Jessica Walter, whose roles as a scheming matriarch in TV's "Arrested Development" and a stalker in "Play Misty for Me" were in line with a career that drew on her astringent screen presence more than her good looks, has died. She was 80.
Walter's death was confirmed Thursday by her daughter, Brooke Bowman, an entertainment industry executive. A cause of death and other details were not immediately provided.
"It is with a heavy heart that I confirm the passing of my beloved mom Jessica. A working actor for over six decades, her greatest pleasure was bringing joy to others through her storytelling both on screen and off," Bowman said in a statement.
Walter will also be well-remembered for "her wit, class and overall joie de vivre," or life of love, her daughter added.
Although her photogenic appearance might have qualified her for standard leading lady roles, Walter claimed no regrets about being cast as a character actor.
She loved playing difficult women because "those are the fun roles. They're juicy, much better than playing the vanilla ingรฉnues, you know—Miss Vanilla Ice Cream," Walter said in an AV Club website interview.
Her most memorable film role was in Clint Eastwood's 1971 thriller "Play Misty For Me" — her first significant lead — in which she plays Evelyn Draper, the woman who becomes obsessed with Eastwood's disc jockey character. Walter was widely praised for her unnerving performance.
Roger Ebert wrote in his review that, "She is something like flypaper; the more you struggle against her personality, the more tightly you're held."
"Arrested Development" represented a second act for Walter, and earned her admiration from a new generation of fans.
Walter's feature debut was in the 1964 film "Lilith," with Warren Beatty, Jean Seberg and Gene Hackman, who was also on his first film.
She won a role in John Frankenheimer's racing epic "Grand Prix," from 1966, as the glamorous but discontented wife of a Formula One racer who falls for another driver.
That same year she appeared in Sidney Lumet's "The Group," a female-led ensemble about the graduates of a prestigious university (Walter played the catty Libby), and acted for Lumet again in 1968's "Bye Bye Braverman."
AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr and AP Entertainment Writer Andrew Dalton contributed to this report.