Kathryn Joosten
Joosten's mother died when she was just 24 years old. By the early 1970s, she was well into a career as a psychiatric nurse at Chicago's Michael Reese Hospital, a facility for disturbed teens. She married a psychiatrist at the hospital, later having two sons and settling into the comfortable suburb of Lake Forest, IL. The marriage foundered, however, due to the doctor's alcoholism and the two were divorced in 1980. Faced with the prospect of single motherhood with two young sons, Joosten was haunted by her mother's bitter deathbed regrets about a life too short and dreams deferred too long. Armed with that knowledge, she made the difficult decision to follow her longtime dream and started acting classes at Steppenwolf Theater in Chicago.By day, Joosten worked a variety of jobs, including a wallpaper hanger, a housepainter and a saleswoman for Welcome Wagon; by night, she was appearing in community theater and establishing contacts by scouting locations for film. The location scouting paid off with bit parts in "Grandview U.S.A." (1984), "Lady Blue" (ABC, 1985) and "The Package" (1989) - all filmed in the immediate Chicago area. Community theater eventually led to semi-professional theater gigs until, in 1992, Disney held a cattle call for performers at Orlando's Disney World. Joosten landed the job, pulled up stakes, loaded the kids and belongings into a truck and headed for Florida. It was a rough ride and a decidedly unglamorous acting gig, but it was proof positive that acting was in her blood.In 1995, armed with no agent, little money and zero connections, Joosten headed for Los Angeles, where she banged on doors relentlessly, bagging her first paid role inside of five months; two lines on "Family Matters" (ABC, 1989-1998), the show that introduced the world to the bespectacled nerd, Urkel. A few years in the TV trenches led to the role Joosten would become most readily identified with - Delores Landingham, secretary to President Josiah Bartlet (Martin Sheen) on "The West Wing." She completely inhabited the role and made the character hers, until Delores was written out of the series in 2001 after succumbing to a car crash. Around the same time Joosten was working on "Dharma & Greg" (ABC, 1997-2002) as the recurring character Claire, the two high-profile roles opened more doors for the actress. In fairly quick succession, she landed roles as Old Lady God on "Joan of Arcadia" (CBS, 2003-05), Natalie on "The Drew Carey Show" (ABC, 1995-2004), as well as small roles on "Curb Your Enthusiasm" (HBO, 2000-) and Scrubs" (ABC, 2001-2010). While making an appearance on "My Name Is Earl (NBC, 2005-09), she appeared as a character struggling to give up cigarettes. The irony of this was that the actress was an actual lung cancer survivor, who openly discussed her traumatic life struggle during an appearance on "The View" (ABC, 1997-). Despite her fame as the long-suffering "West Wing" secretary, it was "Desperate Housewives," where Joosten really hit her stride as a recognizable actress. The hit series followed the darkly comic turns of a group of suburban moms on Wisteria Place, with the tenuous neighborly relationships formed on the cul-de-sac the centerpiece of the show. All sorts of intrigue, shady dealings and closet-dwelling skeletons were to follow in subsequent seasons among the shady middleclass climes of Fairview. Joosten's role as Karen Cluskey started with her as a cranky, curmudgeonly aging neighbor, delivering snarky lines and serving as a foil to the show's more nubile lead actresses. Over the course of the show's run, however, Cluskey turned into a much more sympathetic character - namely a confidant of Lynette (Felicity Huffman) and a keeper of a few dark secrets of her own. Her run on the high profile show netted Joosten an Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actress in a Comedy Series in both 2005 and 2008. In 2010, she was again awarded with an Emmy nod for playing Karen Cluskey on "Desperate Housewives," a role that earned her a promotion to full-time regular status for the following season. In September 2009, Joosten's lung cancer returned. Despite her efforts to beat the disease yet again, the beloved actress passed away on June 1, 2012 at age 72. Less than two months later, she was posthumously honored with another Emmy nomination for her "Desperate Housewives" role.