Born Loni Kaye Anderson on Aug. 5, 1945, in Saint Paul, Minn., the actress began her career as a beauty queen, taking after her model mother. Though known as a blonde bombshell, Anderson was naturally black-haired, saying in a 2020 interview: âI loved being a brunette. It was exotic, people werenât quite sure what nationality I was, there was a mystery. When acting, I could play the bad lady.â
Initially, Anderson turned down the gig on WKRP, saying she liked the show but not the part.
âI went in and sat on my little soapbox: âI donât want to play this part because sheâs just here to deliver messages and is window dressing.â Then Hugh said, âWell, how would you do it?’â Anderson recalled. ââLetâs make her look like Lana Turner and be the smartest person in the room.’â
Outside of WKRP, Anderson portrayed Jayne Mansfield in a 1980 TV film opposite a then-unknown Arnold Schwarzenegger. She played another real-life sex siren in 1991âs telefilm White Hot: The Mysterious Murder of Thelma Todd. Her other TV credits include S.W.A.T., The Incredible Hulk, The Love Boat, Police Woman, Barnaby Jones, The Bob Newhart Show and Threeâs Company, and in later years, The New WKRP in Cincinnati, Empty Nest, Sabrina the Teenage Witch and Clueless.
Anderson is also known for her 12-year relationship and six-year marriage to Burt Reynolds, which captivated Tinseltown in the late â80s during its height as well as during its subsequent, tumultuous dissolution. The two worked together on 1983âs action comedy Stroker Ace and began dating shortly afterward, tying the knot in 1988. Their acrimonious divorce came amid Reynoldsâ struggles with substance abuse, resulting in a protracted public battle that featured the Boogie Nights actor bashing Anderson in the press.
âWe were bombarded, I mean, we could not leave the house. There were people outside the gates, people got onto the property. I was serving him breakfast one morning and there was somebody in the window,â Anderson recalled of the tabloid fervor.
However, Anderson and Reynolds kept in contact through the years while meeting up with their son until the actorâs 2018 death. The two spoke at his funeral.
In 1995, she penned the New York Times bestselling autobiography, My Life in High Heels, which she said was about âthe growth of a woman, a woman who survives. Itâs about my childhood, the death of my parents, my career, my divorces, and my children. Then of course, the trauma of my marriage to Burt,â per the Associated Press.
Her last credit was Lifetimeâs Ladies of the 80âs: A Divas Christmas (2023) with Linda Gray, Donna Mills, Morgan Fairchild and Nicollette Sheridan, portraying glamorous stars whose rivalries resurface when they reunite to shoot the final Christmas episode of their long-running soap opera.
Steve Sauer, president and CEO of Media Four and Andersonâs manager for 30 years, said in a statement: âLoni was a class act. Beautiful. Talented. Witty. ALWAYS a joy to be around. She was the ultimate working mother. Family first ⊠and maintained a great balance with her career. She and I had wonderful adventures together that I shall forever cherish. I will especially miss that infectious chuckle of hers. She will be forever missed.â
Anderson is survived by her husband Bob Flick, daughter Deidra and son-in law Charlie Hoffman, son Quinton Anderson Reynolds, grandchildren McKenzie and Megan Hoffman, stepson Adam Flick and wife Helene, step-grandchildren Felix and Maximilian.