Oscar winner Cloris Leachman — one of the most decorated actresses in television history, best known for playing nosy neighbor Phyllis on the “Mary Tyler Moore Show” — died on Wednesday. She was 94.

She died of natural causes at her home in Encinitas, California, spokesperson Monique Moss confirmed to NBC News.

Leachman won eight Emmy Awards, tying her for the most individual acting honors with “Seinfeld” and “Veep” actress Julia Louis-Dreyfus. Leachman’s Facebook cover shot depicts her sitting on a couch, surrounded by golden pals.

The late actress, inducted into the the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences’s Hall of Fame in 2011, won best supporting actress for a comedy series in 1974 and 1975 for her “MTM” work, as Moore’s snobbish neighbor Phyllis Lindstrom.

The show and character were so popular, Leachman was spun off into her show “Phyllis.”

She won the 1973 Emmy for best leading actress in the TV movie, “A Brand New Life,” playing a first-time mother in middle age — a daring act in that early Generation X era. In real life, Leachman was 46, when that “ABC Movie of the Week” aired on Feb. 20, 1973.

Other Emmy wins included the 1975 best supporting actress in a variety or musical for her work in “Cher,” in 1984 for best variety performance in the “Screen Actors Guild 50th Anniversary Celebration” and in 1988 for best actress in a guest role for “Promised Land.”

Younger TV fans probably know Leachman best for “Malcolm in the Middle,” playing Malcom’s hilariously scheming grandmother. She was also a contestant on the 2008-09 season of ABC’s “Dancing with the Stars” and at the time the oldest competitor in show history at age 82.

Those “Malcolm” gigs earned Leachman Emmy Awards in 2002 and 2006 for best guest actress in a comedy.

Cloris Leachman in an episode of “Raising Hope” in 2014.FOX / via Getty Images

Despite all those wins, Leachman insisted she went into every awards night assuming she wasn’t going home with a statue.

“I never had a speech because I never thought I was going to win,” Leachman told the TV academy in a 2015 interview.

“But if you are good at what you do — and I always intend to be good at what I do — then the acclaim is just the follow-through. But it is a wonderful feeling.”

Cloris Leachman with her Best Supporting Actress Academy Award in Los Angeles in 1972.AP Photo

The actress also passed away with one Oscar statue on her mantle, earning the 1971 award for best supporting actress in “The Last Picture Show.” She played Ruth Popper, the lonely wife of the town’s high school football coach.

But through all of those accolades, Leachman will be best known as “Mary’s” neighbor and landlady. Of the the actors who were in as many or more “MTM” episodes than Leachman, the deceased include Moore, Ted Knight, Georgia Engel and Valerie Harper.

When Moore passed away in 2017, Leachman said Mary Richards’ sunny demeanor matched reality off stage.

“The picture that we all have of Mary, that’s how she was—sweet, kind, so tender, so delicate,” Leachman said. “She was America’s sweetheart. We loved you.

In the show, Leachman’s Phyllis frequently and hilariously clashed with Harper’s Rhoda, in on-screen conflicts that were the total opposite of real life.

“‘The Mary Tyler Moore Show’ was a gorgeously written show. My character, Phyllis, wanted Mary to be her best friend … and she couldn’t stand Rhoda. Ha! In reality, Valerie and I were best friends,” Leachman told the TV academy n 2015.

Cloris Leachman, Mary Tyler Moore, and Valerie Harper starred in “The Mary Tyler Moore Show.”CBS Photo Archive / via Getty Images

The veteran actress had slowed down in recent years. In a 2015 interview with “Today,” Leachman struggled getting out of a chair.

“I’m going get up, it’s very difficult, I can get this far,” an 89-year-old Leachman said, putting her hands on the chair’s arms and pushing herself up several inches before freezing.

Even with a slower body, Leachman showed her comedic mind was sharp as ever with a perfectly timed, “And then you come in,” signaling for co-hosts Hoda Kotb and Kathie Lee Gifford, who came to her rescue.

Leachman credited her initial interest in radio and television to her mother, also named Cloris, who encouraged the young Cloris to explore her creative side.

“Momma never pushed me to anything, always an invitation,” Leachman said at her 2011 induction to the TV academy’s Hall of Fame.

The Iowa born-and-raised Leachman is among the many famous actors who studied at Northwestern University. Her move to the outskirts of Chicago led Leachman to compete in the 1946 Miss America competition as Miss Illinois.

She’s survived by sons Morgan Englund, Adam Englund and George Howe Englund Jr. and daughter Dinah Englund. Leachman’s former husband, and the father of her five children, George Englund, passed away in 2017, and son Bryan Englund died in 1986.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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