Nevins debuted on Broadway in The Wall (1960) with other Broadway appearances including Plaza Suite (1968) and Danton's Death (1965).[2] She also appeared in In White America (off-Broadway) with Gloria Foster and Moses Gunn.[3]
The National Company of The Great White Hope, in which she starred with Brock Peters, took her to Los Angeles, after which she began working in television.[citation needed] For two and a half years she was seen in the long-running daytime soap opera Love of Life playing Laurie Krakauer. She appeared as a series regular in Headmaster (opposite Andy Griffith), Husbands, Wives, and Lovers, and Married: the First Year (a David Jacobs project). Her guest star appearances include Beverly Hills 90210, Barnaby Jones,Melrose Place, JAG, Three's Company, Lou Grant, Without a Trace, M*A*S*H, Hart to Hart, ‘’Trial and Error (TV series)’’, and many others.
Her work in regional theaters included the following: Arena Stage; Major Barbara, The Iceman Cometh, Ring Round the Moon, The Cherry Orchard with the Atlanta Repertory; King Arther, The Hostage, The Little Foxes, Major Barbara, The Homecoming, You Can't Take It With You, Twelfth Night, and with LA Shakespeare; Comedy of Errors; La Mirada: Blithe Spirit.[citation needed]
Nevins was a member of the Matrix Theatre Company, where she appeared in Alan Bennett's Habeas Corpus, J. B. Priestley's Dangerous Corner, Caryl Churchill's Mad Forest, and The Water Children. Other stage appearances in Los Angeles include Passion Play (Taper), Isn't it Romantic? (Pasadena), P.S. Your Cat is Dead (Westwood) and Philadelphia Story (Court).[citation needed]
In addition, she had extensive on-camera and voice-over commercial credits.
Personal life
Nevins married Benjamin L. Pick, with whom she had two daughters, Jessica and Sabrina.[4] Nevins died February 20, 2020, in hospice care at her home in Los Angeles.[5]