She was born Suzanne Cupito in Los Angeles, December 5, 1951—close enough to Hollywood to breathe its exhaust, far enough away to still dream about its lights. By five she was already performing, already standing under hot studio lamps in a Playhouse 90 episode or an early Sea Hunt slot, depending on which story you hear. It doesn’t matter. What matters is that she was one of those children the industry spots early—bright, pretty, professional, hungry.
At twelve she danced ballet on The Dinah Shore Chevy Show, a pint-size ballerina holding her posture like it was the only stable thing she had. That same year she slipped into The Twilight Zone, the kind of place where children either vanish or become unforgettable. She did three episodes—Nightmare as a Child, Caesar and Me, and Valley of the Shadow—each time disappearing into parts that required more intensity than most adults could muster.
She was Baby June in Gypsy (1962).
She was Jeannie Hill on My Three Sons.
She was Jessica Damon on Gunsmoke.
Uncredited child in The Birds (1963).
Winter Night on Rawhide.
Minerva Gordon—the blind child in The Inheritors on The Outer Limits.
She was the kind of little actress whose filmography reads like a map of mid-century American television—dime-store Westerns, sprawling soaps, family comedies, ghost stories, high-gloss musicals.
By the time Yours, Mine and Ours (1968) rolled around, starring Lucille Ball and Henry Fonda, Suzanne was thirteen, professional in every gesture, the kind of kid who hit her marks and knew exactly where the camera lens was. But childhood acting is a short fuse. At fifteen, after that film, she walked away long enough to finish high school.
Then she reinvented herself.
At eighteen, Suzanne Cupito became Morgan Brittany—a name sleek as a new haircut, a name designed for the kind of woman she planned to become. She danced in Gene Kelly’s Las Vegas show. Then she moved to New York and did what plenty of actresses do when Hollywood forgets them: she modeled. Ford Models took her in. She became the Ultra Brite Toothpaste Girl. Faces like hers sell fantasies.
Her beauty had a classic quality—dark hair, sharp jaw, a velvet stillness. Someone saw Vivian Leigh in her. Then two people saw it. Then three. Suddenly she was playing Leigh in The Day of the Locust (1975) and Gable and Lombard(1976)—the ghost of a ghost, Hollywood playing itself through her. It fit too well: the porcelain face, the delicate voice, the simmer of danger behind the eyes.
Japan wanted her too.
Kanebo Cosmetics made her the face of Ireine from 1974 to 1976. She traveled the world. Billboards. Ad campaigns. The model-as-star era baked into a single American export with a British-old-Hollywood face.
Television kept calling:
The Amazing Howard Hughes (1977),
The Initiation of Sarah (1978),
Death Car on the Freeway (1979),
The Dream Merchants (1980).
Then Dallas walked into her life and changed everything.
Morgan Brittany became Katherine Wentworth—Pam Ewing’s half-sister, Cliff Barnes’s half-sister, and one of primetime’s great schemers. She was beautiful, icy, vindictive, irresistible. Katherine was the kind of villain viewers loved to hate, the kind who could tilt her chin slightly and turn a scene electric. She first appeared in the 1981–82 season and kept returning like a bad dream with perfect hair.
In 1985 she killed Bobby Ewing—ran him down in a car during one of the show’s most infamous finales. Of course, it later became part of the “dream season” twist, a retcon that erased both Bobby’s death and Katherine’s. Still, Morgan’s impact stuck. Ask any fan of Dallas who Katherine Wentworth was, and they’ll tell you: she was trouble in high heels.
The Spelling factory loved her too. She starred as Kate Simpson in Glitter (1984), a short-lived drama about entertainment journalism. She popped up on The Love Boat, Fantasy Island, Melrose Place, Hotel, and the revival of Burke’s Law—all those glossy shows that made the ’70s and ’80s sparkle.
She co-hosted Star Games, hosted more than 100 episodes of Photoplay, and acted in films like Sundown: The Vampire in Retreat (1989)—a cult favorite that pairs cowboys and vampires with a straight face.
By the ’90s, she drifted into indie films and family fare—Riders in the Storm, Legend of the Spirit Dog, The Biggest Fan, Americanizing Shelley. She kept working because she wanted to, not because she needed to. That’s a luxury women rarely get in Hollywood unless they’ve earned it.
She married stuntman Jack Gill in 1981—met him on The Dukes of Hazzard set. They built a family: daughter Katie, son Cody. A Hollywood marriage that didn’t implode. A rarity. A triumph.
Then she reinvented herself again.
By the 2010s, Morgan Brittany had become something entirely new: a conservative political commentator, columnist, speaker, co-owner of the PolitiChicks website. She wrote books (What Women Really Want in 2014, PolitiChicks in 2017), traveled the country speaking at conservative events, appeared on Hannity, Fox & Friends, The Dennis Miller Show, Huckabee, The Kudlow Report.
Hollywood might not know what to do with women after forty, but Morgan Brittany did. She didn’t fade. She pivoted. She built her own platform, her own audience, her own unapologetic voice.
Her life has been three acts:
the prodigy, the beauty, the firebrand.
Child star to model to soap villain to pundit.
Always reinventing.
Always immaculate.
Always in control of her own image.
Morgan Brittany wasn’t just a face in the frame—
she was a woman who kept rewriting her own story,
long after Hollywood stopped handing out scripts.
