logo
Loretta Swit, Margaret 'Hot Lips' Houlihan on ‘M*A*S*H,' Dies at 87

Loretta Swit, Margaret 'Hot Lips' Houlihan on ‘M*A*S*H,' Dies at 87

Yahoo31-05-2025

Loretta Swit, the actress and animal activist forever known for her pioneering turn as the disciplined Maj. Margaret 'Hot Lips' Houlihan on the acclaimed CBS sitcom M*A*S*H, has died. She was 87.
According to a police report, Swit died just after midnight Friday of suspected natural causes at her home in New York City, her publicist, Harlan Boll, announced.
More from The Hollywood Reporter
Mike Sumler, Kool & the Gang Hype Man, Dies at 71
Ena Hartman, 'Dan August' and 'Terminal Island' Actress, Dies at 93
Brian Avnet, Longtime Artist Manager and Music Executive, Dies at 82
Swit won two Emmys for her portrayal of the Army nurse — she was nominated 10 times, every year the show was on the air except the first — and appeared on 240 of the series' 251 episodes during its sensational 11-season run.
Adapting the character from Sally Kellerman's film portrayal of the lusty powerhouse, Swit was one of only two actors (along with Alan Alda as Hawkeye Pierce) to have a role in both the pilot and series finale of M*A*S*H.
That finale, which aired Feb. 28, 1983, attracted a record of nearly 106 million viewers, and a 35-second kiss between Swit and Alda during that episode has been called the most expensive in television history, based on its length and the ad revenue per minute.
As a tough, by-the-book major, Swit's Houlihan was a rare strong woman on television. 'She was [unique] at the time and in her time, which was the '50s, when [the Korean War] was happening,' Swit said in a 2004 discussion for the TV Academy Foundation website The Interviews: An Oral History of Television.
'And she became even more unique, I think, because we allowed her to continue to grow — we watched her evolve. I don't think that's ever been done in quite that way.'
Bolstered by her M*A*S*H fame, Swit performed in a number of movies, including Freebie and the Bean (1974), Race With the Devil (1975) and BoardHeads (1998). She also was hilarious as Polly Reed, a Sue Mengers-type agent, in Blake Edwards' satire of Hollywood, S.O.B. (1981).
Swit starred alongside Tyne Daly on the 1981 pilot for Cagney & Lacey, but because of contractual obligations to M*A*S*H, she could not continue when the cop series was picked up by CBS a year later. After Meg Foster played Cagney in the six-episode first season, Sharon Gless took over the role.
Active in theater, Swit starred as one of the daffy Pigeon sisters during the L.A. run of Neil Simon's The Odd Couple that starred Don Rickles and Ernest Borgnine as the ill-matched roommates.
In 1967, she starred in a national tour of Any Wednesday with Gardner McKay. Eight years later, she made her Broadway debut in Same Time, Next Year opposite Ted Bessell (That Girl). She also played on Broadway in The Mystery of Edwin Drood.
Loretta Jane Szwed was born on Nov. 4, 1937, in Passaic, New Jersey. She studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York and performed in repertory.
Swit moved to Los Angeles in 1970 and landed TV gigs on such series as Mission: Impossible, Mannix, Gunsmoke and Hawaii Five-O and in the women's lib film Stand Up and Be Counted (1972). Those parts led to Swit being considered for M*A*S*H, produced by Fox.
'I had done a guest-starring role [in the premiere episode in 1971] on Glenn Ford's CBS series, Cade's County, which was short-lived, but it was a wonderful role,' she said. 'The network people, as well as Fox, knew about me, and when the part came up, they thought of me.'
Swit always pushed for Houlihan to grow in maturity and complexity. Her character cut off her affair with the 'lipless wonder' Frank Burns (Larry Linville) to marry a soldier she could be proud of (Lt. Col. Donald Penobscott, though they quickly divorced) and revealed her vulnerability to those under her command in the season-five episode 'The Nurses.'
'She was the head nurse, and her ambition was to be the best damn nurse in Korea, and I tried to help her achieve that,' Swit recalled. But in 'The Nurses,' Houlihan's conflicted relationship with authority comes into focus when, in a memorable monologue, she confronts her subordinates for not including her.
'That woman was so lonely, and she was trying to do such a good job. And nobody appreciated her,' Swit recalled in a THR oral history that marked the show's 35th anniversary.
'Gene [Reynolds, the show's executive producer] called me the next morning after shooting it and said they'd watched the dailies, and my scene was last. When the lights went up, everyone was sniffling,' she said. 'He asked the projectionist to run the scene again. The lights go out and they watched it again. The lights go up and everyone's still crying. He says to everyone, 'Is that the best thing you ever saw?''
