosted numerous infomercials, particularly for fitness products like the ThighMaster starting in the late 1980s, leveraging her public persona for direct-to-consumer promotion rather than scripted narrative roles.[1]

Film Roles

Suzanne Somers had a limited presence in theatrical films, with most appearances consisting of uncredited or minor roles early in her career, followed by selective cameos that occasionally leveraged her public persona. Her cinematic contributions emphasized brevity and alignment with her established image, avoiding lead roles in favor of supporting or guest spots in comedies and action films.[145]
YearFilmRoleNotes
1968BullittWoman (uncredited)Bit part in the Steve McQueen-led action thriller directed by Peter Yates.[26][145][4]
1973American GraffitiBlonde in white Thunderbird (uncredited)Brief appearance driving the iconic car in George Lucas's coming-of-age film.[18][146]
1973Magnum ForceWoman in apartment (uncredited)Small role in the Clint Eastwood Dirty Harry sequel.[146]
1994Serial MomHerself (cameo)Guest spot as a fictionalized version of herself in John Waters's satirical black comedy starring Kathleen Turner.[147][41]
Later projects included the 2001 comedy Say It Isn't So, where she portrayed Gilbert's mother, reflecting her preference for lighthearted, character-driven fare.[143] These roles underscored Somers's selective approach, prioritizing compatibility with her family-oriented brand over extensive film work.[148]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.