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Linda Sue <I>Rogoff</I> Segal

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Linda Sue Rogoff Segal

Birth
Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, USA
Death
13 Jun 1996 (aged 49)
Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California, USA
Burial
Burial Details Unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Linda Rogoff Segal


About the illness that claimed his second wife Linda Rogoff: "It started with a hospital screwup about four years ago. Linda had a sore throat, which they misread. She was allergic to penicillin, the doctors weren't aware of it, and they kept pumping her full of the stuff. It killed her.

"They didn't know what was wrong with her--they thought it was a tropical disease and a whole lot of other things. There was a series of unbelievable surgeries. It went from bad to worse, and in the end her body couldn't take it anymore.

"In fact, she had a condition called aplastic anemia. But all the hospital did was exacerbate the problem. It has been a terrible four years, and what happened fills me with a kind of rage."

Source: The Daily News, August 18, 1996, by Kevin O'Sullivan



LINDA ROGOFF SEGAL, CW'68, New York City, June 13. After Penn, she moved to California and worked with the well-known rock promoter, Bill Graham; and later served as road manager for the Pointer Sisters. She retired 13 years ago, after marrying the actor George Segal. In recent years she was ill with complications from aplastic anemia.

Source: The Pennsylvania Gazette, "The Old Guard", November 1996, University of Pennsylvania




George moved in with (and eventually married) Linda Rogoff, a woman he met backstage after playing with a Beverly Hills jazz band.




How he met his second wife, Linda Rogoff, onetime manager of the Pointer Sisters, could have been a scene in a Mel Frank-George Segal movie. It happened when Segal was playing banjo with the Beverly Hills Unlisted Jazz Band as opening act for Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme at New York's Carnegie Hall.

"I did my usual number of 'Yes, Sir, That's My Baby,'" Segal related, "and I used the (Frank) Sinatra trick of picking one person in the audience to sing to. The one I picked happened to be Linda. I had given three tickets to (writer) Terry Southern, and he had invited her. When they came backstage after the concert, I fell in love. Just like a movie."

Source: Gainesville Sun, October 10, 1985, "Actor George Segal has had his share of ups and downs" by Bob Thomas, Section E, Page 8



As a sideline, he's played the banjo with various groups for some years. It was when he played Carnegie Hall that he met Linda Rogoff, now his wife (his marriage to Marion, his wife of 26 years, ended in 1983). He credits Linda with helping him finally kick his drug habit.

Source: Los Angeles Times, April 06, 1985, "Roderick Mann : An Upbeat George Segal May Be Down, But Never Out" by Roderick Mann





Linda's sister Nancy ?, Byron School years,her Courtland Blvd home, Shaker Heights High School Class Of 1964, Mom's Name:Greenberger, Married George Segal on October 9, 1983
Mother's Maiden Name Shirley Greenberger Rogoff
Mother's Birth Place Ohio
Father's Name Earl Rogoff
Father's Birth Place Ohio
Linda Rogoff Segal


About the illness that claimed his second wife Linda Rogoff: "It started with a hospital screwup about four years ago. Linda had a sore throat, which they misread. She was allergic to penicillin, the doctors weren't aware of it, and they kept pumping her full of the stuff. It killed her.

"They didn't know what was wrong with her--they thought it was a tropical disease and a whole lot of other things. There was a series of unbelievable surgeries. It went from bad to worse, and in the end her body couldn't take it anymore.

"In fact, she had a condition called aplastic anemia. But all the hospital did was exacerbate the problem. It has been a terrible four years, and what happened fills me with a kind of rage."

Source: The Daily News, August 18, 1996, by Kevin O'Sullivan



LINDA ROGOFF SEGAL, CW'68, New York City, June 13. After Penn, she moved to California and worked with the well-known rock promoter, Bill Graham; and later served as road manager for the Pointer Sisters. She retired 13 years ago, after marrying the actor George Segal. In recent years she was ill with complications from aplastic anemia.

Source: The Pennsylvania Gazette, "The Old Guard", November 1996, University of Pennsylvania




George moved in with (and eventually married) Linda Rogoff, a woman he met backstage after playing with a Beverly Hills jazz band.




How he met his second wife, Linda Rogoff, onetime manager of the Pointer Sisters, could have been a scene in a Mel Frank-George Segal movie. It happened when Segal was playing banjo with the Beverly Hills Unlisted Jazz Band as opening act for Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme at New York's Carnegie Hall.

"I did my usual number of 'Yes, Sir, That's My Baby,'" Segal related, "and I used the (Frank) Sinatra trick of picking one person in the audience to sing to. The one I picked happened to be Linda. I had given three tickets to (writer) Terry Southern, and he had invited her. When they came backstage after the concert, I fell in love. Just like a movie."

Source: Gainesville Sun, October 10, 1985, "Actor George Segal has had his share of ups and downs" by Bob Thomas, Section E, Page 8



As a sideline, he's played the banjo with various groups for some years. It was when he played Carnegie Hall that he met Linda Rogoff, now his wife (his marriage to Marion, his wife of 26 years, ended in 1983). He credits Linda with helping him finally kick his drug habit.

Source: Los Angeles Times, April 06, 1985, "Roderick Mann : An Upbeat George Segal May Be Down, But Never Out" by Roderick Mann





Linda's sister Nancy ?, Byron School years,her Courtland Blvd home, Shaker Heights High School Class Of 1964, Mom's Name:Greenberger, Married George Segal on October 9, 1983
Mother's Maiden Name Shirley Greenberger Rogoff
Mother's Birth Place Ohio
Father's Name Earl Rogoff
Father's Birth Place Ohio


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