Swit was able to carry those kinds of dramatic moments with her character throughout the series. 'I was allowed to continue to grow,' she said. 'I didn't bounce back to where I was before you saw this happen to her.'
She noted that the cast was tight-knit from the very start, and things got emotional when they shot the finale. One especially touching moment comes when Swit and Harry Morgan (Col. Sherman Potter) say their goodbyes.
'We could hardly rehearse,' she told THR. 'I had to look at this man whom I adore and say, 'You dear, sweet man, I'll never forget you,' without getting emotional — and I couldn't. I can't now even. [Morgan died in 2011.] It wasn't words on a page. You knew what you were saying was truth.'
Swit became the first M*A*S*H castmember to visit Korea when, in 1988, she hosted the syndicated documentary Korean War — The Untold Story. The doc combined interviews with American veterans and combat footage and was released in conjunction with the 35th anniversary of the truce that ended the fighting.
Apart from her acting career, Swit was an active supporter of animal welfare, serving on the boards of Actors and Others for Animals and The Wildlife Waystation and as a spokesperson for the Humane Society. In 2016, she founded SwitHeart Animal Alliance, a nonprofit dedicated to ending animal cruelty. She used proceeds from her original artwork to raise funds.
Swit also was host of the cable documentary series Those Incredible Animals in 1992 and teamed with M*A*S*H co-star Mike Farrell (B.J. Hunnicut) to host the 1986 PBS special Saving the Wildlife, which highlighted efforts by Jane Goodall, Brigitte Bardot and Prince Philip to protect endangered species.
Swit was named Woman of the Year by the Animal Protection Institute and the International Fund for Animal Welfare. She testified before Congress in 1999, speaking out for the prohibition of 'crush videos' — productions where insects and small animals are squashed onscreen.
She was active in the Chicago theater community and performed the one-woman play Shirley Valentine more than 1,000 times. She received the Sarah Siddons Award in 1991 for her theatrical contributions and in 2003 joined the touring cast of The Vagina Monologues.
That same year, she played the title role in a North Carolina production of Mame — she had starred as Agnes Gooch in 1968 in Las Vegas after serving as an understudy on the Broadway show headlined by Angela Lansbury.
Swit said her career came full circle when, in 1994, she guest-starred on Murder, She Wrote alongside Lansbury. 'Angie is one of two fan letters I've ever written in my life. The other was to Robert Mitchum,' she recalled. 'She was just dazzling [in Mame]. Years later, when we met at a CBS function, I said, 'You probably won't remember this, but when I was in New York …' I don't think I got further than that and she stopped me and said, 'I still have that letter.''
A talented singer and dancer who had been enrolled in dance classes as a youngster, Swit also performed on The Muppet Show and in a number of musical TV specials. And she was a game-show regular on Match Game, The Hollywood Squares and The $10,000 Pyramid.
In 2019, after a 21-year absence, she returned to the screen in the religious film Play the Flute, about a youth group.
Swit was married to actor Dennis Holahan, whom she met on the set of M*A*S*H, from 1983 until their divorce in 1995.
Donations in her memory can be to Actors & Others for Animals or the SwitHeart Animal Alliance, which she set up to protect, rescue, train and care for animals and preserve their habitat. She recently created a fragrance and a necklace, the sales of which supported her efforts.
When asked about the continuing impact of the show that made her a household name, Swit brought up a telegram from a fan. 'It said, 'Dear M*A*S*H folk: You made me laugh. You made me cry. You made me feel. Thank you.' I've never forgotten that,' she said. 'That's one hell of a legacy.'
Duane Byrge contributed to this report.
Best of The Hollywood Reporter
'The Studio': 30 Famous Faces Who Play (a Version of) Themselves in the Hollywood-Based Series
22 of the Most Shocking Character Deaths in Television History
A 'Star Wars' Timeline: All the Movies and TV Shows in the Franchise

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘SNL's' 50th season takes on 9-time-champ ‘Last Week Tonight' for the Best Scripted Variety Series Emmy
‘SNL's' 50th season takes on 9-time-champ ‘Last Week Tonight' for the Best Scripted Variety Series Emmy

