She was born February 15, 1923, in Harlem, back when the city still smelled like coal smoke and ambition. Her parents, Joseph and Rose Jassem, raised her in Brooklyn, where people learned early how to talk fast, think faster, and make themselves useful. Fritzi grew up without illusions about glamour. She understood work. You could see it in the way she carried herself later—upright, alert, never begging the camera for approval.
She went to Brooklyn College, which already set her apart from the myth of actresses as accidental creatures. She wasn’t discovered at a soda fountain or pulled out of a chorus line by a man with a cigar. She studied. She read. She went to drama school while holding down a job at a tie company in New York City, selling neckwear by day and learning how to speak other people’s words at night. That tells you almost everything you need to know about her.
During World War II, she met Robert Cohen at a USO. That’s how a lot of lives changed back then—not through grand romance, but through shared exhaustion and cheap coffee and the understanding that the world could vanish at any moment. They married, and in 1946, when most people were rushing back toward cities and noise, they moved to Maine.
Maine wasn’t a retreat. It was a choice. Cold winters, long silences, a place where nobody cared who you thought you were. They raised one daughter, Jill, and built a life that didn’t depend on applause. Fritzi didn’t disappear. She recalibrated.
She worked for Channel 6, an NBC affiliate, and quietly made history by becoming the first woman on-air drama critic in New England. No parade. No plaque. Just a woman sitting in front of a camera, talking seriously about theater, about what worked and what didn’t, about craft instead of celebrity. She reviewed productions the way working actors do—fair, sharp, unsentimental.
And then, somehow, Hollywood came knocking anyway.
Not with a starring role. Not with promises. But with something better: a part that stuck.
Mrs. Taft.
If you’ve seen Jaws, you’ve seen her. Even if you don’t remember her name, you remember the feeling. The hotel owner. The woman behind the desk. The one who watches the chaos unfold and stays put. In the first film, she’s uncredited, like a lot of people who hold the place together while the heroes panic. But she’s there. Solid. Unmoving. A human piece of furniture that turns out to be load-bearing.
Most actresses would’ve done it once and vanished. Fritzi Courtney didn’t.
She came back in Jaws 2. This time credited. This time acknowledged. Same character. Same energy. The town still in trouble, the water still full of teeth, and Mrs. Taft still running the hotel like someone who knows panic doesn’t pay the bills.
Then, nine years later, she showed up again in Jaws: The Revenge. By then the franchise had gone strange, bloated, half-mythical. But there she was, anchoring it to something real. Continuity with a face. History with wrinkles.
That’s not stardom. That’s endurance.
Between shark movies, she worked when the work came. A judge in a TV movie. A librarian on Route 66. Roles that didn’t scream, didn’t sparkle, didn’t ask for sympathy. She played authority figures and background minds—the kind of people who know how systems actually function. Women who had keys. Women who decided things.
She never chased the industry. She didn’t need to. She had Maine. She had her family. She had a voice on television before most women were allowed one. Acting was something she did, not something she begged to keep.
When she died on August 7, 2012, in Portland, Maine, she was 89 years old. No tragic end. No comeback narrative. Just a long life that held together.
Fritzi Jane Courtney belongs to a class of actresses Hollywood rarely celebrates and constantly relies on: women who make the world believable. She didn’t play dreams. She played infrastructure. She didn’t need the camera to love her. She needed it to trust her.
And it did.
She stands there in Jaws, behind that desk, watching men argue about beaches and money and fear. She doesn’t flinch. She’s seen storms before. She knows how towns work. She knows how people survive them.
Some actresses are remembered for their faces. Some for their scandals. Some for how loudly they burned out.
Fritzi Courtney is remembered for staying.
And that, in the long run, might be the hardest role of all.
