Angela Paton
Angela Paton (11 January 1930–26 May 2016; age 86) was the actress who portrayed Aunt Adah in the Star Trek: Voyager first season episode "Caretaker". She filmed her scenes between Monday 3 October 1994 and Thursday 6 October 1994 on Paramount Stage 16 and on location at the Paddison Farm in Norwalk. On second unit, she filmed an additional scene on Thursday 17 November 1994 on Paramount Stage 11.
Early career
Born in Brooklyn, New York, Paton worked on stage for several years before she was seen on the screen. She was a local theater star in the San Francisco Bay area and founded with husband Robert Goldsby the Berkeley Stage Company in the early 1970s. In 1971, Paton made her screen debut with a background role as a homicide detective in Dirty Harry. which featured fellow Star Trek performers Andrew Robinson, Vince Deadrick, Chuck Hicks and Victor Paul.
Seventeen years later, Paton started to work in film and television regular when she had supporting roles in the television movies Winnie (1988, with Katy Boyer and Hal Landon, Jr.), Roe vs. Wade (1989, starring Holly Hunter, with Kathy Bates, Jeff Allin, Dion Anderson, James Avery, Daniel Benzali, Ward Costello, David L. Crowley, Jerry Hardin, Ken Jenkins, Glenn Morshower, George Murdock, Terry O'Quinn, Randy Oglesby, David Selburg, Karole Selmon and Kenneth Tigar), and Manhunt: Search for the Night Stalker (1989, with Jake Dengel and B.J. Davis), guest roles in episodes of Thirtysomething (1988, with Clyde Kusatsu), Dear John (1989, starring Jane Carr, Harry Groener and William Glover), Hunter (1989, starring Charles Hallahan), and The Wonder Years (1989, with Olivia d'Abo, Raye Birk and Matthew Faison).
Paton was well known for her recurring role as Harriet Anderson in six episodes of Falcon Crest (1988-89, with Castulo Guerra, Allan G. Royal, Kevin McDermott, Carl Ciarfalio, Gerard David, Jr., John Hostetter, Betty McGuire, Judith Jones, Robert Ito, J. Michael Flynn, Morgan Nagler and Buck McDancer).
The 1990s
Beside featured parts in Flatliners (1990, with Julie Warner, Susan French and Shauna O'Brien), Welcome Home, Roxy Carmichael (1990, starring Winona Ryder, with John Short, Rhonda Aldrich, Heidi Swedberg and Carl Steven), Love, Lies and Murder (1991, with Clancy Brown and Megan Butler), the television romance Crazy from the Heart (1991, with Bibi Besch, Fran Bennett and Brent Spiner), and Lies of the Twins (1991, with Iman), she also appeared in episodes of Doctor Doctor (1990, starring Matt Frewer, with Brian George), Equal Justice (1990, starring Joe Morton, with Jack Kehler and John Hostetter), Father Dowling Mysteries (1991, with John Rubinstein and Kate Vernon), Quantum Leap (1991, starring Scott Bakula and Dean Stockwell, with Tim de Zarn), Wings (1991, starring Steven Weber), and L.A. Law (1991, with Corbin Bernsen, Larry Drake, Sam Anderson and Earl Boen).
Further film work in the 1990s include Groundhog Day (1993, with Willie Garson and Peggy Roeder), Clean Slate (1994, starring James Earl Jones, with Robert Wisdom, Vyto Ruginis, Olivia d'Abo, Jayne Brook, Reg E. Cathey, Brad Blaisdell and Ian Abercrombie), Blue Sky (1994, with Mitchell Ryan and Dion Anderson), Trapped in Paradise (1994, with Mädchen Amick), Home for the Holidays (1995), Eye for an Eye (1996, with Armin Shimerman, Natalija Nogulich, Wayne Péré, Sierra Pecheur, Michael Buchman Silver, Robert Clendenin, Jack Janda, David R. Maier and Janet Dey), Lolita (1997, with Frank Langella), The Wedding Singer (1998, with Ellen Albertini Dow, Christina Pickles and Al Burke), and The Joyriders (1999, with Steve Bond and Jay Karnes).
Paton also guest starred in episodes of Murphy Brown (1992, with Paul Carr, Judyann Elder and John Hostetter), Doogie Howser, M.D. (1992, with James B. Sikking), Nurses (1991-92, with Ada Maris and Carlos LaCamara), Love & War (1993, with Michael Nouri and Suzie Plakson), Dave's World (1994), NYPD Blue (1995, starring Gordon Clapp and Sharon Lawrence, with Bill Bolender, Michael Reilly Burke, Kavi Raz, Annie O'Donnell and William Lucking), Picket Fences (1995, with Ray Walston, Justin Shenkarow and Kelly Connell), Home Improvement (1994-95), The Client (1995, with Neal McDonough, Dennis Creaghan, Natalija Nogulich, John Pyper-Ferguson, Timothy Carhart and Anne Haney), ER (1995, starring Eriq La Salle, with Paul Dooley, David Spielberg and Ann Shea), Cybill (1996, with Brian Keith), Ink (1997, with Saul Rubinek), Cracker (1997, starring Carolyn McCormick and Robert Wisdom, with Efrain Figueroa and Patty Holly), Chicago Hope (1998, starring Jayne Brook), Players (1998, with Tim de Zarn), Dharma & Greg (1998, with Mitchell Ryan), Jesse (1998), L.A. Doctors (1999, starring Sheryl Lee, with David Huddleston, Stanley Kamel and Richard McGonagle), and Sliders (1999, starring Jerry O'Connell and co-created by Tracy Tormé).
2000s
In the 2000s, she appeared in The Kennedys (2001), Early Bird Special (2001, with Amy Benedict, Ray Walston and William Windom), and Joe Dirt (2001, with Christopher Walken, Hamilton Camp, Brian Thompson, Richard Riehle and Steve Schirripa), The United States of Leland (2003, with Matt Malloy, Michael Welch, Ann Magnuson, Ron Canada, Randall Bosley, Clyde Kusatsu, Dell Yount and Jim Metzler), American Wedding (2003, with Lawrence Pressman, Rey Gallegos and John Cho), Red Eye (2005, with Suzie Plakson, Robert Pine, Dey Young, Dane Farwell, Beth Toussaint and Scott Leva), the television drama The Valley of Light (2007, with Brent Hinkley and Arne Starr), and The Final Season (2007).
Further acting credits include The X-Files (2001, starring Gillian Anderson, with Dylan Haggerty), Becker (2002), JAG (2003, with Scott Lawrence and Zoe McLellan), Numbers (2005, with Molly Hagan), Curb Your Enthusiasm (2005), Four Kings (2006), My Name Is Earl (2008, with Ted Rooney), Sons of Tucson (2010, with Lamont Thompson), Medium (2010, starring Jake Weber, with Clancy Brown, David Burke and Stoney Westmoreland), and Grey's Anatomy (2011, with Frank Kopyc).
Among her later credits are the drama I Am I (2013, with Kevin Tighe and Josh Clark), the pilot episode of I Didn't Do It (2014), and the short drama Last Wishes (2014).
Paton died on 26 May 2016 following a heart attack at the age of 86. [1] [2]