Community Corner

Fairfield Cemetery Chosen for Mary Tyler Moore's Resting Place: Report

The legendary actress is expected to be buried Sunday at the cemetry. Her family purchased 12 gravesites.

FAIRFIELD, CT — Hollywood Icon Mary Tyler Moore will be buried at the Oak Lawn Cemetery in Fairfield reports the Connecticut Post and TMZ on Saturday. Moore, a Greenwich resident, will be buried Sunday sometime before 2 p.m. and her family purchased up to 12 gravesites at the 1530 Bronson Road cemetery.

Angel statues purchased for the grave were valued at $200,000 and the 12 gravesites cost about $24,000 combined, TMZ reports. The Connecticut Post reports that at least one Fairfield police officer has been hired for private duty Sunday at the cemetery’s address.

Moore, whose sunny smile and boundless optimism in various roles helped usher in the dawn of modern television and paved the way for female leading roles, died Wednesday at Greenwich Hospital in Connecticut.

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She died at 80 years old. For many fans, though, she will forever be remembered as the young woman struggling to make it in the "big city" of Minneapolis with the help of friend Rhoda Morgenstern and under the tutelage of her boss, Lou Grant.

Moore passed away in the company of friends and her loving husband of over 33 years, Dr. S. Robert Levine.
Moore had battled diabetes and had other health issues recently, according to TMZ.

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She starred in "The Dick Van Dyke Show" from 1961 to 1966, winning an Emmy Award for her portrayal of Laura Petrie, the wife of Van Dyke's character.

She became best known, though, for her role in the sitcom titled after her name, "The Mary Tyler Moore Show," which ran from 1970 to 1977. Set at the fictional WJM news room, she portrayed a single woman on her own, working as a fragile but resilient associate producer for the news show hosted by Ted Baxter, played by Ted Knight.

She won Golden Globe awards for "The Dick Van Dyke Show" and "Mary Tyler Moore" along with another Golden Globe for the movie "Ordinary People." She also has six Primetime Emmy awards to her name along with many nominations, according to IMDB.

Van Dyke said in a 2015 interview that diabetes has taken its toll on Moore and that she "isn't well at all."
She was first diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes when she was 33, and the disease had left her nearly blind during the past few years, according to the Washington Post. She also had a benign tumor removed from the lining tissue of her brain in 2011 and has reportedly suffered from heart and kidney issues.

Moore had done much charity work during her life and was currently the international chairman of JDRF, formerly known as the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.

Patch staff contributed to this story.

Image via Bureau of Industrial Service/Wikipedia Commons

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