Mary Kay Bergman - Personal Life

Personal Life

Mary Kay Bergman married Dino Andrade at Saint Monica's Church on April 7, 1990. Along with her husband, she enjoyed Star Trek conventions and visited Disneyland, Walt Disney World and Disneyland Paris.

Bergman's most admired films were Room With a View, Meet Me in St. Louis and The Sound of Music. Her preferred music was jazz, classical, opera and especially film scores. Bergman loved reading books by authors Anne Rice, Stephen King, Clive Barker, Amy Tan, Carrie Fisher, Leonard Maltin and Douglas Adams, and in genres such as mystery, science fiction, horror, comedy, biography, and comic books. Bergman was also an avid Dodgers fan since the 1988 National League Championship Series.

During her time at UCLA, Bergman befriended classmate and future Simpsons voice actress Nancy Cartwright. Bergman was also good friends and teacher/mentor to voice actress Grey DeLisle.

Although her parents were Jewish, Bergman never practised the faith. In the early 1970s, Bergman became fascinated with Christianity; she spent a number of years bouncing from one Christian religion to another, eventually settling on Catholicism, which she converted to, although she was never devout. She always remained proud of her Jewish heritage, jokingly referring to herself as a "Catholic Jew." As Andrade stated, "I don't know if it was because she just had this spiritual sense, or if it was because she hoped there was a better life beyond this one. It could be simply that she was just looking for God."

Read more about this topic:  Mary Kay Bergman

Famous quotes containing the words personal and/or life:

    It has no share in the leadership of thought: it does not even reflect its current. It does not create beauty: it apes fashion. It does not produce personal skill: our actors and actresses, with the exception of a few persons with natural gifts and graces, mostly miscultivated or half-cultivated, are simply the middle-class section of the residuum.
    George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950)

    The most useful man in the most useful world, so long as only commodity was served, would remain unsatisfied. But, as fast as he sees beauty, life acquires a very high value.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)