Elizabeth Hubbard (December 22, 1933 – April 8, 2023) was an American actress best known for her roles as Althea Davis on the NBC daytime soap opera The Doctors (1964-1978, 1981-1982), for which she won a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series in 1974, and as businesswoman Lucinda Walsh on the CBS soap opera As the World Turns (1984-2010), for which she received eight Daytime Emmy Award nominations.
Hubbard also appeared in films such as I Never Sang for My Father (1970), The Bell Jar (1979), and Ordinary People (1980), and was nominated for another Emmy for her role as former First Lady Edith Wilson in the television film First Ladies Diaries: Edith Wilson (1976).
Elizabeth Hubbard’s parents: Who are her father and mother?
Elizabeth Wright Hubbard and Benjamin Alldritt Hubbard gave birth to Hubbard on December 22, 1933. Her mother, a physician, was a pioneer in homeopathy and one of the first women to graduate from Columbia University with a medical degree. Merle Hubbard, an opera talent manager, was one of her two brothers.
Meanwhile, the late actress Elizabeth Hubbard was born in New York City on December 22, 1933, to Elizabeth Wright Hubbard and Benjamin Alldritt Hubbard. Her mother, a physician, was a pioneer in homeopathy and one of the first women to graduate from Columbia University with a medical degree. Merle, an opera talent manager, was one of her two brothers.