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

‘SNL's' 50th season takes on 9-time-champ ‘Last Week Tonight' for the Best Scripted Variety Series Emmy

When Last Week Tonight With John Oliver switched Emmy categories from Variety Talk Series to Scripted Variety Series, it put an end to Saturday Night Live's six-year winning streak. Last Week Tonight, which has claimed nine consecutive program trophies, is now hoping to take home No. 10 this year. But SNL's milestone 50th season should prove to be a worthy competitor. First things first: there are six submissions this year for Best Scripted Variety Series, which means there will only be two nominees. Television Academy members who vote on this category are instructed to watch an episode of each contender (a requirement that is not present in the other program races), and then vote "yes" or "no" for whether they think each one is worthy of a nomination. The two entries that receive the highest amount of support will receive bids, as long as they are both over 70 percent approval, according to the Emmys rulebook. More from GoldDerby 'Arcane,' returning from a 3-year hiatus, leads early Best Animated Program Emmy odds The 10 most Lynchian items at the David Lynch auction - and how much they sold for Best Drama Writing Emmy predictions: 'The Pitt' takes a risk by submitting 3 episodes Here's the fine print for what, exactly, constitutes inclusion in this relatively new Emmy category: A Scripted Variety Series is defined as a variety program that is primarily scripted, or loosely scripted improv, and consisting of discrete scenes, satire, musical numbers, monologues, comedy stand-ups, sketches, etc. Scripted Variety may occasionally feature unscripted elements, but the main intent of the series is scripted or performed entertainment. Last Week Tonight has the best chance of winning Best Scripted Variety Series this year, per Gold Derby's Emmy predictions. In Season 12, the John Oliver-hosted program skewered important topics like Elon Musk's influence on Donald Trump's presidency, online content moderation, tipping, ICE detention centers, sports betting, the use of tasers by police, and discrimination against trans women in sports. A 10th victory would put Last Week Tonight just one shy of the all-time record-holder, The Daily Show With Jon Stewart, which won 11. SNL celebrated its golden anniversary on NBC with a season full of returning cast members and special guest stars, including Maya Rudolph as Vice President Kamala Harris, Jim Gaffigan as Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Andy Samberg as second gentleman Douglas Emhoff, Dana Carvey as President Joe Biden, and Mike Myers as Musk. Notable guest hosts during Saturday Night Live's 50th season were Ariana Grande, Chris Rock, Dave Chappelle, Timothée Chalamet, Lady Gaga, and Scarlett Johansson. (Note that the two primetime specials, SNL50: The Anniversary Special and SNL50: The Homecoming Concert, are competing in the separate category of Best Live Variety Special.) The other four contenders competing in Best Scripted Variety Series are Fantasmas, which focuses on Julio Torres' search for a golden oyster earring; Studio C, the 20-year-old family-oriented sketch show; After Midnight, the late night quiz spoof hosted by Taylor Tomlinson; and It's Florida, Man, the series that reimagines weird stories from the sunshine state. Gold Derby's Emmy odds are based on the combined forecasts of more than 4,100 people (and counting), including experts we've polled from major media outlets, editors who cover awards year-round for this website, and the mass of users who make up our biggest predictions bloc. Track the Emmy predictions by exploring all of our charts and graphs, and sound off in our TV forum. PREDICTED NOMINEES 1. Last Week Tonight With John Oliver — 11/20 2. Saturday Night Live — 2/1 POTENTIAL SPOILERS 3. Fantasmas — 100/1 4. Studio C — 100/1 LONGSHOTS 5. After Midnight — 100/1 6. It's Florida, Man — 100/1 SIGN UP for Gold Derby's free newsletter with latest predictions Best of GoldDerby Everything to know about 'The Pitt' Season 2 Adam Brody, Seth Rogen, Jason Segel, and the best of our Emmy Comedy Actor interviews Kristen Bell, Tina Fey, Bridget Everett, and the best of our Emmy Comedy Actress interviews Click here to read the full article.

