Mary Tyler Moore, whose portrayal of a spunky Minneapolis newswoman on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" made her a TV icon and inspired a generation of young women, died Wednesday.
Few sitcoms achieved more critical success or resonated more deeply with viewers than "MTM," in large part because of the character of Mary Richards, who valued work and friendship above marriage, a radical concept when the show debuted on CBS on 1970.
During its seven-year run, the show collected 29 Emmys, a record only surpassed by "Saturday Night Live," "Frasier" and "Game of Thrones." More important, Richards became a role model for teenage girls who would emulate her character's can-do attitude as adults.
"As a girl growing up in the '70s, I thought anything was possible, and that's largely because of Mary Tyler Moore," Minneapolis Mayor Betsy Hodges said after learning the actress, 80, had died of cardiopulmonary arrest after being hospitalized with pneumonia. Hodges is such a fan that she turned a City Hall space into the Moore Conference Room. She uses Joan Jett's version of the "MTM" theme, "Love Is All Around," as introductory music before speeches.
"MTM" proved you didn't have to be brittle or brazen to make it after all.
Some viewers balked at her character's eagerness to please the men in her life and the fact that she almost always referred to her gruff boss as Mr. Grant. But even leading feminists recognized Richards as a breakthrough figure.
"This was [such] a happy human image of a woman as an independent person that several generations of young [and not-so-young] women stopped suffering if they didn't have a date on Saturday night," Betty Friedan wrote in a 1978 article.
Richards wasn't exactly a goody two-shoes. As the series progressed, we watched her demand a raise, get suspended, go to jail to protect a source and come down with a case of the giggles at a funeral. On occasion she stayed out all night. She was on the pill.