OBITUARIES A38 NATION Jayne Meadows, the Emmynominated actress and TV personality who often teamed with her husband, original “Tonight Show” host Steve Allen, has died. She was 95. Meadows died of natural causes Sunday at her home in the Encino, California, area, spokesman Kevin Sasaki said yesterday. “She was not only an extraordinarily gifted actress who could move audiences from Meadows, seen here in 2006, laughter to tears and back again was nominated for three Emmys. all in one scene, but she was the greatest storyteller I have ever barely spoke English when the known,” said her son, Bill Allen. family moved back to the United Though best known as the wife States. She appeared in several of the TV host — and the sister of Broadway shows in the 1940s. She “Honeymooners” star Audrey changed her name to Meadows Meadows — Jayne Meadows also (borrowing an old family name) had a solid career. In the 1940s, when she made her film debut in she acted on Broadway and in 1946 in “Undercurrent” with movies, before becoming a house- Katharine Hepburn. hold name as a panelist on the TV She met Allen in 1952 at a dingame show “I’ve Got a Secret” ner party. He sat next to her, from 1952 until the late 1950s. speechless, until she turned to Meadows was born Jayne Cot- him and said, “Mr. Allen, you’re eiter to Episcopal missionary par- ther the rudest man I ever met or ents in Wu Chang, China, and the shyest.” It was the start of AP / PHIL MCCARTEN The Associated Press something big. They married in 1954, just as Allen was starting his run as the first host of “The Tonight Show.” After his death in 2000, Meadows called him “my best friend and my partner on stage and off for more than 48 years.” Meadows’ innumerable TV guest credits include many appearances on her husband’s shows: “Tonight,” “The Steve Allen Show” and “The Steve Allen Comedy Hour.” One of her three Emmy nods came in 1978 for her portrayal of Florence Nightingale in “Meeting of Minds,” Allen’s 1977-81 PBS show that portrayed historical figures getting together for a chat. She was nominated in 1987 for a guest role in the drama series “St. Elsewhere” and in 1996 for her supporting role in the sitcom “High Society.” She also played Billy Crystal’s mother in the 1991 movie “City Slickers” and its 1994 sequel. She had been largely retired since her husband’s death. Plans for a memorial service were not immediately announced. AP / BON WANDS Actress Jayne Meadows, wife of TV’s Steve Allen Meadows, comedian Louis Nye and Meadows’ longtime husband, Steve Allen, rehearse for a new TV series in 1967. LONG ISLAND W. Islip’s Dr. Renato Giorgini, 71, podiatrist BY OLIVIA WINSLOW A leader and innovator in the field of podiatric medicine. A dedicated teacher and mentor to physicians in training. A loving family man. An esteemed colleague. Those were some of the ways family and friends yesterday described Dr. Renato Giorgini, who died April 17 of complications from liver cancer at Good Samaritan Hospital in West Islip. He was 71. One of his daughters, Dr. Tara Giorgini, an orthopedic surgeon who resides in Rome, Italy, said her father was “extremely generous” to his family, and “dedicated” to his students, colleagues and patients. He lived in West Islip with his wife of nearly 50 years, Florence Giorgini, whom he met when both attended college in Pennsylvania. “We married in 1965 — Aug. 28. We just didn’t FAMILY PHOTO NEWSDAY, TUESDAY, APRIL 28, 2015 newsday.com [email protected] Dr. Renato Giorgini of West Islip was chief of podiatry at Good Samaritan Hospital. make 50 years,” she said. At the time of his death, Giorgini was chief of podiatry and program director of podiatry residency at Good Samaritan Hospital. Lauded for his excellence in teaching, Giorgini was also a professor at the New York College of Podiatric Medicine in Manhattan, where he joined the faculty in 1971, said the college’s dean and vice president for academic affairs, Dr. Michael Trepal. Giorgini was chairman of the college’s department of surgery from 1972 to 1983, and also served as residency director. “He really was involved with the podiatric surgical education of four decades of students,” Trepal said. Dr. Gino Giorgini, a retired gastroenterologist who is now medical director for care and utilization at Good Samaritan Hospital, cited his cousin’s “standout qualities” in teaching, adding, “he trained podiatrists all over the place.” He added his cousin was also “well-respected for his development and maintaining the accreditation of the podiatric program” at Good Samaritan. Several of Renato Giorgini’s former students wrote tributes to him posted to the Podiatry Medicine website, podiatrym.com. Dr. Philip Wrotslavsky of San Diego wrote: “Dr. Giorgini as you know was a leader in the podiatric world. He was an innovator, a teacher, and a mentor to many. He told me many times, ‘If you want to learn, I’ll teach it to you.’ ” Giorgini was born in Copiague. He graduated from Copiague High School in 1960. He earned a bachelor’s degree in biology from Villanova University in 1964; and a medical degree in 1968 from what is now known as the Temple University College of Podiatric Medicine in Philadelphia. He returned to New York in 1970 and set up his practice on South Wellwood Avenue in Lindenhurst in a building owned by his brother, Arthur, a lawyer. “His brother was upstairs and gave Rennie the room downstairs,” his wife recalled. Giorgini’s brother died last year. Giorgini later moved to a different office on the same street, where “he practiced until the last,” his wife said. He lectured widely in the United States and abroad, and had professional certifications from the American Podiatric Medical Association and the American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons, his daughter said. Other immediate survivors include another daughter, Tanya L. Giorgini of Manhattan; a sonin-law, Dr. Michele Calderaro, Dr. Tara Giorgini’s husband; a sister-in-law, Ada Giorgini of Amityville; and two grandchildren. A funeral was held April 20 at St. Patrick’s Roman Catholic Church in Bay Shore; burial followed at Amityville Cemetery in Amityville. LEGACY Read recent obituaries, in memoriams. newsday.com/obituaries
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