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Millbrook remembers Mary Tyler Moore

MILLBROOK — When beloved actress Mary Tyler Moore died on Wednesday, Jan. 25, she was mourned by the world. She was also mourned by many who knew her during the years she lived in the town of Washington. In talking to a few of those people, it’s evident that while she might have been an icon, at home in Millbrook she lived life just like other Dutchess County residents.

Moore became famous as the television wife of Dick Van Dyke on “The Dick Van Dyke Show,” which ran from 1961 to 1966. She later starred in “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” from 1970 to 1977. 

She played a smart, sophisticated and modern woman, especially in her own show. Moore also starred in several movies, including “Ordinary People,” which saw her nominated for an Academy Award in 1980. She also performed on Broadway.

Moore was also a type 1 diabetic and an advocate for diabetes research. She was chairperson of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation in 1984, and remained an advocate for diabetes research throughout her life.

A vegetarian, Moore was a lifelong advocate for animals. She fought to end the use of horses for carriage rides in the city, and was active with Broadway Barks, an effort to find homes for shelter dogs.    

After finishing her two television series, Moore moved to New York City. Marrying her third husband, cardiologist Robert Levine in 1983, they began thinking about a permanent home. They went north and found a property in the town of Washington. They originally bought 21 acres, and later added another eight and a half acres. They also leased 10 acres across from their property to keep their horses.

Although Moore and her husband moved from Millbrook in 2006, they are well remembered. Town of Washington Supervisor Gary Ciferri, a former mayor of Millbrook, said, “She’s just so vivid in our minds and just such a sad loss. No matter where you went, if she saw you, she always had a hello for you.”  

David Greenwood, town historian, said she often shopped at Marona’s supermarket. 

“You’d notice her husband first, he was very good looking, and he’d be handing things from the shelf to her,” he said. “You wouldn’t recognize her at first, because she downplayed her looks. She was just like anyone else in town, and people let her be.” 

Greenwood said that Moore did many good things for the area while she was a resident. 

“When they were renovating the old firehouse, there was a wooden sign, hand carved, about 12 feet long. It was beautifully crafted. It ended up at Kevin De Martine’s Bottle Shop Antiques.”  Greenwood he loved the sign, and went to the shop one day hoping to purchase it. He was told Moore had bought it. 

“When she left Millbrook, she went to the firehouse and, in her unassuming way, offered it back to them. It’s now on exhibit.  

“She was definitely part of the fabric of what makes Millbrook, Millbrook.”

Moore was buried in Fairfield, Conn., on Sunday, Jan. 29.

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