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Nancy Berg (July 9, 1931 – February 4, 2022) was an American model and actress.[1][2][3]
Berg was born in Kenosha, Wisconsin to Paul Axel Berg[4] and Dorothy Esther (née Schanock) Berg.[citation needed] She ran away from home there in 1947 and moved to Detroit[5] to become a model. By 1960, she was earning $40,000 per year. Berg was on the front cover of Vogue four times, starting in 1953, and was Esquire's "Lady Fair" for May of 1956.[6] She was also the star and sole performer for a 1955 New York television program entitled Count Sheep with Nancy Berg which aired five nights a week from 1:00 to 1:05 in the morning. "The nightgown-clad Miss Berg would appear, get into bed, perform a bit of business, such as read from Romeo and Juliet or eat grapes off a toy Ferris wheel, and then, in extreme close-up, whisper a good night to the camera and pretend to go to sleep as animated sheep jumped over a fence. Her manager stated, 'A lot of people watch it. God knows why.'"[7]
In 1962, Berg toured with Bob Cummings in a production of Tunnel of Love.[4]
In 1964, she appeared on “Perry Mason” in S8E12’s “The Case of the Wooden Nickel”.
Berg was married to actor Geoffrey Horne on February 6, 1958, with whom she had a child. They divorced in 1962.[8] She was also married to, and divorced from, Alan Elliott and Richard Praeger in the 1960s.[5] She died on February 4, 2022, at the age of 90, in New York.[9]