Hollywood never saw this coming.
She defied the rules, rewrote them, and then walked away in silence. A producer once told her models could never become actresses. She answered with 70 television roles, hit films, and a pen that opened doors for women behind the camera. Now, at 92, she’s gone—leaving behind a legacy most never real… Continues…
She was born Loretta Basham in a small West Virginia town, but the world came to know her as Lory Patrick. Refusing to accept limits, she left modeling for Los Angeles and turned doubt into fuel. Within days of signing with Universal, she landed a role on The Loretta Young Show, launching a television career that would span some of the most beloved series of the 1960s. From Tales of Wells Fargo to Bonanza and Dr. Kildare, she became a familiar, steady presence in America’s living rooms.
Yet her influence reached far beyond the screen. At a time when women were rarely invited into writers’ rooms, she contributed scripts to Bonanza, quietly widening a door others would later walk through. She wrote, directed for the stage, and eventually devoted herself to faith, family, and service alongside her husband, actor Dean Jones. In the end, her greatest role may have been the life she lived off camera—one of courage, conviction, and gentle, lasting impact.





