Mary Pat Gleason

Mary Pat Gleason (February 23, 1950 – June 2, 2020) was an American film and television actress and an Emmy Award-winning writer. From 1983 to 1985, she appeared as "Jane Hogan" on the daytime soap opera Guiding Light, for which she was also a writer.

Life and career
Gleason was born in Lake City, Minnesota, the daughter of Mary Elizabeth (Kane) and Harold Clifford Gleason. During her high school years she starred in a local theater's production of Once Upon a Mattress.

Her first screen role was the a 1982 episode of Texas, a soap opera that aired on NBC. She appeared on, among many others, such television series as Full House, Dear John, Murphy Brown, Empty Nest, L.A. Law, Saved by the Bell, Friends, and Step by Step. She appeared in more than 50 feature films, including I Now Pronounce You Chuck & Larry, Basic Instinct, Traffic, Bruce Almighty, 13 Going on 30, The Crucible, Bottle Shock, A Cinderella Story, The Island, Killing Kennedy, and Nina. In one of her last roles, she voiced Professor Foxtrot in CollegeHumor's animated web series WTF 101.

Writing
In addition to acting, Gleason also wrote for Guiding Light and was part of the team that won the 1986 Daytime Emmy for outstanding daytime drama series writing.

Gleason became a vocal proponent of mental health treatment, and in 2006 wrote and starred in Stopping Traffic, a one-woman play about her struggles with bipolar disorder. The play is now used as a teaching aid for the Mayo Clinic's mental health programs.

Death
Gleason died of uterine cancer on June 2, 2020, at age 70.