Best Drama Writing Emmy predictions: ‘The Pitt' takes a risk by submitting 3 episodes
Best Drama Writing Emmy predictions: ‘The Pitt' takes a risk by submitting 3 episodes

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Best Drama Writing Emmy predictions: ‘The Pitt' takes a risk by submitting 3 episodes

Ballots for the 2025 Emmys have officially been released and voting is currently underway in all categories. For Best Drama Series Writing, there are 132 submissions, which means there will be six finalists for the category when nominations are announced July 15. When it comes to writing, there are two strategic approaches when it comes to seeking a slot: submit one showcase episode or flood the zone. This year, as is often the case, practically all of the frontrunners are opting for the former tactic. This includes the incumbent winner Will Smith for Slow Horses, who is the only nominee from last year eligible again. He could win his second consecutive Emmy for the Season 4 finale, a shattering, suspenseful episode surrounding River Cartwright (Jack Lowden). More from GoldDerby 'Jaws' at 50: How Spielberg's movie changes 'horrified' wife of novel writer Peter Benchley 'SNL's' 50th season takes on 9-time-champ 'Last Week Tonight' for the Best Scripted Variety Series Emmy 'Everything has an expiration date': Amy Poehler on her 'inappropriate' 'SNL' moments, including portraying Michael Jackson and Kim Jong-il Apple TV+ But what may stop Slow Horses in its tracks would be Severance, with "Cold Harbor," the Season 2 finale scripted by creator Dan Erickson. It's just as devastating, with a race against time and multiple story turns, capped by a final twist that has left fans wanting more. READ: The second episode of The Last of Us, written by showrunner Craig Mazin, features a brutal battle that ends in a tragic, heartbreaking death and changes the trajectory of the entire series. And there are standout, lengthy monologues in submissions from both The White Lotus — Sam Rockwell's 10-minute treatise on sex, incest, and suicidal attempts — and Andor, which features Genevieve O'Reilly's Mon Mothma delivering an all-too-relevant speech on the manipulation of power and truth -- a theme similar to teleplay that earned the Star Wars series a writing nomination in its first season. HBO READ: The Pitt, however, zagged while the competition zigged, presenting three choices on the ballot. There's first hour by creator R. Scott Gemmill (pilots historically do well in the writing category), the fourth episode penned by star Noah Wyle, and the eighth episode by medical consultant Joe Sachs, featuring a drowning child patient and an honor walk. The reason most shows shy away from multiple submissions is the threat of vote-splitting, especially when it comes to a debut show that hasn't yet established itself at the Emmys. Nontheless, we expect The Pitt pilot to make the cut. The other notable series to push multiple scripts was The Handmaid's Tale. For its final season, the Emmy-winning series submitted the last three episodes for consideration. Most of the rest of the top contenders put forward either their pilots/premieres or their finales. This include The Day of the Jackal, Black Doves, Paradise, and Squid Game for the former, and The Diplomat for the latter. Two other possibilities for those six slots are Bad Sisters, a previous nominee for last season, for its penultimate episode, and Industry, for its fourth installment, featuring some of the most intense dialogue and high stakes. Here is how we see the 2025 Best Drama Writing category breaking down. FRONTRUNNERS Severance (Dan Erickson, 'Cold Harbor') Slow Horses (Will Smith, 'Hello Goodbye') The White Lotus (Mike White, 'Full-Moon Party') The Last of Us (Craig Mazin, 'Through the Valley') The Pitt (R. Scott Gemmill, '7:00 A.M.') Andor (Dan Gilroy, 'Welcome to the Rebellion') POTENTIAL SPOILERS The Pitt (Joe Sachs, '2:00 P.M.') The Diplomat (Debora Cahn, 'Dreadnought') The Day of The Jackal (Ronan Bennett, 'Episode 1') The Pitt (Noah Wyle, '10:00 A.M.') Bad Sisters (Sharon Horgan and Perrie Balthazar, 'How To Pick a Prick') LONGSHOTS Industry (Mickey Down and Konrad Kay, 'White Mischief') Black Doves (Joe Barton, 'To Love Then') Squid Game (Hwang Dong-Hyuk, 'Bread and Lottery') The Handmaid's Tale (Bruce Miller, 'The Handmaid's Tale') Paradise (Dan Fogelman, 'Wildcat Is Down') SIGN UP for Gold Derby's free newsletter with latest predictions Best of GoldDerby Everything to know about 'The Pitt' Season 2 Adam Brody, Seth Rogen, Jason Segel, and the best of our Emmy Comedy Actor interviews Kristen Bell, Tina Fey, Bridget Everett, and the best of our Emmy Comedy Actress interviews Click here to read the full article.

