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Actress Deborah Raffin dies at 59

LOS ANGELES, Nov. 22 (UPI) -- Actress Deborah Raffin, who had a second career publishing audio books, has died of leukemia at a Los Angeles hospital, her family said. She was 59.

Raffin -- whose film credits included "Forty Carats" and "Once Is Not Enough" -- died Wednesday at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, the Los Angeles Times reported. Her brother, William, said she had been diagnosed with leukemia about a year ago, the newspaper said.

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Her television miniseries credits included "Haywire" and "Noble House."

Raffin was born March 13, 1953, in Los Angeles, to actress Trudy Marshall and restaurateur Philip Raffin.

Working with her then-husband, Michael Viner, Raffin established Dove Books-on-Tape in 1985.

The business was initially meant to be a hobby, the Times said, but grew into a multimillion-dollar business, issuing a diverse mix of titles that included physicist Stephen Hawking's "A Brief History of Time" -- its first bestseller -- and Sidney Sheldon's "The Naked Face."

The audio-book business had its genesis in a game of backgammon in which Sheldon lost $8,000 to Viner, the Times said. Rather than collect the money, Viner -- who died of cancer in 2009 -- had Sheldon agree to let him produce two of the author's bestsellers as books on tape.

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Raffin hired actors including Burt Reynolds, Roger Moore and Ruby Dee to read books on tape.

Raffin's marriage to Viner ended in divorce in 2005.

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