- Now a beloved employee at an interactive design and programming agency in Culver City, California. (December 2006)
- (1996-) Conny is now retired, in Virginia, and lends her talents to various youth and civic organizations.
- Mother of actor and screenwriter, Bronson Page.
- Shortly after her return to television in 2008, Van Dyke suffered a massive stroke, which left her partially paralyzed and marked the beginning of her retirement. After this, she lived in Los Angeles, and was cared for by her son Bronson.
- She also battled colon cancer during her lifetime.
- Her only sibling, Benjamin Van Dyke III, was killed in an auto accident near Salinas, California, in 1969.
- The Detroit native was a longtime colon cancer and stroke survivor.
- In 2008 she made a return to network television, guest-starring on Cold Case; she appeared on CSI the following year.
- Van Dyke also appeared on several game shows in the 1970s, including Match Game, You Don't Say, The Cross-Wits, The Hollywood Squares, Tattletales, and The Gong Show.
- Her only Motown release appeared in early 1963: "Oh Freddy", written by Smokey Robinson, backed with "It Hurt Me Too", written and previously recorded by Marvin Gaye.
- "I had Marvin Gaye playing the piano for me, Stevie Wonder playing the bongos. He really was 12 years old," Van Dyke said in an interview with comedian Skip E. Lowe, recalling her days in Motown's recording studios. "And then I some backup singers, some girls I learned a lot from. They were a couple years older than me, not much older. ... The Supremes and also Martha Reeves & The Vandellas.".
- When she was 15 years old, Van Dyke made recordings, worked as a fashion model, and made her first film, Among the Thorns.
- Shortly after Hell's Angels '69, she married Robert Page and gave birth to a son, Bronson Page, but she continued to pursue recording, and released a self-titled album in 1972.
- Van Dyke also worked as a songwriter for Wheelsville Records in Detroit.
- She entered and won Teen magazine's "Miss Teen of the United States" in 1960.
- She co-starred in W.W. and the Dixie Dancekings with Burt Reynolds, and in Framed, with Joe Don Baker, both in 1975. Another album, Conny Van Dyke Sings for You, was released following the film.
- She signed with Motown Records in 1961, making her one of the first white recording artists for the label.
- She worked as a songwriter and recording artist for Wheelsville Records in Detroit, Michigan.
- The introduction to Berry Gordy, which came out of her appearances on local television in Detroit, where she was raised, proved a fascinating vignette in her life, as she toured the industrial midwest with the Supremes, the Four Tops, Smokey Robinson & the Miracles, Marvin Gaye, Martha & the Vandellas, and Mickey Stevenson -- alas, by her own account, her early music career came to an end after her mother became concerned that the teenager might become romantically attracted to one of her black labelmates.
- She was cast in Hell's Angels '69 with Tom Stern, Jeremy Slate, and several members of the Hells Angels motorcycle club.
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