- Ex-husband Burt Reynolds invited Judy as his guest the first time he guest-hosted The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (1962) in the early 70s. They hadn't spoken in six years.
- While on a promotional tour for the TV series Fair Exchange (1962) Judy met Burt Reynolds. After a six-month courtship the two were married on June 28th 1963. The marriage lasted but two years. She never asked for alimony. Reynolds would be there for her in later years when she was dealing with financial woes amid her drug problems.
- Living in her birth town of Northampton, England. (2001)
- Judy auditioned for and won the lead role of Julie Willis in the sitcom called Love on a Rooftop (1966). She was paired with actor Pete Duel, someone she knew and had met when she did a one-episode stint on the "Gidget" TV series. She later guested on his "Alias Smith and Jones" TV series. Duel later committed suicide.
- When she was nine she was accepted to the prestigious Bush-Davies Theatrical School for Girls, in East Grinstead, England near London. An instructor there began calling her "Judy" explaining that "Joyce" wasn't a good professional name. At sixteen she took her professional name Judy Carne. Carne comes from a character in the play "Sister Bonaventure.".
- In July of 1969, during her "Laugh-In" heyday, Judy performed "American Moon" on the Ed Sullivan show. Sullivan, known for mispronouncing names, introduced her as "Judy Crane".
- "Laugh-In" producer George Schlatter initially blamed her for trying to break up the Laugh-In "family" by leaving after only two seasons.
- In 1978 she was in a car crash with her second husband, The car plunged into a ditch and hit a telegraph pole , She broke her neck and spent 5 months with her head in a steel halo.
- Appeared twice on I Dream of Jeannie (1965), once as a character and later as herself.
- She was one of the actresses considered for the lead role of Eglantine Price in Disney's Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971). Her performance of one of the film's songs, "Subsititutiary Locomotion," ended up on a Disneyland LP record containing cover versions of the songs (catalog # STER-1326).
- She lived at Carne Lodge, Chapel Bramton Northamptonshire.
- Began dancing at her aunt's dancing school then moved to the Pitt-Draffen Academy of Dance.
- At the age of six she performed in a local concert and won the encouragement of her parents to continue.
- In April 1986 she was found in possession of cocaine resulting in 3 months imprisonment.
- She wrote her auto biography 'Laughing on the Outside, Crying on the Inside'.
- Clint Eastwood, knowing that she longed to be in a western, offered her a part in his film, Pale Rider (1985), but she had to turn it down as she was already working on a Danish film.
- She left school at 15 and worked in various jobs while trying to get into show business. She joined an amateur dramatic company which eventually led to her joining a repertory company by lying about her age and claiming that she had done lots of things.
- Started dancing when 4 wining every competition she entered,.
- Parents Kath and Harold Botterill.
- Discovered a simple method of becoming a household name by having a bucket of water thrown over her every week in Rowan and ~Martins Laugh In and became known as the .Sock It To Me Girl.
- He formed his own production company in mid 86 Stalwart Productions.
- Upon Carne's death, her body was cremated, with her ashes given to her surviving relatives.
- In 1987, she served two months of a three month prison sentence in HM Prison Cookham Wood in the UK for illegal drug possession. She is actually shown being arrested by a female customs officer at London's Heathrow Airport in 'The Duty Men', a 1987 BBC TV documentary.
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