Neely O'Hara
Encyclopedia
Neely O'Hara is a fictional character in the Jacqueline Susann
Jacqueline Susann
Jacqueline Susann was an American author known for her best-selling novels. Her most notable work was Valley of the Dolls, a book that broke sales records and spawned an Oscar-nominated 1967 film and a short-lived TV series.-Early years:Jacqueline Susann was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to...

 penned novel and movie Valley of the Dolls
Valley of the Dolls
Valley of the Dolls is a novel by American writer Jacqueline Susann, published in 1966. The "dolls" within the title is a slang term for downers, barbiturates used as sleep aids....

. She was played by actress Patty Duke
Patty Duke
Anna Marie "Patty" Duke is an American actress of stage, film, and television. First becoming famous as a child star, winning an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress at age 16, and later starring in her eponymous sitcom for three years, she progressed to more mature roles upon playing Neely...

 in the first movie; and then in the 1981 remake by Lisa Hartman.

Overview

Neely is an actress and singer who first came to attention in vaudeville
Vaudeville
Vaudeville was a theatrical genre of variety entertainment in the United States and Canada from the early 1880s until the early 1930s. Each performance was made up of a series of separate, unrelated acts grouped together on a common bill...

. She came from Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Pittsburgh is the second-largest city in the US Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the county seat of Allegheny County. Regionally, it anchors the largest urban area of Appalachia and the Ohio River Valley, and nationally, it is the 22nd-largest urban area in the United States...

, according to the movie. While working on Broadway, she worked in a musical with the legendary Helen Lawson
Helen Lawson
Helen Lawson is a fictional character in the novel Valley of the Dolls written by Jacqueline Susann.Lawson is described as having been a very successful Broadway star for many years . Her age is never revealed, there are only vague hints, but she's probably supposed to have been born ca. 1900...

. However Helen had her fired through jealousy and fear of being upstaged by the talented newcomer.

Neely's boyfriend was Mel Anderson and her best friends were chorus girl and fellow actress Jennifer North and entertainment attorney secretary Anne Welles. A very talented singer, Neely developed a stellar career and the massive ego that would later prove to be her downfall.

Neely married Mel and moved to California, where she became a successful movie actress. However, she had began taking Seconal, the "dolls" of the title, in New York City, and her addiction worsened in Hollywood. Along the way, she began to alienate everyone to whom she was close.

She drove Mel out by beginning an affair with a supposedly gay man named Ted Casablanca; and eventually divorced Mel. Not long after her divorce, she married Ted. Later on, however, Ted left Neely after she caught him swimming in their pool with another woman ("Carmen Carver" in the novel but unnamed in the movie), and her pills- and alcohol-fueled downward spiral surged on. Also, her conniving nature emerged more fully.

Neely went off to San Francisco, annoying her manager, Lyon Burke. She also tried to break up his relationship with her friend Anne, which drove her to the dolls as well.

However, in the movie, Anne kicked the pill habit, threw out Lyon, and returned to her New England hometown, Lawrenceville, where she finally felt that she belonged--after a lifetime of wanting to break free of it forever.

After a stint at a sanitarium, Neely attempted a comeback; but by this time her ego had become worse than Helen Lawson's had ever been. In a ladies-room catfight, Neely exposed Helen's real age by snatching her wig off her head and attempting to flush it down the toilet.

Prior to her opening night in the fictitious play Tell Me, Darling, Neely had a vicious argument with Lyon about a girl named Allison whom she wanted fired because she was eclipsing Neely's "star." She insulted everyone--including Anne, which truly infuriated Lyon (Anne had forewarned him about Neely's deviousness). Neely declared arrogantly, "I'm not everyone! I don't have to live by stinking rules set down for ordinary people! I licked pills, booze and the funny farm! I don't need anybody or anything!!" Finally fed up, Lyon quit as her agent. This infuriated Neely even more; she called him "just an agent" and implied that she was better than he was because she was a star. Reeling from the vicious implied insult, Lyon replied angrily, "And you're just a Helen Lawson, and not even that! Because she is a professional." After he stormed out for the last time, Neely shrilled, "They love Helen Lawson, then they love Neely O'Hara!!"

After becoming drunk and strung out on dolls, Neely appeared in her second-act costume and the director ordered her out, replacing her with the understudy. She went to a bar across the street. By the movie's end, she was all alone in the alley outside the theater, crying; totally alone, having driven out anyone she ever had hoped would care about her. She had finally hit rock bottom.

In the book, Neely was sent to another agency after Lyon fired her; she carried on with Lyon and destroyed her friendship with Anne. Also in the book, Neely had twin sons--Bud and Jud--with Ted, but in the movie she had no children.

In the book, Neely O'Hara's timeline differs very much from the movie version. The book begins in 1945 when Neely is 17 years old, and ends in 1965. The movie-version takes place in the 1960s. Also, in the book, Neely isn't fired from the Helen Lawson show. She replaces Terry King (the one fired in the book) on Anne's suggestion, and thus Neely's career begins. In the book Neely becomes a star of Hollywood movie musicals in the late 40's and 50's, while in the film-version she's more a pop, movie, and Broadway star.

Book sequel 2001

In 2001, author Rae Lawrence released her followup to Valley of the Dolls, called Jacqueline Susann's Shadow of the Dolls. In this sequel, liberties have again been taken with the characters' ages and the time setting. It begins in 1987, though it picks up the story just a few years after Susann's 1965 ending point, and ends in 2001.
Here we meet Neely O'Hara again, 33 years old (...) in 1987, doing a one-woman show in Las Vegas and struggling to get back on top again. And she does. A couple of years later, she plays Helen Lawson (who is now dead) in a movie about Lawson's life, and Neely wins another Oscar! Her son Jud has changed his name to Dylan.
Neely re-reaches the top in Hollywood, marries Lyon Burke, and becomes Jennifer Burke's stepmother, but she falls into an addiction of Vicodin and after some years she's back in rehab. A year later, mid-40s-ish Neely leaves rehab on the anti-depressant pill Zoloft and has plastic surgery. In 2001, Neely (47) is still alive, doing a Las Vegas show, and making the tabloids every month.
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