‘Arcane,' returning from a 3-year hiatus, leads early Best Animated Program Emmy odds
‘Arcane,' returning from a 3-year hiatus, leads early Best Animated Program Emmy odds

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

‘Arcane,' returning from a 3-year hiatus, leads early Best Animated Program Emmy odds

The second and final season of Arcane is poised to shake up the 2025 Emmys. There are 38 submissions this year in the Best Animated Program category, which means there will again be five nominees. Leading the pack, per the Gold Derby odds, is Arcane. More from GoldDerby The 10 most Lynchian items at the David Lynch auction - and how much they sold for Best Drama Writing Emmy predictions: 'The Pitt' takes a risk by submitting 3 episodes 'Jaws' at 50: How Spielberg's movie changes 'horrified' wife of novel writer Peter Benchley Netflix's steampunk action-adventure show came on strong for its first season at the 2022 Emmys, winning Best Animated Program and three trophies for Best Individual Achievement in Animation. Three years later, it's back for Season 2, and there's no reason to think Television Academy members won't be just as enamored this time around. Arcane wrapped up major plot points in the series finale, "The Dirt Under Your Nails," in which destinies clashed in the lead-up to an all-out war. This is the episode that has been submitted for Emmy consideration. READ: The one show best positioned to beat Arcane in our odds is The Simpsons. The longest-running American scripted primetime series ever wrapped up its 36th season in May with its 790th episode. To date, The Simpsons has won 37 Emmys from 102 nominations, including 12 trophies for Best Animated Program. The comedy about the denizens of Springfield most recently prevailed in 2023 for "Treehouse of Horror XXXIII," but was beaten last year by Blue Eye Samurai, which is not currently in the running. This time around, the season premiere, "Bart's Birthday," is being entered for Emmy consideration, which serves a meta take on the show's eventual series finale. Love, Death + Robots has a near-perfect track record at the Emmys, winning 13 of its 15 nominations through the years. It won Best Short Form Animated Program for each of its first three seasons in 2019, 2021, and 2022, but is now competing against the big dogs up in the main Best Animated Program race. (There is no short form animation category this year, possibly due to a dearth of eligible submissions.) Season 4 of the anthology series streamed all 10 episodes on May 15, right at the tail end of the eligibility period. The third episode, "Spider Rose," has been submitted, and focuses on a grieving woman hellbent on revenge at the end of the galaxy. In fourth place is Bob's Burgers, a 13-time nominee in this category and two-time winner (2014 and 2017). Season 15 was split into two parts, with the first part airing at the end of 2024 and the second part airing now and through the summer. The eighth episode, "They Slug Horses, Don't They?," is being put forward for Emmy consideration, in which Tina and Louise get into an argument that escalates across several increasingly graphic "apology" cards. Invincible comes in fifth place for a nomination. Emmy voters will be judging the sixth episode of Season 3, "All I Can Say Is I'm Sorry," where a powerful new figure challenges Markus "Mark" Grayson/Invincible (voiced by Steven Yeun), and helps him to explore the concept of right vs. wrong. The superhero series streams on Prime Video, and received its first Emmy nomination last year for Sterling K. Brown for voicing Angstrom Levy. Gold Derby's Emmy odds are based on the combined forecasts of more than 4,100 people (and counting), including experts we've polled from major media outlets, editors who cover awards year-round for this website, and the mass of users who make up our biggest predictions bloc. Track the Emmy predictions by exploring all of our charts and graphs, and sound off in our TV forum. PREDICTED NOMINEES 1. Arcane — 19/10 2. The Simpsons — 71/20 3. Love, Death + Robots — 5/1 4. Bob's Burgers — 8/1 5. Invincible — 13/1 POTENTIAL SPOILERS 6. Big Mouth — 25/1 7. #1 Happy Family USA — 85/1 8. What If...? — 95/1 9. Harley Quinn — 100/1 10. Family Guy — 100/1 LONGSHOTS 11. Devil May Cry — 100/1 12. Batman: Caped Crusader — 100/1 13. Futurama — 100/1 14. Secret Level — 100/1 15. Star Trek: Lower Decks — 100/1 SIGN UP for Gold Derby's free newsletter with latest predictions Best of GoldDerby Everything to know about 'The Pitt' Season 2 Adam Brody, Seth Rogen, Jason Segel, and the best of our Emmy Comedy Actor interviews Kristen Bell, Tina Fey, Bridget Everett, and the best of our Emmy Comedy Actress interviews Click here to read the full article.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store